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10.10.2008 9:00 pm

Sunday editorial: Barack Obama for president

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Post-Dispatch photo by Robert Cohen

Post-Dispatch photo by Robert Cohen

Nine Days before the Feb. 5 presidential primaries in Missouri and Illinois, this editorial page endorsed Barack Obama and John McCain in their respective races.

We did so enthusiastically. We wrote that either Mr. Obama’s message of hope or Mr. McCain’s independence and integrity offered America “the chance to turn the page on 28 years of contentious, greed-driven politics and move into a new era of possibility.”

Over the past nine months, Mr. Obama, the junior senator from Illinois, has emerged as the only truly transformative candidate in the race. In the crucible that is a presidential campaign, his intellect, his temperament and equanimity under pressure consistently have been impressive. He has surrounded himself with smart, capable advisers who have helped him refine thorough, nuanced policy positions.

In a word, Mr. Obama has been presidential.

Meanwhile, Mr. McCain, the senior senator from Arizona, became the incredible shrinking man. He shrank from his principled stands in favor of a humane immigration policy. He shrank from his universal condemnation of torture and his condemnation of the politics of smear.

He even shrank from his own campaign slogan, “Country First,” by  selecting the least qualified running mate since the Swedenborgian shipbuilder Arthur Sewall ran as William Jennings Bryan’s No. 2 in 1896.

In making political endorsements, this editorial page is guided first by the principles espoused by Joseph Pulitzer in The Post-Dispatch Platform printed daily at the top of this page. Then we consider questions of character, life experience and intellect, as well as specific policy and issue positions. Each member of the editorial board weighs in.

On all counts, the consensus was clear: Barack Obama of Illinois should be the next president of the United States.

We didn’t know nine months ago that before Election Day, America would face its greatest economic challenge since the Great Depression. The crisis on Wall Street is devastating, but it has offered voters a useful preview of how the two presidential candidates would respond to a crisis.

Very early on, Mr. Obama reached out to his impressive corps of economic advisers and developed a comprehensive set of recommendations for addressing the problems. He set them forth calmly and explained them carefully.

Mr. McCain, a longtime critic of government regulation, was late to recognize the threat. The chief economic adviser of his campaign initially was former Sen. Phil Gramm, R-Texas, who had been one of the architects of banking deregulation. When the credit markets imploded, Mr. McCain lurched from one ineffectual grandstand play to another. He squandered the one clear advantage he had over Mr. Obama: experience.

Mr. McCain first was elected to Congress in 1982 when Mr. Obama was in his senior year at Columbia University. Yet the younger man’s intellectual curiosity and capacity — and, yes, also the skills he developed as a community organizer and his instincts as a political conciliator — more than compensate for his lack of more traditional Washington experience.

A presidency is defined less by what happens in the Oval Office than by what is done by the more than 3,000 men and women the president appoints to government office. Only 600 of them are subject to Senate approval. The rest serve at the pleasure of the president.

We have little doubt that Mr. Obama’s appointees would bring a level of competence, compassion and intellectual achievement to the executive branch that hasn’t been seen since the New Frontier. He has energized a new generation of Americans who would put the concept of service back in “public service.”

Consider that while Mr. McCain selected as his running mate Gov. Sarah Palin of Alaska, a callow and shrill partisan, Mr. Obama selected Sen. Joe Biden of Delaware. Mr. Biden’s 35-year Senate career has given him encyclopedic expertise on legislative and judicial issues, as well as foreign affairs.

The idea that 3,000 bright, dedicated and accomplished Americans would be joining the Obama administration to serve the public — as opposed to padding their resumés or shilling for the corporate interests they’re sworn to oversee — is reassuring. That they would be serving a president who actually would listen to them is staggering.

And the fact that Mr. Obama can explain his thoughts and policies in language that can instruct and inspire is exciting. Eloquence isn’t everything in a president, but it is not nothing, either.

Experience aside, the 25-year difference in the ages of Mr. McCain, 72, and Mr. Obama, 47, is important largely because Mr. Obama’s election would represent a generational shift. He would be the first chief executive in more than six decades whose worldview was not formed, at least in part, by the Cold War or Vietnam.

He sees the complicated world as it is today, not as a binary division between us and them, but as a kaleidoscope of shifting alliances and interests. As he often notes, he is the son of a Kenyan father and a mother from Kansas, an internationalist who yet acknowledges that America is the only nation in the world in which someone of his distinctly modest background could rise as far as his talent, intellect and hard work would take him.

Given the damage that has been done to America’s moral standing in the world in the last eight years — by a preemptory war, a unilateralist foreign policy and by policies that have treated both the Geneva Conventions and our own Bill of Rights as optional — Mr. Obama’s election would help America reclaim the moral high ground.

It also must be said that Mr. Obama is right on the issues. He was right on the war in Iraq. He is right that all Americans deserve access to health care and right in his pragmatic approach to meeting that goal. He is right on tax policy, infrastructure investment, energy policy and environmental issues. He is right on American ideals.

He was right when he said in his remarkable speech in March in Philadelphia that “In the end, then, what is called for is nothing more, and nothing less, than what all the world’s great religions demand: that we do unto others as we would have them do unto us. Let us be our brother’s keeper, Scripture tells us. Let us be our sister’s keeper. Let us find that common stake we all have in one another, and let our politics reflect that spirit as well.”

John McCain has served his country well, but in the end, he may have wanted the presidency a little too much, so much that he has sacrificed some of the principles that made him a heroic figure in war and in peace. In every way possible, he has earned the right to retire.

Finally, only at this late point do we note that Barack Obama is an African-American. Because of who he is and how he has run his campaign, that fact has become almost incidental to most Americans. Instead, his countrymen are weighing his talents, his values and his beliefs, judging him not by the color of his skin, but the content of his character.

That says something profound and good — about him as a candidate and about us as a nation.

199 comments

Comments are closed.

Boy! Who could have seen THIS one coming??? Everybody in my neighborhood was on pins and needles wondering which way the Post editorial board would go on this one!!! It has been so confusing, trying desparately to try to pick the smallest clues out of each headline, each Matson cartoon, each editorial. The platform makes it so hard. For two years, everybody I know has been trying to guess WHO the Post was going to choose!! I appreciate the guidance, however. I think this gives us a GREAT chance to put that old capitalist, free enterprise baggage behind us and really embrace the collectivist, socialist agenda that you have promoted so well, for so long! Thanks, Comrade!!

— Star20
9:40 pm October 10th, 2008

Pity the poor P-D delivery driver this Sunday … having to yell
“SORRY! SORRY! Really, really SORRY! SORRY!” with every tossed paper.

===

— BobZ.
11:05 pm October 10th, 2008

Beautifully done. Thank you.

— lmmaloney
11:12 pm October 10th, 2008

Sen. Obama offers leadership through his commitments to community, compassion and peace. Sen. Obama will make a very fine President.

Sen. McCain’s leadership has been smothered by ambition and incivility. I voted for McCain in 2000, and cannot do so again.

— Tim Hogan
11:23 pm October 10th, 2008

Barack Obama favors not only legal partial-birth abortion, but also the repeal of all parental notice laws on abortion and seeks to provide unlimited tax funding of abortion. Obama’s enthusiasm for abortion is unacceptable.

http://www.onenewsnow.com/Election2008/Default.aspx?id=280554

— Bill Hannegan
1:23 am October 11th, 2008

Mr. Hannigan,

One of the most dissapointing points in this campaign has been witnessing Christian Groups that I at one point had great respect for become just as GREAT DISgreat distortors as that one we learn through scripture is our enemy.

— D. Walker
3:58 am October 11th, 2008

Mr. Hannegan,

Sorry I was not able to correct my comment and the misspelling of your name, but my comment posted without my clicking submit for some unknown reason.

— D. Walker
4:02 am October 11th, 2008

Also,

I want to thank the Editorial for its honest display to the world of the HOPE, CHANGE and new direction that the majority of Americans are longing and desiring.

— D. Walker
4:08 am October 11th, 2008

Who is Barrack Obama?

Obama uses a symbol that is a rising sun inside a circle. What is the meaning of this?

Louis Farrakhan calls him, the Messiah and says that Obama will change the world. What is the meaning of this?

Obama was ‘friendly’ with Ayers, the unrepentant terrorist. What is the meaning of this?

Obama has a relationship with Rezco, a convicted criminal. What is the meaning of this?

Obama is tied to ACORN the fraudulent voting machine. What is the meaning of this?

Obama opposed the regulation of Fannie May and Freddie Mack the main causes of the economic crisis. What is the meaning of this?

Would you please connect the dots?

— Juan
8:05 am October 11th, 2008

Couldn’t have said it any better! This nation now can head into a brighter future for everybody that may actually pull us triumphantly out of our current situation, dismal in all repects OR four more years of essentially the same policies that led us here, if not worse!!!

— J. Keller
8:09 am October 11th, 2008

Great! Maybe MO will turn BLUE instead of RED. It’s time we get rid of the evil republicans who have driven this country right over a cliff. A person voting for a republican is like a chicken voting for Col. Sanders. Senseless.

— diana
8:20 am October 11th, 2008

Barack Obama may prove to be the greatest thing to happen to the U.S. presidency in a long time; especially given the mess he’d be handed!!! These people who holler about socialism had better return every penny of unemployment, social security benefits, every dollar ever robbed from their bank (FDIC), food stamps, workman’s comp., police protection, financial aid, school aid, wages paid at time and a half, mile driven on the interstate or state highways, emergency warning system, disaster relief, workplace protection, wages over minimum wage, medicaid benefit, medicare benefit and so forth they have EVER received, then they might have a little credibility! OR we can just let corporations make slave labor out of ya! YOU BETCHA!!

— J. Keller
8:29 am October 11th, 2008

Obama is still pretty firmly to the “right” side of the political spectrum when it comes to foreign policy; when he talks about Iran, Cuba, Venezuela and “American leadership in Latin America” the words could be coming from Dick Cheney’s mouth. Two of his principal economic advisers are Rubin and Sommers, who helped to bring about the current implosion on Wall Street. In 1972 I voted for Nixon, believing the leopard could change its spots; I was wrong. On the other hand, perhaps De Gaulle had a point when he said politicians are always surprised when taken at their word, because they don’t believe what they say and don’t expect others to do so either. I certainly won’t be voting for McCain, and I cling to some hope that in office Obama will prove better about foreign policy, economic policy and spending priorities than his campaign rhetoric indicates. If so, I will vote to reelect him in 2012; but for now I am undecided about whether I should withhold my vote altogether or cast a vote for a third party candidate. Running the country on the right shoulder of the road is better than driving it through the ditch, but pulling it fully onto the roadway would allow us to go farther, faster, and safer.

— Alan Barbour
8:41 am October 11th, 2008

Incredibly well written. You can tell a lot about an administration based on how they run their campaign. The world is watching, and for the most part, praying for an Obama victory. It is a great responsibility being an American citizen, please take this responsibility seriously.

— TND
8:43 am October 11th, 2008

First off, I would like to say THANK YOU, VERY MUCH for endorsing Barack Obama! I live in st. louis and I have to tell you that this is a OBAMA city! Mccain, sat on the board of right wing racist, for many years. Sarah PAINLIN, husband has been on the alaska separist board for numerous of years, and they are considered to be a right wing group. Instead of talking about the economy, Painlin stances on abortion, stem cell reseach, animal rights, she rather bash Obama! Instead of Mccain asking Obama himself about the AYERS connection, he hides behind his wife, and painlin skirt..AND this is the man that always brag that he was a POW! Flip him

— Ms. Gunn
8:43 am October 11th, 2008

Very well written. After 8 years of terror, it’s amazing that we have an opportunity to elect a ma of Obama’s character, vision, and dedication.

— A Long
8:44 am October 11th, 2008

OBAMA/BIDEN 2008

— Ms Gunn
8:49 am October 11th, 2008

For all who agree with Sen McCain’s tortured requests for Sen Obama to answer questions about his relationship with Bill Ayers, let’s do this; 1st, have John McCain explain why he shouldn’t be accused of consorting with domestic terrorists, since the board that Sen Obama served on with Ayers was sponsored by Walter and Lee Annenberg’s educational charity. Lee Anenberg is a Major contributor to and supporter of John McCain’s campaign. Then, we can have Sen McCain explain why Todd Palin is consorting with domestic terrorists through his association with the Alaska Independence Party, whose founder states in his platform that he is not living under “America’s damned flag”, and Alaska should secede from this union. And, btw, Mrs Palin has addressed this lovely group, so she’s consorting too. I’m just saying, what’s good for the goose…..

— Joyce
9:04 am October 11th, 2008

An excellent editorial, making an excellent recommendation. McCain’s nasty, disgusting, and divisive campaign has made him ineligible for the presidency. His selection of the Alaska fascist Palin has made his selection unwise. He is unlikely to survive his first term, especially if Sarah brings him coffee occasionally. Obama has shown, day in and day out, that he is a rare bird indeed. He is calm, intelligent, sensible, and chooses good associates. He has run an excellent campaign. His selection of Biden was masterful. He is the only choice.

— POed Lib
9:12 am October 11th, 2008

Content of his character? You mean Rezko, Ayers, Dohrn, Klonsky, Giannoulias, Wright. What nonsense!

— Reality
9:36 am October 11th, 2008

Wow that is the best piece I have read on this election, that is the kind of writing that makes me proud to be a Missourian and an American Thank You St. Louis Post Dispatch.

— Michael Six
9:38 am October 11th, 2008

He even shrank from his own campaign slogan, “County First,

Correct County with Country.

Thanks! Good article!!!

— Darlene
10:07 am October 11th, 2008

I am so excited about this election. Barack Obama is what america needs at this moment in time.

— Lakisha Jackson
10:07 am October 11th, 2008

Wonderfully written. Let’s hope that Missouri pulls the country out of misery by electing a wise and capable man, Sen. Barack Obama.

— Catherine C
10:07 am October 11th, 2008

Beautifully written. Points out all the reasons Obama should and will be the next POTUS.

