Here’s an assessment of the presidential candidates’ logos. Politics aside, I think Obama’s logo is pretty brilliant.
Interesting tidbit: the typeface of McCain’s logo is the same as that used on the Vietnam Memorial.
Here’s an assessment of the presidential candidates’ logos. Politics aside, I think Obama’s logo is pretty brilliant.
Interesting tidbit: the typeface of McCain’s logo is the same as that used on the Vietnam Memorial.
Pam is dead-on about why Hillary Clinton has been tanking. Some choice quotes:
Our country’s issues with gender bias places everything Clinton does under a microscope…. However, I would argue that gender may play less of a role in this race because of the broad demographic voting patterns we are seeing here. I think the problem is that the woman is Hillary Clinton — it’s quite possible that a woman could have faired better in this race, just not this one.
The problem isn’t the policy positions, I think the main dismay among the Clintonistas is that the voters are responding to something Obama has — charisma and a message that connects — that she cannot match, and that they don’t know how to successfully counter that.
Unfortunately it’s pretty hard to wag your finger at the American public and tell them not to be fooled, or that they are stupid for thinking with their hearts, not their heads. That doesn’t garner more votes, in fact it can cause blowback.
Hillary is now trying to win the nomination by brute force, with the help of idiots like Mark Penn. While Obama’s campaign entices and inspires, her campaign tries to tell people how stupid they are for wanting to vote for him. It makes her seem tone-deaf when it comes to people skills. Is this how she’d run her presidency?
If she manages to bounce back and become the nominee (it’s possible; there’s a debate tomorrow night and another one next week, and debates have a way of turning things around, and Obama has been diffident during debates), I’ll fully support her. She’s a Democrat with Democratic policy ideas and she’d be lots better than McCain. And I still want to like her. I don’t like not liking her.
But she’s not making it easy.
Here’s my voting history, as much as I can remember, since I turned 18 in 1991. I’ve included federal races as well as some notable state races.
From 1992 to 1995 I was an absentee New Jersey voter going to college in Virginia. In 1995 I became a Virginia resident; in 1999 I moved back to New Jersey; in 2005 I became a New York resident.
1992 (NJ)
President: Bill Clinton/Al Gore
U.S. House: Herb Klein
1993 (NJ)
I don’t remember voting in the governor’s race (Republican Christie Whitman vs. the beleaguered incumbent Democrat Jim U.S. Florio).
1994 (NJ)
U.S. Senate: Frank Lautenberg (beat Chuck Haytaian)
U.S. House: Herb Klein (lost to Bill Martini in the 1994 Republican Revolution; two years later, Martini was beat in turn, one of only 8 of 54 Republican House freshmen to be ousted)
1995 (VA)
State senate: Emily Couric (didn’t she look like her sister?)
1996 (VA)
President: Bill Clinton/Al Gore
U.S. Senate: Mark Warner (lost to John Warner; went on to serve as governor; running for Senate again this year)
U.S. House: probably Virgil Goode (who later switched parties and became a nut)
1997 (VA)
I don’t remember voting in the governor’s race (Republican Jim Gilmore vs. Democrat Don Beyer).
1998 (VA)
I can’t remember if I voted in the U.S. House election.
2000 (NJ)
President: Al Gore/Joe Lieberman
U.S. Senate: Jon Corzine
U.S. House: Bob Menendez
2001 (NJ)
Governor: Jim McGreevey
2002 (NJ)
U.S. Senate: Frank Lautenberg (this is when Robert Torricelli dropped out and Lautenberg quickly replaced him on the ballot)
U.S. House: Bob Menendez
2004 (NJ)
President: John Kerry/John Edwards
U.S. House: Bob Menendez
2005 (NY)
Mayor: Mike Bloomberg
2006 (NY)
Governor: Eliot Spitzer
U.S. Senator: Hillary Clinton
U.S. House: Jerrold Nadler
2007 (NY)
Presidential primary: Barack Obama
The only Republican I’ve ever voted for is Mike Bloomberg. And that hardly counts. I don’t know why it took me so long to register as a Democrat.