Don’t care for using the word “shrill” to describe Palin, though. That’s a sexist codeword when used on women.

— Jennifer
10:08 am October 11th, 2008

From Chesapeake, Virginia:

What a wonderful piece of literature. You spoke to my heart. I agree, it says a lot about us as a country…and yes about Senator Obama as a candidate.

— G. Bazemore
10:21 am October 11th, 2008

Beautifully written. You have so eloquently expressed everything I believe about this election.

— Lisa, Memphis, TN
10:24 am October 11th, 2008

Juan, didn’t your Mom tell you “it’s better to be thought a fool than ……”
Bush and the Republicans are a bunch of crooks and fraudsters, Abramoff, Fabian, Stevens, Cheney, Cunningham, the list is endless, yet you can only name one man in connection with Obama.
Obama was 6yo when Ayers was in his zenith. Ayers was never convicted and today he is a respectable Professor and a valued member of society.
ACORN is no Diebold but I wish it could offer some strong opposition to the
Diebold election fraud that Bush perpetrated on society to get himself elected to the WH.
It has been a Republican government for the last 8 years. You can’t blame keep on blaming the Democrats/Obama for the failings of this government which are monumental. Take a closer look at Lehman Brothers, stuffed to the rafters with ‘Bushes’ yet has been declared bankrupt.

— lydia
10:40 am October 11th, 2008

Brilliant, clear and concise writing!!

I have printed off this editorial and saved it among my clips of this historic campaign because it says ALL that needs to be said to people going to vote this election cycle.

I wish more had been said about the diversity of his biology/physiology, and also his worldly and career experiences. Obama is the candidate who has experience working at the community level, the state government level and the federal level and he would understand the impact of federal policies on people throughout government.

Obama is a citizen of the world and hence a representative citizen of the human race. The world will be lucky to be led by a man of such deep character, compassion, empathy, intelligeny and consesus building

— Linda
10:47 am October 11th, 2008

In perhaps the greatest irony in American history an individual who: because of numerous long-term subversive associations; admitted heavy drug use; and, failure to produce a birth certificate - could NOT pass a basic FBI background check for an initial security clearance, is considered to be a serious contender for the Presidency of the United States! How is it possible that a man who is widely recognized as the least experienced; and, most radical far-left extremist ever nominated by a major political party could beguile so many simply because he’s a SLICK TALKER? In perhaps the ONLY forthright moment of his extended campaign, Obama, while being interviewed on ABC, lamented the dispersions frequently cast against: “MY MUSLIM FAITH”. The ascendancy of this charlatan to the Presidency would unquestionably mark the portending demise of our Constitutional Republic that so many have shed their precious blood to nurture and preserve. Greg Neubeck

— Greg Neubeck
10:48 am October 11th, 2008

“Alaska fascist Palin” — POed Lib Ah, jeez … NTSA from an Obama At All Costs supporter

“the board that Sen Obama served on with Ayers was sponsored by Walter and Lee Annenberg’s educational charity” — Joyce

Not exactly … the board recv’d a grant (not the same as “sponsored by”) from Annenberg’s foundation.

“You can tell a lot about an administration based on how they run their campaign” — TND

Oh, really…? “Obama’s campaign … seemingly improvisational …often overwhelmed … and un-informed … Obama holds news conferences, but seldom banters with the reporters who’ve been following him for thousands of miles around the country. Go figure.” — CBS News’ Dean Reynolds:
http://www.cbsnews.com/blogs/2008/10/07/politics/fromtheroad/entry4507703.shtml

“Ayers was never convicted and today he is a respectable Professor and a valued member of society” — Lydia

Hmmm… “… guilty as sin and free as a bird.” ~ BillAyers

Lydia, low standards and poor character judgment is no way to go through life.

===

— BobZ.
10:53 am October 11th, 2008

Mr. Neubeck,

Barack Obama’s birth certificate from the Department of Health of the State of Hawaii is available on the web for all to see. So are repudiations of all the other untruths in your post. Senator Obama will be a transformative President whose administration will benefit you and all other Americans. We are blessed to have a person of this intellect an character actually interested in serving us at this critical juncture. Thank you, Post-Dispatch, and Mr. Neubeck, have a great day.

— Julie McNamara,Ph.D.
10:56 am October 11th, 2008

Ok, #1 I don’t vote. It seems like a carrot on a stick that was dangled in front of my tribe to keep us from stormin the “masters” house. But it’s gotten to a point now that all these people that I know, people that I considered to be fairly intelligent people are turning into hypocrites. If you honestly are not gonna vote for the best candidate because you have some kinda principle at stake, than you should probably take a step back and don’t vote. MCCAIN seems like he would be a horrible decision here. These guys seem like complete brown shirt goose steppin rabble rousing fascists. We, like Germany Pre WWII, are in an economic crisis. Our dollar is slippin, people are losing their homes and are very mad and angry. In steps Palin and McCain and they start with the maybe its THEM talk, in fact maybe HE’S one of them. Ok ok, I know this maybe goin a little to far, and I hope our government wouldn’t betray us like this, send us down that path. But the fact that we have American soldiers blatantly being deployed in a peace keeping status on our own soil makes me think we are preparing some massive problems. Oil riots, Food Riots, Race Riots, who knows? I do know this, it seems like a cool head would prevail not a bunch of fear mongers.

— Lovecraft
11:00 am October 11th, 2008

Thanks for the official pronouncement of your opinion. Anyone reading your paper has known this for months because of your one-sided reporting.

“It also must be said that Mr. Obama is right on the issues. He was right on the war in Iraq. He is right that all Americans deserve access to health care and right in his pragmatic approach to meeting that goal. He is right on tax policy, infrastructure investment, energy policy and environmental issues. He is right on American ideals.”

Yes, he is definitely not “RIGHT”. Absolutely, he is LEFT. He was trained by the best in socialist, liberal thinking.

Can you tell me what “the content of his character” is? Is it saying or doing anything to get elected? Is it that he is such a reformer who has never challenged anyone but just votes with his party to get along? Tell me what he has reformed!

The only “change” we will undergo if he is elected is we will have more unemployment, more taxes, more government programs, and more government interference in our lives! He has never changed a thing in his career!

— marmacmal
11:02 am October 11th, 2008

Wow, a lot of big words yet still no clear plan…I will agree with everything you have said if, in 4 years I see the following:

The income, property and sales tax percentages are lower than what I am paying right now (I do not make over $249,999 a year).

Everyone has healthcare and I am not paying anymore in premiums or a tax, whichever the case may be, AND things are running smoothly.

America is energy independent and gas is under 3.50 per gallon.

My stock porfolio has substantially increased.

The unemployment rate is under 4%.

America has not been attacked by terrorists.

— jmas
11:16 am October 11th, 2008

Lydia,

You are about to lose your country, your future and your hope. And nobody is taking them away from you but you are giving them away to a deceitful man.

Obama, his wife and his associations do hate this country, what it has stand for since it was founded.

Michelle Obama said it clearly: it is only now that she has been proud of her country. Reverend Wright was clear enough, Ayers was clear enough.

Just alone that Farrakhan calls Obama the Messiah should be proof enough.

Bush made mistakes might have been whatever you want but Bush does not hate this country. Obama does.

Let me say it again, somebody might wake up:

Who is Barrack Obama?

Obama uses a symbol that is a rising sun inside a circle. What is the meaning of this?

Louis Farrakhan calls him, the Messiah and says that Obama will change the world. What is the meaning of this?

Obama was ‘friendly’ with Ayers, the unrepentant terrorist. What is the meaning of this?

Obama has a relationship with Rezco, a convicted criminal. What is the meaning of this?

Obama is tied to ACORN the fraudulent voting machine. What is the meaning of this?

Obama opposed the regulation of Fannie May and Freddie Mack the main causes of the economic crisis. What is the meaning of this?

Would you please connect the dots?

Juan

— Juan
11:18 am October 11th, 2008

Thank you for your great analysis. Aside from all the hate and struggle, I believe it makes sense to appeal to the good in people and I find your text does that - irrespectively if one agrees or disagrees with your opinion.

— Sebastian
11:19 am October 11th, 2008

Well, McCain’s own campaign sabotaged his chances. He should have sacked his advisors for running such a nasty, hateful campaign. McCain was demolished by Bush’s people in 2000 Republican primaries — why would he allow the same tactics against others? John sold out his integrity for votes.

— Ron
11:19 am October 11th, 2008

Oops, forgot one:

No more government programs!

— jmas
11:21 am October 11th, 2008

What is utterly amazing to me is the fact that if Obama wanted to get a job with the FBI or with the secret service he would be unable to due to his past relationships with radicals and terrorists and yet there is a great chance he will be the next President of the US?

Does anyone but me see a huge problem with this?

— Scott
11:24 am October 11th, 2008

Sarah “Abuse of Power” Palin isn’t helping the cause much either …

— Ron
11:26 am October 11th, 2008

I think the editorial boards consensus opinion is spot on and glad to see it. There has been a long history of political zealots in both parties doing their best to polarize the voting public: one candidate has to be the good one and the other has to be the bad one. And usually this is done through a process of demonizing. And any reasoned conscious person has to ask whether or not this really helps and secures our democracy. I think not. About the most successful thing the McCain campaign has done has been to perpetuate the vitriolic ranting of a small group of voters who have little interest in accuracy and fairness, and exploit their ignorance. Evidence of this is clear in reading these blog comments. When faced with unreasoned accusations, how is one to respond? One really cannot address illogical thinking and fear mongering with logic and reason. That’s right - go ahead and demonize Obama: since you can’t talk about his policies or the real issues confronting America. Meanwhile many of McCain’s own flag waving supporters are so fanatical in their warped sensibilities, they are now booing their own candidate! How does this happen? Keep on rockin’ on the free world….

— k. garth
11:29 am October 11th, 2008

Scott,

But of course there is a big problem: Obama would not be given security clearance to work in a local Police Department because of his terrorist connections and yet the media wants to elect him President of the United States.

Don’t you notice the collective hysteria?

Louis Farrakhan calls Obama “the Messiah”! What does Louis Farrakhan see in Obama to call him “the Messiah”?

A question: who are we selling, rather giving away, our lives?

America, wake up!

Juan

— Juan
11:38 am October 11th, 2008

You know the feeling you get when you’re reading a really good book and you just can’t wait to turn the page? That’s the way I feel about American History. Gone are the old grey men who served us well in their time, but their time has passed. Gone is the Berlin Wall, gone is the USSR, gone is Fidel Castro, gone are the last few remnants of spite and malice from Vietnam. While the country is still faced with monumental challenges, be it hate espousing religious zealots in the caves of Afghanistan, or the pervasive miasma of fear and doubt on the Wall Streets of the world, the citizens of the world are overwhelmingly on the march towards freedom, liberty, security, and equality. They cannot be forever constrained. My generation, the generation that produced poets who penned “Blowin’ In The Wind” and “Give Peace A Chance,” also issued Osama bin Laden, Charles Manson, and Sirhan Sirhan. We pointed towards the horizon, but didn’t have a clue how to get there. Now, for the first time in my life, I will be casting my vote for a presidential candidate who is younger than I am. I do so with confidence. It’s a good feeling. Maybe, just maybe this is the time. The page is turning…

— Commander Barkfeather
11:39 am October 11th, 2008

Great column. I agree with the editorial board’s detailed reasoning for endorsing Sen. Obama.

— Leslie Ellis
11:41 am October 11th, 2008

Ok, Jmas,

why don’t we all break out our tinfoil hats and start analyzing all the symbols that the Obama campaign uses. Or lets start stringing together our own Octopus cabal type organization that for some reason didn’t control Bush and McCain, but chose a half black dude to represent. Considering that most people on this planet either seem to really hate Jews or Blacks or both it seems like that would be a horrible decision for a shadow organization to go with. Also Farakahn is a moron. Just cuz everybody has an opinion doesn’t make it special right. Also the sun in the circle, I think it means dawn, like the dawning of a new whatever… right. Or maybe it’s his old star system. Point is, you guys are grasping at very thin straws now and dancin around the issues. McCains son was on the board at Freddie and Fannie. Palin is in league with an independence movement that was backed by Iran, Palin hangs out with witch hunting conmen, Palin uses the power she wields as a Governor for personal vendettas. Most of all, I have yet to see Obama just sit back and keep his mouth closed when someone at a rally starts yellin epithets and how we need to kill the other candidate. Oh yes, it’s a completely different crowd at those rallies.

— Lovecraft
11:41 am October 11th, 2008

Lovecraft,

Has Farrakhan ever called a presidential candidate “the Messiah”?

Even the beauty of the electoral process is being destroyed by ACORN’s fraud.

America, beware of the night. It does not look like dawn to me, it looks like dusk.

The legitimate desire for change is being used by the opportunist, like the desire of knowledge that Eve had was used by the serpent to trick her.

Juan

— Juan
11:53 am October 11th, 2008

Uhhh, Juan, Farrakahn doesn’t like white people, buddy. So far, at least according to my history classes, every candidate for that seat has been a white man. My Dad, who grew up during the times when a black child could be tied to a weight and thrown into the river by an angry white mob also has some reservations about whites. But Farrakahn’s opinion about the the nation are just as important as yours and mine. But thats about it its an opinion. And all this talk of messiahs and serpents is delving into the realm of myth anyway. The whole idea that someone would call someone a messiah should dismiss their argument. Serpents in the garden or serpents wearing suits and controlling us, we’ve always collectively had something against snakes.
And something else, Juan. I know that some people in this nation have always had their identity in tack. They’ve always had their Hope (Esperanza), but it’s time for blacks and Latinos and whites and Asians and everyone else to leave behind all those labels I just put out. You talk of symbols, well do your research and get back to me on the most powerful symbol that everyone keeps looking over in all this.

— Lovecraft
12:07 pm October 11th, 2008

Thank you for this beautiful article. It has brightened my spirit. Of late I have noted a number of videos on youtube that have caused me to wonder what has happened to the America I knew. Being a child of the 50’s, living through Vietnam and “that Catholic” being elected President, I remember divisions in this country, but NEVER to the extent I have viewed recently. I pray that my greatest fears are not realized and that instead, my greatest hopes are realized. A bringing together of this country and its people.
When McCain was selected by the Republicans I thought, good, I will have someone of integrity to vote for. Then when Obama was selected, I again, thought, now I have two good choices.
After the selection of Ms. Palin, I saw the campaign of Senator McCain degenerate. As a former Republican I became ashamed that I had ever been associated with such a dismal party, let alone be a former elected official for the Republican party.
I thank Senator McCain for finally making a supportive comment of Senator Obama when one of his supporters made another untrue statement. I only wish it had not taken him so long to confront the wickedness of some.
I Pray the Lord God Bless will Bless our Country and Heal the rifts and hatred within our citizenry.

— Phyllis
12:08 pm October 11th, 2008

Juan,
Abraham Lincoln said the “empty barrel makes the most noise”. That statement was true in Lincoln’s time and it is true today.

I believe you are intellectually and morally dishonest as you do not speak from fact, only from your ideology. Your arguments are empty as they are not based upon fact, only smears from the right-wing.

You do, however, make a lot of empty noise.

— youngharry
12:09 pm October 11th, 2008

The world is watching this election very closely. They have already weighted in to state that they (the entire world) prefers Barack Obama to become the next President, according to all polls done on the question in just about every country.

And although Americans are generally ornery about outside countries having anything to say about our elections, this is one time that Americans may just want to listen up, as our very economic survival may depend on it.

It is a fact that there is a real lack of confidence in the American Financial Markets, and due to it, the world’s financial systems are collapsing. The world is looking towards the United States to see if we will have the guts to elect an innovative leader with eyes toward the future, or a limited older mindset with eyes towards the past.

Electing John McCain would send a signal to the global community that the United States of America is out to lunch. That the United States is too bigoted to move forward into the future. This is a message that would end up in a vote of Non confidence against the United States and all that it stands for, including its financial markets.

The awful truth is that electing John McCain as president would finish the United States as a world power….because as it has been said by many sources; a country that loses its economic might cannot maintain its military might. What Electing John McCain would result in is not an imaginative theory; it is a glimpse into a future that the world does not want to see, and the reasons are very real.

— Catherine Mc.
12:19 pm October 11th, 2008

Youngharry,

You do not see the hand writing in the walls.

When you wake up of your ‘change’ dream you will find yourself where you would not want to be.

Would you associate with somebody that curse your country like Rev. Wright did?

Would you associate with somebody who bombed your house and is unrepentant like Ayers is?

Juan

— Juan
12:20 pm October 11th, 2008

Your eloquence is equal to that of Obama’s. I was very moved by your words, by your analysis - and needless to say I agree wholeheartedly with your choice of Barack Obama to be the next President of the United States. Thank you.

— Natalie Roth
12:26 pm October 11th, 2008

K. Garth,
“vitriolic ranting of a small group of voters who have little interest in accuracy and fairness, and exploit their ignorance”

You can’t possibly be suggesting that it is only the McCain side doing this?

Both sides have supporters who resort to juvenile name calling, ignorant propaganda and downright unsubstantiated nastiness, and that includes some of the PD editorial writers and Matson the cartoonist.

— jmas
12:46 pm October 11th, 2008

Juan,

I suggest that you go read the definition related to the word “association” in a dictionary. Your comments and arguments made me laugh out loud. I also recommend that you look in your own backyard about an associative relationship, aka being married to, related to someone who was a member of an Alaskan political party (you now which one I am talking about), whose founder, J. Vogler, was willing to spit on the U.S. flag and bear arms to defend the independence of Alaska. This party was no less supported by the Iranian government when Vogler went in front of the UN in 1993 to demand Alaska’s freedom from the United States. I assume this is what we call maverick these days.

http://www.salon.com/opinion/feature/2008/10/07/palins_unamerican/index.html

— yulyyz
12:47 pm October 11th, 2008

Juan–

How do you know you don’t associate with people who have sorted pasts or have unsavory views about the US? Do you perform a background check on everyone with whom you may have casual or professional relationship? There are probably many of your associates who have done bad things in their past or have spouted racist and inflammatory words with which you disagree.

By the way, Michelle Obama said it was the first time she was REALLY proud of her country. She has always been proud, but her husband’s ascendancy to the Democratic candidacy made her even prouder. Duh. Amazing how Obama bashers love to omit that word, which completely changes the meaning of her quote.

In addition, many prominent Republicans are on the same boards as Obama and Ayers. Ayers was appointed by a staunch Republican who supports McCain–I guess, according to your logic, that makes both Annenburg and McCain terrorist sympathizers, too! Oh my!!

Tell me how you don’t like Obama’s plan in terms of turning the economy around, or give me valid criticism about his education plan. Tell me why, in rational, reasoned terms, why McCain’s plan for the economy and education are better. But stop the meaningless drivel. It’s just plain annoying, and only weakens your position, as well as McCain’s.

— loyola
12:54 pm October 11th, 2008

Just a quick Post Dispatch staffer note on a factual matter:

These claims that Obama could not receive a security clearance are false.

According to Steven Aftergood, who directs the Project on Government Secrecy for the Federation of American Scientists, Obama already HAS a security clearance by virtue of his being a sitting U.S. Senator.

In addition, the Bush administration has been working with BOTH the McCain and the Obama teams since last summer regarding an efficient transition to a new administration, regardless of which candidate wins. This takes on even more importance with U.S. forces engaged in military actions overseas and American intelligence services intensely monitoring potential terrorist activities.

As a consequence of this planning President Bush has authorized security clearances for additional members of the McCain and Obama staffs.

— Eric Mink
12:56 pm October 11th, 2008

To Bill Hannegan: Barack Obama wants to get beyond the verbal sparing of past elections on the abortion issue. I totally agree with protecting a woman’s right to choose. We must move beyond the legal/illegal discussion and talk about how we can reduce the number performed.

Whether abortions are legal or illegal, they will still be performed. Women with money and their own doctor will not have a problem. Poor women will be forced to return to the back alley and have to put their lives at risk.

If you really want to end abortions, we need to prevent unwanted pregnancies. If a woman does get pregnant, we as a society need to provide alternatives. Jimmy Carter was morally opposed to abortion when he was president. That is why he established the WIC program. It provided what he felt was an viable alternative, choice, for women.

Religious conservatives need to move beyond the rancor and decide whether they really want to end abortions or continue to use the issue as a wedge during elections.

— Tahoe Progressive
1:15 pm October 11th, 2008

Good for the Post Dispatch!

— Ed Szewczyk
1:27 pm October 11th, 2008

If Character matters as some try to claim, then McCain ties to real terrorists dwarf Obama’s alleged ties to someone who has never been convicted.

McCain addressed a conference of the far right Oregon Citizens Alliance in the early 90s. Where the speaker right before him praised a convicted domestic terrorist who attempted to murder a doctor. And who praised a bomber and arsonist.

McCain is also on the record praising a felon, who not only planned to assassinate a journalist; but is on the record advocating domestic terrorism against law enforcement officials.

McCain gushed the following to G. Gordon Liddy, who advocated domestic terrorism: “I’m proud of you, I’m proud of your family, It’s always a pleasure for me to come on your program, Gordon, and congratulations on your continued success and adherence to the principles and philosophies that keep our nation great.”

One “American Value” is “Innocent till proven guilty” and there is no statute of limitations on murder. Old DNA that exists on the stored evidence could be used to convict Ayers if he is in fact guilty of anything other that his admitted exaggerations in his book.

And then we have the The Palins’ un-American activities: Where her husband was a 7 year member of the Alaska Independence Party; and her many positive and uplifting messages to the AIP. Just wait till when the Media starts finally doing its job and starts to air the clips of the various video greetings she sent the AIP. And starts reporting on the fact that the AIP got Iran to support the AIP’s founder giving a speech at the U.N.

Imagine if the Obama’s had hooked up with a violently anti-American group in league with Iran like the AIP.

And let’s not forget McCain trying to defend bin Laden back in 1998. Back then when Clinton was warning people about bin Laden McCain was trying to defend bin Laden and said the following:

Look, is this guy, Laden, really the bad guy that’s depicted? Most of us have never heard of him before.

— Kuni
1:34 pm October 11th, 2008

PERFECT. Thank you.

— jls
1:51 pm October 11th, 2008

The fear mongering racists posting here should stop to think how ignorant they sound. What do these sheeple think would happen EVEN IF Obama was Muslim? Is he going to institute sharia? Is he going to attack Israel? Is he going to make women wear a bhurka and walk a foot behind their husbands? Is he going to raid the treasury for his cronies and destroy our economic system? Never mind, that’s been done.

On reflection, however, the low esteem which these cretins have for our constitution should come as no surprise.

— Tim Harrington
1:59 pm October 11th, 2008

I agree with every line of this editorial. Obama has shown himself to be worthy. McCain sadly has shown his feet of clay.

— Sarah
2:05 pm October 11th, 2008

What I do not understand is why so many are concerned about Bill Ayers, someone who has turned his life around, and give nary a thought to the relationship that the Palins have with the Alaskan Independence Party. Todd Palin was a member until recently. Don’t be lazy, check out the party’s platform, Joe Voegel etc. And why does McCain’s relationship with Phil Gramm, of the Enron exception, not bother you?

Please, I implore you do some research.

— Karen
2:07 pm October 11th, 2008

Simply eloquent! I hope that this endorsement provides the tipping point for those who are undecided. Obama is the future. The alternative is too frightening to consider.

— Lisa
2:08 pm October 11th, 2008

To the Post staffer:

There is a big difference between elected officials and appointed officials.

No government agency could deny a security clearance to a candidate to the presidency because security clearances are not spelled out in the constitution.

So that Obama have a clearance as a senator and as a candidate does not change the fact that he would not receive it if he were applying for a paid job.

What are FBI checks for?

All of you are so blind that are confusing dusk with dawn.

America is slipping into the dark night of “the Messiah”.

I hope and pray that you would not have to regret the support you are providing to Obama.

Juan

— Juan
2:34 pm October 11th, 2008

Karen,

Ayers have not turned his life around.

He is unrepentant to this day. His regret is that he did not do enough bombings.

Juan

— Juan
2:38 pm October 11th, 2008

Tim Harrington

Obama might not attack Israel but he will not fire a shot for Israel.

I see this happening:

Iran and its allies will attack Israel and Obama will declare a ‘national alert’, will send the planes and the ships, will go on national TV and ‘condemn’ the aggression and ‘demand’ than an immediate cease fire and call for the United Nations to intervene.

He will not fire a shot, nothing will happen and Israel will be destroyed.

Juan

— Juan
2:51 pm October 11th, 2008

Ah, jeez … NTSA from a Post-Dispatch staffer.

Mink, why on earth would you use FAS as a reference for anything? And Steven Aftergood … it’s as if somebody tried passing off Gary Benoit as an expert.

There’s Security Clearance, Top … Deep … Family Jewels-level, etc. You well know that were Barack Obama a government contractor he would have extreme hurdles to overcome (dare I say — hide) before getting even a basic security clearance.

You’ve got access to Lexis/Nexis … how about some real research on your part. Find out EXACTLY what security level Obama holds.

http://i31.photobucket.com/albums/c358/MsFalconersCabanaBoy/PostItObama.png

===

— BobZ.
3:02 pm October 11th, 2008

Juan,

The best thing we can do is to read articles from different media and inclinations. Also, is important to read biographies and the comments of Political scientists and economists. Once you try your best at this reading and with an open mind (non biased), then you’ll learn to see from a different perspectives and just this action will guide you to a broader (deep) thinking.

I did it, and trust me in this, its open a whole world of knowledge and possibilities.
Often, I read the German Spiegel Magazine, the BBC of England, The NY Times, LA Times,Washington Post,also I had read biographies of President Clinton, Hillary Clinton, Al Gore, Sen.Obama, Pres. Bush, Sen. McCain, Malcom X, Martin Luther King, Mahatma Ghandy, Mother Teresa..

I speak Spanish, English, German and read some level of French and live in Europe. And as I’d told you before:

Reading from different perspectives makes you a well inform person.

…and don’t try to give me your opinion until you did all the reading that I’ve done.

— Liam
3:23 pm October 11th, 2008

Beautifully stated–everything expressed recognizes the high-mindedness of Obama. Thank you for being so perceptive and honorable in writing this piece and for openly supporting a great man for president.

— Auda Marie
3:36 pm October 11th, 2008

Liam,

All Obama’s associations are factual: Michelle Obama, Reverend Wright and Bill Ayers all have said and done what I have posted.

I do not understand why you are throwing all your knowledge to me.

You spoke of your readings and your traveling but knowledge is not wisdom to begin with. And as I use to tell my Ivy League graduated son, more often than not, degrees do cloud one’s reasoning as it is obviously happening with you: you warned me not to try to give you my opinion when you have given me yours. That looks to me like elitism, of course, it had to be: Obama like elitism.

Juan

— Juan
3:45 pm October 11th, 2008

Bravo. John McCain and Sarah Palin’s rallies of anger and hate are the last thing this country needs after the last eight years of division and our current economic crisis.

It’s time for Americans to come together, as best we can, and move our country forward. Obama will be a strong, intelligent and respected leader for the U.S. and the world.

— Lori
3:49 pm October 11th, 2008

I read your article and I admire it.
I am however, very disappointed of all those anti-Obama persons who are indeed endorsing all you have said through their attacks and their anger. These people are full of so much hate that they are actually blind to see what the rest of the world has seen. They are bigoted, hateful and just like those they admire (McCain and Palin)ambitious and self centered. Country first means that the USA should establish its dignity in the world. Either these selfish people are very naive or very stupid that they do not realize the value of this.

— Michael
3:51 pm October 11th, 2008

Very well said. Thank you.

— Julianne
3:58 pm October 11th, 2008

Let me start by saying I have not seen such beautifully written journalism in many years. Just reading this piece was a pleasure in itself because of the wonderful way it was written. Second, I agree on all points that you made. Our country is in crisis, our world is crumbling around us, and we need leadership — but we also need a leader who has new ideas and new ways of thinking. I see all of this in Obama. McCain has served his country admirably, and he shall always be remembered for that, but now is the time to pass the torch to the next generation of American leadership.

— Robert Stinnett
4:02 pm October 11th, 2008

Lori,

The current crisis was provoked by Obama’s friends Barney Frank and Christopher Dodd with their refusal to regulate Freddie Mack and Fannie Mae. And Obama is profiting from it.

Michael,

Obama put a cat in a bag and it is selling it to you as it were a rabbit.

Juan

— Juan
4:05 pm October 11th, 2008

Michael,
Apparently you don’t read these blogs much. If the PD had endorsed McCain you would see just as much bigoted, hateful, naive, selfish, angry and self centered comments, only they would be against McCain and Palin.

— jmas
4:08 pm October 11th, 2008

What a beautiful, articulate and accurate endorsement. Thank you, Post-Dispatch editorial board. You are one of the few public voices that defy the popular perception that Missouri (or should I say Missourah) is full of backwater yokels. Thank you for doing your part to keep St. Louis one of the bluest cities on the map!

— Jill B.
4:13 pm October 11th, 2008

Have you not noticed that these days Obama agrees a lot with Bush?

Obama agrees with Bush on North Korea, while McCain, of all people, disagrees.

Are you editorialists that blind? Would you please pay attention? What are you doing to America?

Juan

— Juan
4:14 pm October 11th, 2008

Very nice editorial. Let’s hope we see a big Obama win here in November. The country is sick of the dirty politics McCain and Palin play.

— Charlie
4:15 pm October 11th, 2008

Juan and friends of Juan
The more you write all these nasty comments the more people become attracted to Obama. This is called “Positive Psychology”. So if you are really supporting McCain, then write good things about him and stop attacking Obama and his supporters.
I am giving you this lesson as I am a psychologist and know how people react to the negative comments!

— Michael
4:25 pm October 11th, 2008

That was truly a moving and well written piece. Bravo.

— K Chen
4:38 pm October 11th, 2008

Michael,

My comments are factual comments.

Obama’s associations would disqualify him to obtain security clearance for many jobs.

Would you say that the agencies that do check backgrounds are being ‘negative’?

I bet that if they were McCain associates you would think otherwise.

Juan

— Juan
4:43 pm October 11th, 2008

Juan–

Unless Obama actually applied for a security clearance and was denied, your assertion that he wouldn’t get one is merely conjecture and opinion, not fact.

Even as a Senator, if the FBI or Secret Service had issues about his trustworthiness, he would not have been given clearance to see classified information.

Do you know the difference between conjecture and fact, Juan? From your postings, you don’t seem to understand the meaning of those words.

— loyola
5:24 pm October 11th, 2008

“Have you not noticed that these days Obama agrees a lot with Bush?

Obama agrees with Bush on North Korea, while McCain, of all people, disagrees.”

Juan, with all due respect, you’re incredibly foolish. Obama agrees with Bush? WRONG, it’s the other way around. Obama has held these views about diplomacy long before Bush was through destroying our reputation, and in fact, it has been pointed out numerous times by those who actually *pay attention* that Obama was the only one who spoke of Pakistan being a focal point while the rest of the candidates and Bush admin. simply called him “naive” for besmirching an ally like Pakistan. Recently, Gen. Petraeus essentially endorsed Obama’s military’s policies. What you erroneously define as Obama’s agreeing with Bush, is in fact, Obama’s foresight that you refuse to acknowledge.

— Donna
5:33 pm October 11th, 2008

Loyola,

Do you imagine that the Bush administration had refused to give Obama ‘clearance’ to receive the briefings that presidential candidates receive?

His position as a presidential candidate overrides all other issues because by that mere condition he is entitled to receive the information.

And there is precisely the paradox: the American people is giving him a clearance that he would not have received if he were applying for a job in the intelligence services.

Conjecture? Let us put it this way: Obama associated with Ayers that is an unrepentant terrorist and lied about the association; Obama sat in a Church for twenty years listening to the preaching of Rev. Wright that obviously hates the American political system and he applies for a clearance: the only way that he would have given the clearance is if he had been working for the FBI or CIA during that time. Now was he?

Do you want to call it ‘conjecture’?

Well it might be a ‘conjecture’ in the sense that it has not happened but to assume that he would have been given the clearance for a paid job in the intelligence services without being an informant is to stretch the imagination beyond the breaking point.

I call that common sense rather than conjecture.

And that is what, in my opinion, the Obama endorsers are lacking: common sense.

Juan

— Juan
5:48 pm October 11th, 2008

Donna,

Are you paying attention?

Obama does not say anything until somebody does take action and then he steals the show.

Obama, “the Messiah”, as anointed by Farrakhan, is a magician that masters the use of smoke and mirrors.

The best example of this is this article from Politico.com that most certainly is not a pro McCain site. The article is titled:

“Obama cautious, vague in economic crisis”

http://www.politico.com/news/stories/1008/14484.html

Please read it!

Juan

— Juan
5:56 pm October 11th, 2008

Juan–

Being someone who had a security clearance while working for the U.S. Government, and being friends with several people who actually conducted security checks and made security classification determinations, I think I’m in a better position than you to know whether or not a casual association through a charitable foundation, or attending a church where the preacher would state his opinions regarding racism in America, would have disqualified Obama from a security clearance. It takes a whole lot more than what you claim to deny it–if that were all it took, I know several folks who never would have gotten clearance. A few folks with whom I worked attended very (white) racist churches or had FAMILY who were former KKK members, yet had very high clearances.

Don’t talk about what you know nothing.

— loyola
5:57 pm October 11th, 2008

Juan, I HAVE been paying attention, and your attempt to connect Obama to Bush considering the obvious about John “90%” McCain is laughable. Some of us were listening to Obama over a year ago and the things you now claim as Obama agreeing with Bush is ridiculous when I l-i-s-t-e-n-e-d to Obama myself… a long time BEFORE diplomacy or focus on Pakistan was even considered by the Bush admin. It’s people like you who prefer arguing about a *hypothetical* Obama presidency rather than deal with the *reality* of what the GOP has done for eight years. People are not dead or in foreclosure because an old, black, former Marine and preacher is repeating the words of a former Ambassador named Edward Peck. People are not losing their life’s savings because of Bill Ayers.

Interestingly enough, you people enjoy bringing up all of these boogeymen, yet you can’t seem to tell us what Obama did (legislatively) that is a reflection of whatever associations he may have had. It is not the Dems that have allowed the worst elements of the party to dictate the platform of the party. The GOP is expected to flock to the Robertsons, Dobsons and Hagees of the world for *political* ends, which results in attempts to stifle progress in our nation.

Enjoy your evening.

— Donna
6:11 pm October 11th, 2008

Loyola,

Why are you bringing up the KKK? Are you playing the race card?

Obama endorsed a book written by Ayers about education where Ayers proposes a radical educational system that would undermine the American political system.

The association was never casual.

And since you are demanding facts, your claimed experience in security clearances is not factual, at least for the readers.

By telling me not to use common sense and that I “do not know what I am talking about” you are showing that Obama like elitism that many of his supporters have.

Beware of “the Messiah”! With the ‘devotion’ that many of his supporters show to him we might be in for some awful surprises.

Juan

— Juan
6:18 pm October 11th, 2008

“These claims that Obama could not receive a security clearance are false.

According to Steven Aftergood, who directs the Project on Government Secrecy for the Federation of American Scientists, Obama already HAS a security clearance by virtue of his being a sitting U.S. Senator.

— Eric Mink”

He was GRANTED a clearance, politicians dont go through the back ground checks and vetting process that real people do. If were to actually fill out the paper work, the question about associating with people who called for the violent over through of the US government would be a problem. But the last thing I would expect from the Post Disgrace’s editorial staff is honesty.

I could have saved the Post Disgrace a lot of time writing this, it could have been written months ago:

We support the democrat.

— Si Vis Pacem Para Bellum
6:19 pm October 11th, 2008

Donna,

You are right. The present crisis is not the result of Rev. Wright’s hate for America.

It is the result of the corruption of Barney Frank and Christopher Dodd among others, the silence of Obama and the complicity of many.

You are right also that I can not point out to anything Obama has done in Congress because he has done nothing.

But Obama, “the Messiah”, will do plenty if he is the White House.

I pray and hope it will not happen.

Juan

— Juan
6:28 pm October 11th, 2008

Juan, I have taken note of your admonitions and warnings about Obama. You have made your point loud and clear. Based, on the information I have gathered from different sources during this very long election season, I simply do not share your views. That being said, I have also taken note that you have provided no answers about what it is that you find positive about McCain and the Republican party. Is it to much to ask that you express why McCain’s ideas and policies are better instead of insisting that we all come to dislike Obama as much as you do? What good will that do the country? The american people are hungry for solutions. For specifics about how we will solve the health care crisis, the financial crisis, etc. No amount of character assassination can hide the fact that the republicans have offered no solutions to the mess we’re in.

— Jen
6:35 pm October 11th, 2008

Juan whoever-you-are,

This is not your own personal message board or blog. You have submitted your well worn comments many times today and it is obvious your attitude and perspectives on the matter. Since you have taken multiple opportunities to espouse your opinions, I would suggest you move on to a real message board to find the sympathetic responses you seem to desire so much. As in the words of John Lennon singing in the Beatles song Revolution: “You ain’t gonna make it with anyone anyhow.” Good luck to you.

— time for no bs
6:44 pm October 11th, 2008

What a well-written piece. I am as hopeful now about the future as I can remember being since 1992. The last eight years have been awful.

— Spencer Klein
6:54 pm October 11th, 2008

Jen,

I agree with you completely that Bush has not provided solutions. And I also agree that McCain has not proposed much. But Obama hasn’t either.

I see it this way: a person with gangrene in one leg does not have any other choice but to cut it off. Because of these associations Obama is like gangrene. The country will be worse off with him than with McCain because the country will capitulate to her enemies and the political system will be assailed by Obama. The best choice would have been Hillary Clinton but she is not running. And please remember that these very same Obama’s associations were pointed out by Hillary Clinton, have we forgotten?

If I see my wife in bed with another guy, do I really need to explain why I would not want her?

Mister “time for no bs”:

Are we already ‘silencing’ the opposition? With Obama, “the Messiah”, it will happen.

Juan

— Juan
7:02 pm October 11th, 2008

Juan,

Still did not address the AIP association. Interesting… Based on your exceptional thought process, I assume that you agree that it should disqualify Palin too. I believe you need to take a good night rest.

— yulyyz
8:03 pm October 11th, 2008

McCain and Bush are in lock step on all issues includung the Economy .. most people blame the Republicans for the economic mess we are experiencing
and McCain has voted for every Economic plan Bush came up with .. If you want change for the better, Vote Obama.

— zjd99
8:06 pm October 11th, 2008

Thanks to the St. Louis Post-Dispatch for its leadership in campaign commentary.
Ruth, Iowa

— Ruth Ratliff
8:07 pm October 11th, 2008

A wise endorsement for the next president. Obama will bring us the change we need without the hate and racism being so loudly pushed by McCain and Palin.

— bernj
8:09 pm October 11th, 2008

Great endorsement. At this point, it’s disturbing to think that anyone who has seen the race-baiting, xenophobic tactics of McCain/Palin, the only ticket where BOTH candidates have committed ethics violations, would still WANT to vote for this strange demonstration of instability, corruption, ignorance and incompetence while our financial system is in major collapse and our world standing has never been weaker. McCain is getting undue credit for supporting veterans just because he claims to “love” them. His voting record in Congress is rated worse than Obama’s by a Veterans’ organization. If Obama isn’t elected, this country is going to finish going down the drain.

— Sandy
8:16 pm October 11th, 2008

Yulyyz,

Tell me more about the AIP-Palin association.

Did they promote violent change in Alaska? If they did and Palin had associated with them that would disqualify her too in my opinion.

Obama certainly is disqualified to be President of the United States in my opinion.

Juan

— Juan
8:18 pm October 11th, 2008

Thrilled that as venerable a newspaper as yours came out for Sen. Obama. I’m a Republican by registration, live in Los Angeles, and will be voting for Sen. Obama based in some part from reading Editorial and Op-Ed pages from newspapers from all over the country. It’s a luxury I can enjoy, as I have no job.

— Liz
8:18 pm October 11th, 2008

It has worked, unfortunately, as my father predicted before he passed several years ago. The Democratic party skillfully has used their control of the public education system, through the teachers’ union, to dumb down a constituency that will support their programs and candidates. I love these comments, eloquent, articulate, profound. Cut to the chase, change and hope. This so called newspaper endorses a man who has accomplished nothing, zero, who has never been a key player, much less a leader, who has knowns and unknowns in his background that would prevent him from getting a clearance to clean the johns in the local government office, and they are applauded by the followers referred to earlier. Other than being as vacant as your candidate, the only exception I would take to your endorsement is slamming McCain’s campaign as shameful and ignoring Obama’s disgraceful use of ACORN. I might mention, that after lying earlier, they now admit to providing nearly a million dollars to ACORN for their fine patriotic get out the vote efforts. I believe 15 states are investigating their activities. Good luck.

— Doubtingthomas
8:36 pm October 11th, 2008

What a beautifully written endorsement! There was a point in time where I could’ve easily lived with John McCain as President *almost* as easily as Barack Obama. However, McCain’s choice of Sarah Palin made me question his sanity. What WAS he thinking? I can no longer accept him because of that. His sleezy, angry campaign has literaly almost made me sick lately. He has serious anger control issues but apparently knows that he can’t show them on the campaign trail. So what does he do? He encourages the joke of a VP candidate to do it for him, or he encourages his audiences to do it. His statement about Obama was too little too late. Plus the fact that he looked like he’d rather be having his appendix out without anesthesia than say it didn’t help.
John McCain should be ashamed of himself and the campaign that he’s run. He’s let the radical right turn him into something nasty and awful. He reminds me of what I scoop out of my litter pans each night. He needs to just go away and do it quickly.

— Frecklesmom
8:42 pm October 11th, 2008

Thank you. When we watch these people on TV giving their racist comments and Sarah Palin and McCain egging them on, we hope that most of America sees this for the bigotry and segregationim and hatred that it is.

You have proved today that you get it.

A big thank you from a proud American who cannot wait to see Barack Obama take the oath of office.

— JJacobs
8:50 pm October 11th, 2008

Mr Obama is not right on all the issues. Though I not a Republican, I have to say that Palin nails Obama on the abortion issue in her speech today:

“In times like these with wars and financial crisis, I know it may be easy to forget even as deep and abiding concern as a right to life, and it seems that our opponent will forget that,” Palin told about 6,000 supporters in the arena. “He hopes he you won’t notice how radical, absolutely radical, his ideas on this and his record is until it’s too late.”

http://www.miamiherald.com/news/politics/AP/story/722568.html

— Bill Hannegan
9:11 pm October 11th, 2008

JJacobs said:

“A big thank you from a proud American who cannot wait to see Barack Obama take the oath of office”

But that would be a sad day for America, it will be the beginning of the dismantling of the American dream: the day when deceit, trickery and flirting with the enemies of the nation, would be rewarded with the office of the Presidency.

May God help us!

Juan

— Juan
9:19 pm October 11th, 2008

NICELY WRITTEN PIECE THAT LAYS THE CASE FOR OBAMA. IT SPEAKS TO THE TRUTH.

— LEONARD D'ORAZIO
9:22 pm October 11th, 2008

Apparently the Obama Campaign put out a call for posts praising the editorial. Give them credit. They are organized. But I question how posters read the editorial before typing.

— Bill Hannegan
9:33 pm October 11th, 2008

The last sentence of my previous post should read: “But I question how many posters read the editorial before typing.”

I noticed that the posts praising the editorial sounded very much the same.

— Bill Hannegan
9:42 pm October 11th, 2008

Bill,

The “Obama Campaign” did not need to call for posts. I know that it’s hard to believe, but, by most polling, the majority of people prefer Obama.

Obama is no where near perfect, but McCain has decided to attack him based on falsehoods and innuendo instead of targeting his real problems. On the other hand, Obama has been more restrained so appears a more stable president.

— William
10:11 pm October 11th, 2008

I love that this post is tagged “Arthur Sewall”. I think that you should begin a regular series on the man.

— Matt Schmidt
10:30 pm October 11th, 2008

Thanks for a great endorsement!

We face a time of many challenges and uncertainties that will require us to come together as a nation and a people to harness all our energy, creativity, and sacrifice to overcome.

Senator Obama has shown strength, and maturity in how he has handled this long crucible of a primary and election season with grace and wisdom. As he repeats in many of his speeches he is not without any faults, as we all are as human beings. However, he has stood head and shoulder above his Presidential competitor Senator McCain.

Senator Obama has stood first and foremost as an American, a citizen of the United States of America despite repeated attempts to throw him off his stand and to paint him otherwise.

Senator Obama has repeatedly expressed his fervent hopes and wishes to pull together people of all stations of life, of all ethnic groups, across any divisions of color or race, to work together to rebuild our country.

His call, which inspire millions is to pull together to rebuild our country and its economy that have been hurt by many years of a government that:
- has taken us into a unnecessary war that was started on false pretexts;
- has practiced an economic policy that has let Wall Street and the powerfully connected run wild - unchecked
- has damaged our standing in the eyes of our allies and the rest of the world.

Thanks for standing for the best values of the United States of America.

— Ted
10:41 pm October 11th, 2008

William, I think the Obama campaign called for posts this time. I’ll bet Ted didn’t read the editorial.

— Bill Hannegan
10:47 pm October 11th, 2008

After a fun filled day watching some great college football and spending time with many generations of my extended family - from the old and infirm to the brand new babies - I returned here to see that Juan is probably still in his PJs (or worse) and still spouting the swill of a deranged and bigoted fool, and that several of his friends have joined him.

Folks, take some advice. Get a life. The boogey man sightings will decrease in direct proportion to your engagement with the rest of humanity.

— Tim Harrington
11:16 pm October 11th, 2008

Thank you for your beautifully constructed endorsement. America would be greatly blessed to have Senator Obama lead to lead us through our current economic challenges, to end the war in Iraq, take care of our veterans, and protect our citizens. It is time for new and inspired leadership for America, time in getting down to the business of rebuilding America here at home and restoring our moral leadership in the world. He has demonstrated a measured and steady response to recent economic events and has the temperament and intellect we need sorely. I will breathe an enormous sigh of relief when he is elected president. There will be hope again for my children, America’s children.

— Kate Neilsen
12:51 am October 12th, 2008

I agree Obama is the better choice during a time of great turmoil and uncertainty. Obama’s consistently calm composure and strong leadership-style lends the American people a sense of trust and confidence in his ability to run the country. Notwithstanding Obama has said all along this election is not about him it is about us. But he is also the right leader at the right time, yet he cannot do it without us.

Against unbelievable odds, the fact Obama started 40 points behind in the primaries and got to where he is today is nothing short of extraordinary. In the two years that Obama has been on the national stage the American people have connected to him because they got to know him up close and personal. The respect he’s earned comes from the fact his deeds match his words.

Another important aspect is Obama has shown he is willing to and knows how to listen. Therein voters trust he will work through problems with others whose expertise will lend pragmatic, viable and workable solutions.

With the right leader Americans have the chance to be proud of America again, but we will be doing the heavy-lifting. That is why this election is about us. Complacency is no longer an option.

Obama is committed to bettering the human-condition and taking America in a new direction. The question is: are we?

— serena1313
4:14 am October 12th, 2008

Whoever wins this election will be the big loser, politically. The public will be the biggest loser, of course.

( suspent that Hussein will win, and he will futtingly preside over the destruction of America as we know it.

— johnh
7:47 am October 12th, 2008

An eloquent articulation of serious issues. Thank you for maintaining the best standards of the American press.

— Diana Wright
10:15 am October 12th, 2008

I am so proud of my Post-Dispatch!

I moved from St. Louis to Dallas a few years ago, but still follow St. Louis news closely. Reading this makes me very proud.

— Michael
10:16 am October 12th, 2008

Blah blah blah. Like the Post Democrat would EVER endorse a Republican for President. Barack is less qualified for Vice President than Sarah Palin, and he’s going for the top post. If people actually looked at his character (drug user, racist, socialist, inexperienced), they would be making a different choice in November.

— Think|
10:48 am October 12th, 2008

Why is it that you can’t disagree with a Republican on any issue without them attacking you personally? I see the behavior repeated time and again as it is with your readers. You endorse Obama because you think he stands for the issues that are important to you,so you are a communist! Republicans shoot themselves in the foot at every turn. Have Republicans forgotten that dignity and respect are one of the many things we expect from each other….and our President. A temper tamtrum because everyone doesn’t want to play the same game means that no one wants to play with you at all. Watch the polls and learn.

— Jan
11:03 am October 12th, 2008

If Obama gets elected, we can only hope that that house and senate go Republican. If the Democrats have complete control with Obama at the helm, some very scary changes will be coming our way.

— Think|
11:34 am October 12th, 2008

Well written, persuasive, and logical. Kudos to the St. Louis Post-Dispatch.

— Daniel
12:06 pm October 12th, 2008

Your editorial is wise, thoughtful, reasonable. Obama is truely the very best choice

— barbara bridges
12:14 pm October 12th, 2008

Thank you for this beautifully-written and incredibly insightful piece. The contrast between Obama’s and McCain’s records, campaigns and overall perspectives are stark… and it couldn’t be more obvious that Obama is the clear choice for president.

Especially as someone who cares deeply about veteran’s issues, how a man who lived as a POW during wartime could not care about upholding the Geneva Conventions that prohibit the torturing of people AND who has repeatedly slashed veterans’ benefits is someone I cannot vote for. He clearly has lost touch with reality… and what is reality for most Americans.

And for Star20: really?! STLtoday.com has a socialist agenda?! Come on. How old ARE you, with your “Comrade!”. What ignorance.. way to drink the McCain “fear” koolaid.

Thank you for this piece. GOBAMA!

— J.
1:06 pm October 12th, 2008

St Louis? Didn’t they arrest 19 Dems for Vote Fraud last election? Endorsing a Terrorist Sympathizer like Obama is a Disgrace.

— Dennis D
1:49 pm October 12th, 2008

?? Mr. McCain, a longtime critic of government regulation, was late to recognize the threat

Are you Joking?? McCain and other Republicans recognized this threat long ago. The Black Congressional Caucus did everything in their power to Protect Franklin Raines and Fanny Mae. Barney Frank. Maxine Waters and others are on VIDEOTAPE opposing such stronger regulations. Democrats fingerprints are ALL Over this financial Mess. Stop pushing disinformation. No wonder Newspapers are losing Circulation accross the nation. They are LIARS.

— Dennis D
1:52 pm October 12th, 2008

Who is this Farrakahn? And why is it important what he thinks? Why should I base my choice of a President on this person’s views?

All those who oppose this editorial endorsement seem to justify their opposition based on what Farrakahn thinks. Was there something in the endorsement that justifies this? Unless there’s a reasoned, logically cogent counter proposal, I don’t see how one could argue with the editors’ endorsement.

I wish more newspapers gave such clear justifications.

— Dave
2:21 pm October 12th, 2008

Thank you for such a well-written editorial. Our household decided after the VA primary(in which we voted for Clinton) that Obama is the best choice for these times.

— Bio
5:20 pm October 12th, 2008

i would like to comment on this article….very well written. i have so many friends that are republican but are voting democratic this year..senator obama has ran a fair campaign while john mccain and his buddy..sarah palin have ran a very dishonest and cruel unamerican race. we must all come together at this time as americans and get to the voting polls and bring barack obama to the white house. joelene smith

— joelene smith
8:30 pm October 12th, 2008

Beautiful article. Thank You. You have brought peace to our hearts.

— WomensGroup-Canada
8:46 pm October 12th, 2008

Apparently reformers like Sarah Palin make enemies in both parties. Powerful Republicans in Alaska must be very mad at Sarah for the Troopergate report to come out three weeks before the election. Really, there isn’t much to it. The Palins tried to get a cop fired who had threatened their family and went overboard. No financial gain was involved.

http://www.adn.com/troopergate/story/552799.html

— Bill Hannegan
8:55 pm October 12th, 2008

The Obama campaign needs to withdraw the call for posts praising this editorial as well-written. Sure, it’s written just fine. But this is getting out of hand.

— Bill Hannegan
8:59 pm October 12th, 2008

experience is worthless without intellect and sound judgement.. McCain has neither of these…. he is a gambler and quick to anger, makes snap decisions without due consideration… he choice of VP is very indicative of what kind of president he would make. Poor…. Frankly WE are in too much trouble for me to endorse someone whos first consideration is and always has been war.. we need help right in the the USA, and we need someone who will make wise and considered decisions… that person CLEARLY is Obama….

— Levi Cro
9:10 pm October 12th, 2008

We as a group- would like to make a rather forceful comment. So please forgive the rather rude comment.

AYERS - WHY ISN’T EVERYONE WHO POSTS HERE ABOUT THIS GUTTER SMEAR RUN BY MCCAIN - OBAMA WAS ONLY EIGHT YEARS OLD - 8 repeat 8 years old when Ayers was up to something horrible. Please everyone - educate those that do not read.

Can McCain say he was eight - 8 years old when the Keating Five Scandal surfaced - How about his close association with 157 Lobbyists - How about Liddy - who is a very close friend of McCains. What about the Troops who he voted AGAINST 26 times. Poor Senator McCain has totally destroyed every bit of honour he might of had - No Judgement at all. Let us just hear about their platforms. I haven’t heard a complete one from the Rpublicans. Also Note. Palin does not have any deal with Canada for any Pipeline! She simply gave millions to Canadian Pipeline who has not got any government approval. Not a hope ms. palin.

— WomensGroup-Canada
9:12 pm October 12th, 2008

I believe it is safe to say that the “elephant (or more likely “donkey”) in the room, is that this space is more populated with those in agreement with the editorial than those who disagree with it, not because there ARE more people who agree with it, but because this editorial, for the most part is preaching to its target audience choir.

Much of the derision aimed at the “Post-Disgrace” is from conservatives who do not feel that the St. Louis Post-Dispatch is not a newspaper for the St. Louis region. It is a newspaper for the St. Louis region’s liberal Democrats. That would be fine if the paper was labeled the St. Louis Democrat, but it is not. It is simply our only major newspaper.

As a conservative, I can’t even have a discussion with most of my like-minded friends about something in the Post, because most of them stopped reading it, long ago. The problem isn’t necessarily that they disagree with the news that is IN the paper, it is that they don’t see the news IN the paper that they have to get elsewhere. It is astounding that a newspaper that carries the proclaimed “Platform” that it will “never belong to any party” ALWAYS belongs to one party. Today’s edition makes this clear. “Barack Obama for president,” is the headline of the editorial. Is there ANYBODY in St. Louis that is surprised? Most of us would have place bets on you endorsing the Democratic nominee four years ago! Basically, you have spent four years, writing this editorial! The Matson cartoon adds to the expected liberal position of the Post. The selection of “Your Views” letters to the editor, reinforces the editorial

The headlines of the articles within the Post come as further reinforcements to the editorial. Republicans are often accused of drumming up votes by instilling “fear” in the populace. Today’s headline below the fold is “FEAR. Worrying about the economy is MAKING THINGS WORSE.” Other headlines include;

“Tim Robbins gets star on Walk of Fame.”

“Did Palin promote religion on state’s dime?”

“Obama gives rival nod, lets optimism show.”

“McCain halts attacks, focuses on policy issues.”

“Todd Palin applied pressure, report says.”

“U.S. influence is declining in Latin America.”

“Worrying about economy makes things worse.”

“Democrats may call back Congress after election.”
This breathless Obama ad, disguised as a story for this headline is that “After consulting with Barack Obama, Democratic leaders are likely to call Congress back to work after the election in hopes of passing legislation that would include extended jobless benefits, money for food stamps and perhaps a tax rebate, officials said Saturday. The bill’s cost could reach $150 billion, these officials said.”

Of course, the issue isn’t simply what the Post DOES say. It is also what it DOESN’T say. In an article last week, the Post did a hit piece on Kit Bond, noting that he ranked 8th in receiving donations from Fannie and Freddie. While it did note that Senator Dodd was #1, it failed to mention that #2 was Barack Obama.

A conservative reader knows that the Post-Dispatch is not going to cover many of the issues about Barack Obama that are of concern to them. We know that you will fully cover his associations with William Ayers, or his radical views on partial birth abortion, or a “post-birth fetus.” We know that you will not allow his Marxist, socialist past to be fully explored, but that’s O.K. We have other places to get that information now.

Meanwhile, your readership keeps going down.

— Star20
10:26 pm October 12th, 2008

Thank you for the great article. I find it interesting that Americans are very quick to call those of us who are Democrats socialist or even communist. I thought this name calling died in the 60’s. I guess I was wrong. Too bad.

— Sabreen
11:23 pm October 12th, 2008

Sabreen,

Good point! Just tell me the exact difference between today’s Democrats and socialists, or communists, or Democrats. I’d sincerely like to know the difference. Really. Please tell me the difference.

To my mind, in four to eight years, P-D will be the “St. Louis Post-Capitalist.” Where am I wrong? Or is that a bad thing, in your mind?

— Star20
12:21 am October 13th, 2008

Thank you!!

— crystal
12:58 am October 13th, 2008

The so called “conservatives” who are screaming that a President Obama will be the end of America are truly hilarious.

Obama has shown himself to be the much better choice for America.

— Mark Engle
1:00 am October 13th, 2008

Eight years of lies, corruption, jobs lost, homes lost,education lost and healthcare lost.

Yet we still have die hard ignorance that can’t wait till they lose more.

These articles aren’t about what’s good for our country, it’s about hatred no matter the cost.

— Barney Smith
1:45 am October 13th, 2008

“Sabreen,

Good point! Just tell me the exact difference between today’s Democrats and socialists, or communists, or Democrats. I’d sincerely like to know the difference. Really. Please tell me the difference.”

I probably should not have limited the question to Sabreen. I’m sure all of you other anti-capitalists could explain the difference?

— Star20
1:56 am October 13th, 2008

I am shocked, shocked to learn the Post-Disgrace is endorsing Barak Obama. As if there was a chance they would not be supporting the Democratic candidate.
“the skills he developed as a community organizer and his instincts as a political conciliator — more than compensate for his lack of more traditional Washington experience.” Really??
I had no idea saying change over and over amounted to great ideas and a vision for the future. It will be an interesting four years.
Don’t forget to hide your guns and stock up on the ammo.

— Robin
2:56 am October 13th, 2008

As goes Missouri, so goes the nation. This editorial provides an eloquent rationale for voting for Barack Obama in November. For months, I have seen the vitriol and hatred that many McCain supportors have had for Mr. Obama, yet each time I try to engage the person on the issues, each McCain supporter, in turn fails to address his positions and instead attacks Obama’s lineage, name, and religion.

Obama has receive a good deal of critizism for his demeanor in the face of the McCain attack machine, but as this editorial rightly points out, he has responded with grace and dignity, rising above the muckraking (with few exceptions) and conducting himself in a calm and thought out manner.

I used to have a lot of respect for John McCain (and saw a glimmer of the man I used to admire late last week, when he dressed down a supporter and said that there is “…no reason to fear an Obama presidency”), but unfortunately, I believe that the page has turned, and any further return to his old ways would seem contrived and insincere. I wish McCain well, but I believe it is time for a new era in American politics, and I thing the country as a whole believes this as well.

— T-roy
6:59 am October 13th, 2008

T-roy,

The country has not spoken yet.

If you want a reason why Obama is not good for America here is one:

Obama is an opportunist that has profited from the economic crisis created by the Democrats in Congress when they opposed Clinton and Bush to reign in Fannie and Freddie.

It is the democrats with their socialism and social engineering that have created this mess. This fiasco is proof that those policies do not work if one were necessary after the collapse of the Soviet Union.

— Juan
7:08 am October 13th, 2008

Wow! The PD endorsing a Democrat for President. Can you believe that! I never would have guessed. I sure miss the old Globe-Democrat, it was really nice when we actually had two points of view in StL.

— John
7:50 am October 13th, 2008

“The PD can endorse whomever they want and you know damn well that this is a left-leaning publication, so if you have such a problem with it then just stop reading it. The PD does not have to have 2 points of view, they have never misled any of us readers about their political preferences.”

“B”

Gilbert, Kevin, Eric, Jamie,

Great post! I suggest an editorial along these lines!

— Star20
8:32 am October 13th, 2008

Superbly and eloquently stated. No matter where you stood on the candidates up until now or how you felt about the issues our country and our next president will face, it would be difficult to arrive at any decision other than to elect Barack Obama president. Few men have been elected into such grave and complicated circumstances but few have possessed his unique qualities, of leadership, intellect and calm.

— Lynn L
8:37 am October 13th, 2008

These worshipful comments praising this editorial are nauseating. Clearly someone put the word out to comment on this piece.

I am voting for Obama and came to that decision on my own. Despite the fact that I am in agreement with the PD on who should be president, I still find it insulting that you feel the need to tell your readers what to do because you don’t find them intelligent enough to make an informed decision based on FACTS and ACTUAL NEWS.

— Clipper
9:09 am October 13th, 2008

The future of the St. Louis Post-Dispatch

At some point in the early years of the Obama era, in the new United Socialist States of America, the name of the St. Louis Post-Dispatch is changed to the St. Louis Post-Capitalism.

The “platform” of the Post is shortened to a simpler, “Socialism is the answer. Obama is the way.”

There is no “Classified” section. Everybody works for the state.

Circulation of the Post-Capitalism triples that of the old St. Louis Post-Dispatch. It is now required reading, especially in the re-education camps. Even the English language edition is doing well.

The “Education” section is segmented by education levels. Grades K through Eight teach “Dreams of My Father.” Grades nine through twelve teach “The Audacity of Hope.” College level and advanced degrees are based upon more recent books on the life and times of Barack Obama.

The “Entertainment” section covers all of the films of Michael Moore and Oliver Stone, as well as executions of old regime Republicans.

Implementation of “The Fairness Doctrine” has eliminated conservative thought from all media, as decreed by the “Fairness Czar,” Al Franken. 97.1 Talk radio in St. Louis is off the air, replace by “Air Obama.” The “P-C” doesn’t have much competition from magazines. Conservative magazines, such as “The Weekly Standard” are gone. As a matter of fact, the only magazine now printed, is “O.”

Everybody loves the “Change” from the past and they “Hope” we never go back to the old ways. At least that’s way they say in public.

— Star20
9:13 am October 13th, 2008

Abbreviated, but timely;

America’s Second Wake-Up Call!

By INVESTOR’S BUSINESS DAILY | Posted Friday, October 10, 2008 4:20 PM PT

History is important to study… if you can trust the national media to not withhold key information they don’t want you to see or twist daily news to fit their agenda.

In the last 40 years, there have been nine major surveys of editors and reporters who work for national media. The most they ever voted Republican in a national election was 14%; the more common range has been 4% to 7%.
This is one reason why no matter who wins a political debate, the media almost en masse repeatedly tell you their man won. And most voters who don’t pay close attention will believe them. It’s called coordinated propaganda.

What were the most consistently repeated and strongly asserted slogans you’ve heard over the last few years? “We’re losing in Iraq . . . we must get out . . . it’s costing us $10 billion a month we could use here at home . . . we’re not any safer . . . the surge won’t work.”

A year ago, vice presidential candidate Joe Biden opined that we should get out of Iraq immediately and then divide it into three separate countries. This is the sound, seasoned judgment that’s supposed to compensate for running mate Barack Obama’s youth and complete lack of experience with the military or America’s security in a dangerous world!
Well, the surge in Iraq has worked, we are winning decisively and, as a result, now have a new democracy and strong ally in the Mideast. Meanwhile, seven years have passed since 9/11, and we still haven’t had another major terrorist attack on our soil.

Yet the media give no credit at all to President Bush, the only president to do something about the terrorist attacks that we had suffered repeatedly beginning in 1992.

With the economy slowing and a weak financial market created solely by our subprime mortgage mess, what do we keep hearing now from the media in hopes the majority will believe it and vote accordingly? “The mess is caused by eight years of failed Bush economic policies, including the tax cuts for the rich that should be rescinded.”

This is not the talk of a uniter of people, but rather a separator stirring up class warfare, envy and resentment. It’s a stirring-up of hate in an attempt to endlessly criticize, condemn, demean and destroy every opponent.

Do you know the real cause of the out-of-control subprime loan mess that’s creating so much fear and hurting every American? It’s not something the media or a certain political party wants you to find out. A picture is worth a thousand words, however, and we’ve made notes of key events on the chart above that you can follow as we give you some key facts.

In 1995, President Clinton mandated new regulations that coerced banks to make significantly more subprime loans to inner-city residents previously viewed as unqualified buyers in high-risk areas. Banks were rated on how well they complied and faced big fines if they didn’t do what government regulators wanted.

The government’s worst decision was allowing and encouraging banks, for the first time, to bundle these subprime loans in giant packages with prime loans. These packages were then sold to other investors as safe because they were government-sponsored by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.
In short, this was yet another well-intended, Democrat-supported,government-designed and run program that failed miserably and had the usual unintended consequences.

A few more facts:
• April 2001: The Bush administration’s fiscal budget stated that the size of Fannie and Freddie was “potential problem because financial trouble of a large Government-Sponsored Enterprise could cause repercussions in financial markets, affecting federally insured entities and economic activity.”
• September 2003: Treasury Secretary John Snow, in testimony to the House Financial Services Committee, recommended that Congress enact legislation to create new agency to regulate and supervise financial activities of housing-related government entities to set prudent and appropriate minimum capital requirements.
Rep. Frank, the committee’s ranking member, strongly disagreed, saying: “Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac are not facing any kind of financial crisis . . . . The more people exaggerate these problems, the more pressure there is on these companies, the less we’ll see in terms of affordable housing.”
• February 2004: The president’s new budget again highlighted risks of the explosive growth of these government enterprises and the then-low levels of required capital. It also called for the creation of a world class regulator. The administration determined that housing regulators of government agencies lacked the power and stature to meet their responsibilities and should be replaced with a strong new third regulator.
• April 2004: Rep. Frank ignored warnings, accusing the administration of creating an “artificial issue.” “People pay their mortgages,” he told a group of mortgage bankers. “I don’t think we are in any remote danger here. This focus on receivership, I think, is intended to create fears that aren’t there.”

From 2004 to 2008 the Bush administration made 12 more attempts to get Congress to pass legislation to have safer, sounder regulatory oversight of Fannie and Freddie and capital rules. You can see them for yourself on the White House Web site. But here are a couple of examples that show how Democrats resisted:

• July 2005: Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid rejected legislation on reforming Fannie and Freddie. “While I favor improving oversight by our federal housing regulators to ensure safety and soundness, we cannot pass legislation that would limit Americans from owning homes and harm our economy in the process,” he said.
• August 2007: Sen. Dodd, another Democrat, ignored President Bush’s emphatic calls for Congress to pass Fannie and Freddie reform legislation and called for him to immediately reconsider his ill-advised position.
Democrats have become a far-left propaganda party with the lowest-ranked Congress in history. For six years, they have consistently refused to rein in the monumentally risky subprime loans that Clinton Democrats gave birth to.

Yet, voters are blaming Republicans for this crisis and seem to think that a newcomer they know little about, despite his questionable past associates and mentors, can bring us more huge programs. These include one that would socialize the health care system at a time when government-run systems in Canada and Britain are lower in quality and nearly bankrupt.
Finally, history shows that since World War II, our best results-oriented presidents were Truman, Eisenhower and Reagan. They were much older — in their 60s and 70s — more experienced and made sounder, more productive decisions. The three youngest presidents — Kennedy, Carter and Clinton — all had more problems, particularly with national defense and dealing with dangerous dictators that were threats to America’s security.

— Star20
9:34 am October 13th, 2008

I wonder how many of the letter writers sending these glowing reviews of your endorsement glanced just one page to the right and read Charles Krauthammer’s article, which stated that Obama’s past associations are fair game. Now, Mr Krauthammer leans to the right, but the left was very quick to use him as a respected source some two weeks ago when he questioned Sarah Palin’s credentials. The bottom line in Krauthammer’s piece is that, at a minimum, Obama was guilty of “tolerating the obscene” by attending and supporting Rev Wright’s church for years and associating with Bill Ayers. Many of the comments in these posts refer to McCain backers slamming Obama. Believe me, I am a conservative but not a McCain backer. In just the last two weeks he has betrayed us by voting for the bailout, with earmarks and then proposing 300 billion in mortgage buyout spending. It disgusts me that I have to vote for him. But this isn’t a time for a 3rd party protest vote. I feel I have to do everything I can to get McCain elected, only because it will stop Obama from running the country and the free world. In the back of your minds, does it occur to you that you may be inviting the fox into the chicken coop by electing this man? Isn’t there any suspicion that his views may actually be closer to Wright’s and Ayer’s than they are to patriotic Americans?

— Doubtingthomas
9:36 am October 13th, 2008

This must not have been an easy decision for the editors. However, after the reasons have been laid out, I can see how there’s no other choice. Most of my family members reached the same conclusion — the country could use a clean break from the direction we are now going. As much as my family would like to support a republican candidate, these are times that require us to step outside our political affiliations. An apt, prescient, and well-done editorial.

— Limi
9:40 am October 13th, 2008

As columnist Michael Barone wrote:

“I need you to go out and talk to your friends and talk to your neighbors,” Barack Obama told a crowd in Elko, Nev. “I want you to talk to them whether they are independent or whether they are Republican. I want you to argue with them and get in their face.” Actually, Obama supporters are doing a lot more than getting into people’s faces. They seem determined to shut people up. …

Obama fans jammed WGN’s phone lines and sent in hundreds of protest emails. The message was clear to anyone who would follow Rosenberg’s example. We will make trouble for you if you let anyone make the case against The One.

Other Obama supporters have threatened critics with criminal prosecution. In September, St. Louis County Circuit Attorney Bob McCulloch and St. Louis City Circuit Attorney Jennifer Joyce warned citizens that they would bring criminal libel prosecutions against anyone who made statements against Obama that were “false.” I had been under the impression that the Alien and Sedition Acts had gone out of existence in 1801-02. Not so, apparently, in metropolitan St. Louis. Similarly, the Obama campaign called for a criminal investigation of the American Issues Project when it ran ads highlighting Obama’s ties to Ayers.

These attempts to shut down political speech have become routine for liberals. Congressional Democrats sought to reimpose the “fairness doctrine” on broadcasters, which until it was repealed in the 1980s required equal time for different points of view. The motive was plain: to shut down the one conservative-leaning communications medium, talk radio. Liberal talk-show hosts have mostly failed to draw audiences, and many liberals can’t abide having citizens hear contrary views.

— Star20
9:58 am October 13th, 2008

Obama is hardly a socialist, communist, etc… He may have talked to/supported Bill Ayers at one time yes, but I’d rather have my future president flirting with some misguided hippies from the 60’s who did not kill a single soul except accidentally killing one of their own, then a president who in the past flirted with the Taliban, the Bin Laden family, and multiple right-wing christian organizations who are connected with different white power/homeland terrorist groups who believe that white people are the chosen race, the lost tribe of israel and this U.S. is “God’s chosen land” for us.

The commentator down there wondering about the symbolism in Barrack’s campaign logo? Are you implying that he’s a terrorist? Do you honestly think in this day and age of homeland security that he could exist in the senate with terrorist connections? Do you know how hard it is to get on a plane if you’re a non-anglo with a “foreign” last name…or worse yet, if you have a durag on, or a head wrap? It ain’t gonna happen. Do you really think that Barrack is a Muslim? His father isn’t Arabic, he’s from Kenya, his mom is from Kansas city. Of course Farrakhan said he a messiah and he’ll change the world, by saying this he makes sure that all his people that believe in him as a great minister will vote for him, yeah saying he’s a messiah, maybe a little over board. That’s just Louis’ praising a black man for president just like every other african leader in this country is doing… And the rising sun logo…it’s not even close to the crescent moon, it’s actually kind of the opposite huh?

— Mikey
11:26 am October 13th, 2008

And to the lady down there talking about abortion and how pro-abortion Obama is. You act like he wants to get your daughter knocked up just so he can personally come to your house and abort the baby. It’s kind of a weird thing to say, but did you know that when Ronnie Raygun banned a lot of types of abortion, the next generation saw a significant rise in crime and crime rights can directly be correlated between how legal or illegal abortion is in a given state….. Read the book Freakonomics, it’s not a politically bent book, it’s a book based on numbers in the economy, facts with no spin, so read it. Also are you pro-war right now? Then how is the killing of innocent children for a war that isn’t really about anything different if not even more un-civil than an abortion? Try and give me an answer I’ve yet one person to satisfy me with a decent answer, besides I’m christian……yeah, well Christians are not warriors, maybe if you believe in the god of the old testament, yeah I get it, but not if you believe Jesus was sent here by God to teach us how to live, so please, start turning the other cheek huh? All you people talking about “bomb Obama” and “he’s gonna have us all killed” and “he’s a terrorist”….

— Mikey
11:41 am October 13th, 2008

Given the fact that psychotic Democrat hostility toward George W. Bush started eight years ago and has only gotten worse since, given the fact that the Past-Disgust and the rest of the mainstream media has been at the beck and call of the Democrats all during that time and given the fact that the MSM has been Obama’s bitches ever since the start of the campaign, should Obama actually win, he will get no support from me at all. In fact, I will pray that he fails as miserably as he probably will regardless of what it does to me or to the rest of the country.

— Christopher Johnson
12:08 pm October 13th, 2008

The Pulitzer Politburo has finaly endorsed comrade Obama for Premier.

Welcome to the USSA

— tom sater
12:20 pm October 13th, 2008

“Obama is hardly a socialist, communist, etc… Mikey”

So how is he different?

Anybody??

— Star20
12:34 pm October 13th, 2008

This is in response to Juan at 8:05 AM, October 11, 2008

They symbol is called a logo. The symbol you speak of is not a rising sun, but a circle of unity with the stripes of the flag of the United States at the bottom half. The circle is also representative of the letter “O” for Obama.

Barack Obama has repudiated Louis Farrakhan long ago. If I said you were the devil, what is the meaning of this?

In my past, I have sat on a number of non-profit boards. A member of one of the boards was a Republican mayor the city. That didn’t make me a Republican. There were also some boards I sat on that included Muslims. That didn’t make me a Muslim, even though I am an agnostic, and religion to me is not relevant. Mr. Ayers, an education professor at the University of Chicago, has had a daunting past. He was, in those days, not a terrorist, but an anti-Vietnam War protestor but went about his protests in a very wrong manner. When sitting on a non-profit board, you are not asked to select board members. One is selected because they are deemed to have expertise in the goals of the board. This whole Ayers argument is then moot.

Mr. Obama purchased his home through Rezco. He did not have a close relationship with him. Mr. Rezco was convicted after the transaction. You can’t control what your friends do any more than you can control the actions of anyone else.

Mr. Obama employed ACORN during the primary campaign but severed all ties with them in the General Election. He now uses grass roots, voluntary workers to further his cause.

You are seriously mistaken about Mr. Obama having a part in the de-regulation of Fannie and Freddie. Mr. McCain was the great de-regulator and has been for many years in the Senate. Mr. Obama’s stand is and has been for more regulation. If we had had more regulation, we would not be in the financial crisis we are in today.

— Ed Pazicky
12:35 pm October 13th, 2008

Wonderful editorial.

— Terri
12:42 pm October 13th, 2008

Isn’t it ironic calling Obama a socialist while GWB floats proposals for nationalizing banks to save the economy? In these mixed times, we need editorials like these that cut through the layers of spin. I wish other small and big newspapers across the country can be equally sound. Great editorial — a newspaper that earned its citizen’s keep for its service.

— LongTimeGipperFan
1:40 pm October 13th, 2008

The vitriol that has come from the far right and the republican party is in no way matched by anything from the Obama campaign or his supporters. In fact, the contrary is true. I can speak for myself and others like me, who have for eight years been unable to speak openly against the Bush policies that have lead us to ruin. To do so would evoke mean spirited retribution. I personnally nearly dropped out my normal political activities just after the Patriot Act was signed into law. I decided I didn’t need a bigger target on my back than I already had.
Now we have a candidate that transcends himself and the party, he speaks to the vision that has long been absent from presidential elections.
Let us celebrate as a nation that we can have a more diverse discussion for a change. As much as I knew that Bush & CO. was going to be a disaster, I never once prayed for his failure, as has been suggested by Obama detractors. Our leaders’ failure will be our own. What happen to “country first?”

— Motto
1:47 pm October 13th, 2008

It is not worthwhile to post in a newspaper that deletes the posts it does not like. It is a waste of time.

— Juan
2:15 pm October 13th, 2008

“The Pulitzer Politburo has finaly endorsed comrade Obama for Premier.

Welcome to the USSA”

That kind of nonsense helped me make up my mind to vote for Obama more than any newspaper editorial ever could.

I’m sick of the Republicans’ politics of fear. It’s time they were kicked out. We badly need some fresh thinking in Washington.

— Dan Luke
3:16 pm October 13th, 2008

The Post has a pretty good knack for picking losers. I seem to recall a similar hagiographic endorsement around this time back in 2004.

I don’t think Obama is going to win the election. In fact, I think he’s going to lose substantially. However, if he does somehow manage to pull this off, it will be interesting to see people’s reactions when he turns out to be a complete dud. He will make Jimmy Carter look competent. Hillary is counting on it.

— Go_Fish
4:24 pm October 13th, 2008

I have posted twice since this endorsement, practically begging Obama backers to take a good look at their candidate. No response. Frankly, I think they are afraid to do it. We are fighting a global war on terror and facing a financial crisis that may well be even more serious. Yet, there is at least a reasonable chance we may be electing an enemy. I won’t go into his frightening and ever changing background, because it obviously doesn’t matter to his supporters, but will only mention one of my first memories. Many don’t know that Fidel Castro was a hero here in the 50’s when he overthrew Batista. Soon whispers started, “his brother is a communist”, excuses, much like we hear for this candidate, “it is not him, etc”. Some 5 years later we had the Cuban missile crisis and came as close to blowing up the planet as I hope ever happens. People, just look at him.

— Doubtingthomas
6:37 pm October 13th, 2008

Doubtingthomas,

Everything you raise is a doubt at best and innuendo at worst. But there are some sure things we know. For example, Mc/Palin ain’t the solution. Mc/Palin ain’t the path we need now. Mc/Palin ain’t got the people, experience, or competence to execute solutions for problems ailing a vast majority of Americans.

The electorate were clear about this during the primaries, now the vast public arena, i.e., local papers, editors, and common readers like me, that message of incompetence is reverberating.

As a republican, I’m ashamed to say that the party became so corrupt that whatever concerns you have ring hollow in the face of pocket book issues, wall street melt down, budget deficits, and overall republican incompetence exhibited in the last 8 years.

Now if you’re really itching for conspiracy theories, why not spend some time about AIP? YouTube has some good videos. That’s evidence you can’t doubt.

— Tom
7:57 pm October 13th, 2008

Thanks for sharing your thoughts and determinations in this article. It illuminates as well as states what is on the minds of so many Amercans and people abroad. People in other countries have a vested interest in what goes on here in America because they fill whatever happens here will eventually trickle to them. They are pleading with us! They are saying, in concert, America please get it right this time! Barack Obama IS the only right choice in this presidential election. Let’s all help change the Country, let’s all help change the world!

— Robert Earl Lewis
5:13 am October 14th, 2008

Let me say as an Australian citizen who writes full time on his website in an honorary capacity, to support Barack Obama, how much I appreciate seeing reading such a sound, well reasoned and eloquent endorsment.

Thank you.

If I may, I would like to share an Obama profile article I wrote on the 16th of February titled ” The Power of One”. It has been often used to lift the spirits of Obama campaign volunteers during tough times. PS. I believe the article generated the subsequent “The One” references to Barack. The Clintons first tried it as a negative, and McCain made the same hollow mistake.

The Power of One - http://www.tellingthoughts.com/us-politics/the-power-of-one

Telling Thoughts / A Pro Obama website
http://www.tellingthoughts.com

— John Hay
6:02 am October 14th, 2008

I’m so sorry that the very first comment posted online in response to this beautifully worded editorial was a sarcastic, old school regurgitation of precisely the sort of dogma-drivel that got us into this financial mess in the first place. I wonder how many of the folks who are seeking out a nice warm refrigerator box to sleep in for the winter appreciate the nuances of the free-market economy.

I can add little to your (sadly) accurate take on the trajectory of this general election campaign, which has proven to be a bit of a slow motion train wreck for Senator McCain, albeit largely of his own making - if we gauge the arc of his decline from the day he nominated Sarah Palin as his running mate. I join in your hope of a better and brighter tomorrow to come in just a very few months, if we can only hang in there until January.

— MarkA
6:18 am October 14th, 2008

Tom: I know McCain/Palin are not the answer. I have expressed earlier in this thread that it actually depresses me that I am going to have to pull the McCain lever. I don’t think he will be a good president, and he certainly is not a conservative, which is what I would like to see. But, I am sure he is a patriot. There is at least as much evidence that Obama is actually anti-American as that he loves his country. The lessons of history, world wide, are so obvious, and ignored. This is how people lose their freedom. And always through simple prose, no substance. The fact Obama supporters refuse to look at their own candidate is telling. Forget the past connections, ACORN is as disgraceful and anti-democratic an organizaton as has ever existed. Not just for the current “get out the vote” movement, but earlier efforts to blackmail banks, and indeed Fannie and Freddie, to speed up the subprime loan process. Obama’s fingerprints are all over this group for over 15 years. His campaign has provided financial support even now, and lied about it until it could no longer be covered up. My wife and I were in a local bar last night and got into a discussion with a young couple who supported Obama. I simply asked them, very politely,if it bothered them that Barack and Michelle led their little daughters into church and sat there and listened to Rev Wright’s anti-American, racist filth. Their faces told the whole story, tortured, could not stand to think about it. Their response, the lady through her drink on me and the man called me a racist. Support for this man is not rational.

— Doubtingthomas
8:22 am October 14th, 2008

Congratulations, Post-Dispatch! And to the commentors who have chosen to distort Mr. Obama’s record and stance on the issues, may God have mercy on you…when he is President, you will see that he is the better man and your world will be made better as well.

— Arnete
9:39 am October 14th, 2008

obama has a clear vision for america. he has never wavered on his views. as for abortion mentioned in the comment box. obama does not favor abortion, no one favors abortion. did you know that abortions rise in republican presidencies because funding is cut for sex education, contracetives, etc. abortions rose 34% during the Bush years. during the clinton years, abortions were only at 14% increase because money was kept in the programs that offer help for woman and men. Mccain,during his speech today 10/14,said “he would punish those that abuse their government powers” does that include Palin???, who was found guilty of abuse of power by a vote of 14-0. 10 republicans and 4 democrats on the board.why would voters consider her as a vp, when she swore on her HOLY BIBLE, not to abuse the power of the government for financial or personal gains. she should be punished now according to McCain’s today speech.. this ticket can’t be trusted.also, why won’t mcCain release his health records?? very important issue that’s been ignored. later we will learn about Palin’s home built not by” Todd and a few buddies” but by the same contractors that were awarded the job of building the community center in alaska. wake up voters, the mccain /palin ticket can’t be trusted.

— karen
11:17 am October 14th, 2008

DoubtingThomas:

Thank God we are not voting for Michelle Obama, Rev. Wright, and the rest of the people around Obama. We vote for the candidate Obama. The potential negatives you mention are minor compared to the potential positives: a conclusion the Post-Dispatch reached in its editorial endorsement. If you insist the people around Obama are fair game, then one would have to weigh Charles Keating, Palin’s abuse of power, Cindy’s drug addiction and conviction, and so on. If child rearing is the criteria, then making children listen to bad sermons has to be weighed against inability to raise teenage children without getting pregnant.

For a free market republican, moral failings of a different kind are what pains me. For example, banks nationalized, the economy turned into a banana republic, and fundamental rights and principles of a free society violated. It goes to the very core of what makes us Americans. Given this background, I can see how the majority support Obama yet see it as rational, self serving, perfectly patriotic, and American to the core.

— Tom
11:53 am October 14th, 2008

The Post’s praise for Barack Obama was, of course, expected, but I found the endorsement interesting not for such praise, but for the light it shed on the processes and credibility of opinion writers. When I look at John McCain and Barack Obama, I see two politicians, like many others, who are ambitious, talented in certain ways, but imperfect in other ways. Neither candidate or party can claim higher ground on principles of morality or character. and opinions as to the a candidate’s potential judgment in decision-making are speculative. I will vote for McCain because I think that, as a Republican, he will generally favor policies that are more conservative than liberal. I am not voting on the basis of personality cults that have arisen around each candidate, nor am I voting based on the grand, but perhaps empty, promises the candidates have made. I suspect that the Editorial board of the Post feels that same way. I think that the Board’s support of Obama boils down to the one paragraph that states that “Mr. Obama is right on the issues.” The rest of the editorial is fluffy rationalization. I was particularly entertained by the Board’s excitement over the prospect of Obama’s picking and listening to 3,000 selfless public servants in his administration, as if Obama’s selections would be any less flawed than the selections of anyone else.
I find that the best, most credible opinion writers give the impression that they’re fairly setting out both sides of an issue before they begin supplying reasons why they support one side of the issue. With many of the Post editorials I read, I do not get the impression that both sides are being fairly set out, but that the facts are being skewed, perhaps through omission, to favor the writers point of view. The editorial writer has the perfect right to do this, and perhaps that is the way editorial writers are taught. Nevertheless, such methods detract from the credibility of an opinion piece, and have resulted in the Post Opinion Page’s less than credible reputation.

— Jeff
12:35 pm October 14th, 2008

Amen. Sorry about McCain who I was at first more impressed by, but agree that chosing Palin he outwitted himself. What if something should happen to him? Yiikes! Obama, while not perfect, is the man. My choice, of course, as a New Yorker, would be Mike Bloomberg, who bless him, wants to run for another term to save our unique city.

— Sue Clark
3:42 pm October 14th, 2008

This is an awesome endorsement. I concur with all the points made here and could not have written it better. Anyone that has nothing but negative misinformation to spread should consider keeping it honest, doing REAL research quit quoting lies about Sen Obama instead post why you support Sen McCain as opposed to Sen Obama. The negative comments here are so similar to the McCain platform….supply no information on what you have to offer that is positive but instead just tear Sen Obama down…w/ a lot of lies. Weak and definitely not presidential.

— CJD
7:38 pm October 14th, 2008

Please, stop saying Fannie and Freddie caused the economic crisis. It started with Wall Street, and ballooned into wider problems that included Fannie and Freddie. This crisis is way too large to be caused by any one area - it was a failure of both sides, and of many systems. McCain is revealing his ignorance of the deeper issues when he insists that F & F was the cause. And people continue to parrot his mistake.

— MJ
10:45 am October 15th, 2008

Yes, I am…………..voting for Obama…………..but I want to strenulously defend Senator McCain on one charge that you accuse him of.

You state that “He (McCain) shrank from his universal condemnation of torture”.

My recollection is that the bill was passed that was introduced by Senator McCain regarding the treatment of prisoners in Guantonomo………….but that it was W. Bush who cancelled that line in the bill at moments before midnght with W.’s usage of a legal instrument called ’signing statements’.

Bush had shaken McCain’s hand on the front steps of the White House and agreed that Senator HcCain had been right, and then just several hours later reserved the right of the President to ignore that portion of the bill that had just been passed.

I feel that McCain stood by his principles even at the risk of his destruction of his own political ambitions…………..as I said, I am voting for Obama, but I am not so certain that Obama has the same backbone and courage of his convictios to risk or alienate his own party for the good of our country on some future critical issue.

— Michael B
3:02 pm October 17th, 2008

I live in Washington state but grew up in SLP, graduated in 1971 with people like Tom Friedman (with the Cohen brothers right behind me!)

I’m not as successful as those people, but I am extremely proud to have grown up in such a community…forward thinking even back then, which is what helped make these people successful.

And now I see you endorse Mr. Obama….makes a girl proud to say that’s where I grew up!!!

— Sherri
5:45 pm October 17th, 2008

I live in Washington state but grew up in SLP, graduated in 1971 with people like Tom Friedman (with the Cohen brothers right behind me!)

I’m not as successful as those people, but I am extremely proud to have grown up in such a community…forward thinking even back then, which is what helped make these people successful.

And now I see you endorse Mr. Obama….makes a girl proud to say that’s where I grew up!!!

— Sherri
5:47 pm October 17th, 2008

DoubtingThomas…….I believe there was another American named Thomas who said it was only a true patriot who questions his government… So by calling Obama anti-American just because, he, and some of his supporters, don’t agree with the current administration, doesn’t make him anti-American, it makes him a patriot. I really doubt this lady you speak of threw her drink on you un-provoked… Did YOU really listen to what the reverend said? Tell me what makes him a racist? We spend billions on a war against terror and wonder why there is no money left….blame it on the housing market, blame it on high gas prices….tell me why gas has been so high and now all of the sudden it’s dropping. You seem intelligent but you still make no sense to me. You’re the type of person that thinks every african-american is racist if he’s not kissing up to whites. You are the type of person that thinks that everyone who’s not in the same political mode as a republican, is a communist/socialist, because you don’t think that McCain is right-wing… I think you need to go back to school and take a political science class. Then again you’re probably that one person that sits there and argues with the teacher citing Rush Limbaugh. My late grandfather, a WWII vet, got into my cousins husband at christmas time because my family are purely Kennedy Dems….My cousins husband is a Baptist Bush supporter…. My grandfather finally got frustrated and said, “when did liberal become a dirty word in this country?”

— Mikey
12:16 pm October 20th, 2008

It takes a lot of courage to really examine the issues and the facts and to draw conclusions that are right not just for “the party” but for the nation.

I also realized that my conservative streak was not being served well by the Republican Party. Nor was Senator McCain’s message of more of the same going to provide a way out of this international and financial mess.

I applaud you rational and thoughtful endorsement of Senator Obama for President.

r, Jim

— Jim McDonald
9:23 pm October 20th, 2008

I have never in my 58 years read such a travesty. Sen. Obama is a slick talking, no action and no experience con man. People are voting color and elequent speech instead of thoroughly researching the life of Mr. Obama, including his real religeous beliefs and anti-american views. I hope that the U.S.A. that I fought for during the Vietnam War can stand the damage that will be inflicted by this man and his cohorts. And Yes, I am a Combat Disabled Veteran that served volentarily and with personal sacrifice. John McCain may not be perfect, but he is a proven American Patriot that will lead us out of this darkness.

— Rick A.
5:14 pm October 21st, 2008

Read his book - it does not sound anything like most people get from his sound bites. I think an Obama presidency will have more vision and capability than most realize or even fear.
People fear change because even if they know the change will be good for them, they really have no idea of what to expect or how to respond so they would rather plod along with that which they are resigned and cynical about because they fear not knowing.
I, on the other hand, have learned over the last several years that you cannot explore a new world without being ready to loose site of the old shoreline.
This is why I have voted for the man - I cast my absentee ballot last week as I will be away on the 4th and did not want to waste my opportunity.

— Thom I
7:13 pm October 21st, 2008

Thank you very much for your brave endorsement in a much-divided state. Sen. Obama has taken the high road despite the smears and slurs, and shown true leadership. It’s no surprise that you received a lot of hate mail and accusations of liberal bias for taking a position, but I appreciate that you made the endorsement based on sound rationale, rather than one based on fear. Fear has held this country too long, so I’m glad to see hope and courage on the horizon.

— Christine
1:06 am October 25th, 2008

McCain 4 more years of the same? Yawn. Scripted and boring. Obama will surround himself with compassionate, and competent staffers? His associations in Chicago prove otherwise. He’s dead wrong on the economy. You can blame your congress for that. Hmmm. Public funding for the campaing, then no. Lie. Raise taxes in an economic crisis, wrong. I don’t want a tax credit or cut. I want low income, unmotivated people to get up and work. I had to. I want people to be self motivated, and be accountable for their finances, not live in debt and beyond their means. Hmmm, sound familiar? That’s what you’d have with Obama and big government, spend, and take your money to do so (spread the wealth, take from the haves and give to the lazy have nots). Carter and Clinton the orgin of the sub prime mess leading to the economic debacle, with inaction by your democratic types in Congress 4 to 5 years ago. A vice presidential Biden that got 16 points horribly wrong on McCains congressional record, yeah there’s 35 years of dimensia, I mean experience. Let’s see, McCain vast miltary experience, Obama none. McCain legislative experience since 1982, Obama, whopping 3 years. Obama, a Christian? when he’s the most liberal minded voting Legislator, making Carter look like a Saint. Radical associations (no, not quilty by association, again yawn), but the mere fact they are associations makes me horribly uncomfortable. Obama has a scripted platform, that yields little detail. He is unwilling to elaborate on his questionable associations. He is simply not qualified to be the commander in chief and spokesperson for this nation. One MAJOR failure in Obama and your article. Experience is everything, and seeing the “shifting kalidescope and real world issues” has no footing or foundation without recognition and knowledge of historical tendencies. Having the experience and wisdom to have learned from history, with the ability to apply them to today’s challenges. If you do not have experience, you are not qualified. Obama is not experienced, therefore not qualified. But, this is the media. Liberal slant, liberal bias. Look at how many newspapers election after election tend democrat and liberal. Thankfully, America votes, not the media.

— stlfan_pah
10:13 am October 25th, 2008

Thank you for this editorial comment. It reflects what I have been thinking. As a life-long Republican, I have lived with embarassment for the actions of the administration. I thought that Senator McCain would be a positive guiding light that would help return our country to greatness and respect, but his campaign has demonstrated such poor judgement that I find myself voting for Senator Obama. I only hope that the next administration can dig us out the deep hole that we find ourselves in.

— John Mason
12:50 am October 28th, 2008

I am curious on to where my last blog went to. I was critical of the paper’s endorsement and it was there but has since disappeared. I did not break any of the posting rules and was very cordial. I did not personally attack anyone and did not include anything remotely controversial.

What does it say when the media, that cries out if the government ever wants to censor them, censors their own critics. Now I understand why they endorsed the candidate they did. St. Louis deserves better.

— starr87
9:27 am October 28th, 2008

Thank you. This will help desperate Republicans better understand why Barak Obama is the better choice for many of us. You explain it in a way that does not attack Sen McCain, but does clearly state why Sen Obama is a sensible choice.

— Kia
7:20 am October 29th, 2008

There are Marxists all over the world. And for many, it works. Marks wrote: From each according to their ability, to each according to their needs”. Marx wrote this sentiment not to punish people for being successful, but to ensure that others coming behind those who were successful had just as much opportunity to succeed in the future. I personally do not believe that it is the government’s job to spread the wealth, but many people, including Obama, do. And for that, all he needs is a 50% majority of the people to decide that we are to be Marxists, and we will be among that number all around the world - part of the true global community. I thought that we were better than that, but there are many others - possibly the simple majority required, who agree that we are “that good”. My warning to the Post-Democrat, though: Marxists do not mind censoring media, for the greater good. But in that same sense, when they are telling you what to print in order for people to get their rations and their share of what is being “spread around” on any given day, your job will be easier, since they will write the story for you. All you will have to do is collect your government check. Unless, of course, you make too much, as decided by the government, at which point you will be required to spread your share around a little. You know, so that the other papers can be as successful as you obviously are. I think this is a bad endorsement.

— camdawggy
4:22 pm October 29th, 2008

“Because of who he is and how he has run his campaign, that fact has become almost incidental to most Americans. Instead, his countrymen are weighing his talents, his values and his beliefs, judging him not by the color of his skin, but the content of his character.”

That gave me chills. In a good way.

— Erin
5:47 pm October 29th, 2008

“It’s not that I want to punish you for being successful, it’s just that ‘we’ want to make sure that the others who follow you have just as much chance to be successful.”

It takes more than money to be successful. It is a lifelong quest. “Joe the Plumber” is on such a quest, and merely asked a question of a candidate who (randomly) approached him in his driveway, about how it would look if he tried to follow his boss’ success someday by buying the business that he was part of. Shortly thereafter, the Obama campaign, and the media, tore the guy’s life apart, and he’ll now likely lose his license to drive in Ohio, amogst other things. Merely for asking a question of a person in his driveway, ironically enough, in the same spirit of Obama’s “those who follow should get money to be successful” share-the-wealth speech. It takes more than money. It takes training, knowledge, skills, desire - ganas - the will and want to succeed, regardless of the resources that are available. And it takes keeping your mouth shut if you are not for Obama, as Joe proved.

That gave me chills. In a bad way.

— camdawggy
6:14 pm October 29th, 2008

Beautifully done. Your endorsement is the best thing I’ve read during this entire campaign season. I’ve shared it with others across the country who agree. Thank you.

— SMA in Silver Spring, MD
10:23 pm November 3rd, 2008

I am an upstate New Yorker who was directed to this by a New Hampshire brother via a Chicago brother. Thank you! So brilliant… thoughtful … kind … not knee-jerk … willing to look at both sides … I am happy for your decision and hope this evening the people of this country will validate it.

— Maryanne Schrank
1:03 pm November 4th, 2008