Kudos to Hillary Clinton for a graceful and inspirational exit from the 08 race today. After her wins in Texas, Ohio, and Pennsylvania I felt she deserved to stay in this thing until the end of the primary season. So I do not begrudge her the battle she waged in the last couple of months. Besides, it makes Obama stronger going forward.
Having said that, I am not a fan of the idea of Hillary for VP. I am not opposed to the idea, but I don't believe it's in Obama or the party's best interest.
I stand by my dream VP selection: Chuck Hagel. He's a Republican so the chances are slim to none. But hey, Obama was my dream candidate a year ago and those chances looked slim then.
Short of a Hagel surprise, I stand by my other pick, Jim Webb. He gets some of the so called Hillary vote and delivers military experience and gravitas.
McCain's choice is tough to call. My gut tells me Charlie Crist, the governor of Florida. But I wouldn't be surprised to see Mitt Romney on the ticket either.
So let's go with Obama/Webb vs. McCain/Romney.
Sunday, April 27, 2008
England and France
I spent another April vacation in Europe with students. This year's stops were England and France. We had a great group of kids. For the first time, one of these trips went off without a single issue or incident related to behavior or inappropriate conduct. I should add "that we know of" because I guess you never know. But we had a great time.
We started last Friday morning in London. We checked into the Kensington Close hotel before a tour of the downtown part of the city. Our first night was a relatively quiet night in the Kensington neighborhood before an early bedtime. Saturday began with a bus tour of the city, including stops at St. Paul's Cathedral and Buckingham Palace, in time for the 11:30 changing of the guard. We saw Blood Brothers on Saturday night. Sunday we were off to Windsor for a half-day. In the afternoon we split up. Kensington Palace and afternoon tea for one group, the Imperial War Museum for the other. Monday we split up again, one group going on the London Eye and doing some shopping, the other group going to the Tower of London. In the afternoon, we sent the kids on a trivia hunt through central London, collecting bits of information in teams. We saw Wicked Monday night.
Tuesday we were up bright and early to Stonehenge and then the town of Salisbury for lunch. Then it was on to Portsmouth for the Channel crossing to Caen, France. We spent the night in Caen and were up Wednesday for the Normandy tour to Gold and Omaha beaches, D-Day museums in Caen and Arromanches, and the American Cemetry near Omaha beach. Then on to Paris.
We visited Montmarte on Wednesday night for dinner on the hill. Thursday morning was the city bus tour, a stop at the Louvre, and then Napoleon's tomb. We ascended the Eiffel Tower that night for some great views of the city, followed by a cruise down the Seine. Friday we visited Notre Dame. A couple of us, the Phantom fans, made the visit to the Opera House before lunch. Then on to Versailles. We spent our last night shopping on the Champs E'lysees and catching great views from atop the Arc di Triomphe.
I didn't really use my camera in London. Mostly retreads of familiar territory for me. I snapped some shots in Normandy and my best captures from Omaha beach are below. We were at (and on) the Eiffel at sunset, and I got some good shots that night, including one of about the half the kids. Ted went to the Opera House with me, so I took some pictures for him, including the one below of him on the grand staircase. That group shot is while we were waiting for our bus, near Notre Dame.
We started last Friday morning in London. We checked into the Kensington Close hotel before a tour of the downtown part of the city. Our first night was a relatively quiet night in the Kensington neighborhood before an early bedtime. Saturday began with a bus tour of the city, including stops at St. Paul's Cathedral and Buckingham Palace, in time for the 11:30 changing of the guard. We saw Blood Brothers on Saturday night. Sunday we were off to Windsor for a half-day. In the afternoon we split up. Kensington Palace and afternoon tea for one group, the Imperial War Museum for the other. Monday we split up again, one group going on the London Eye and doing some shopping, the other group going to the Tower of London. In the afternoon, we sent the kids on a trivia hunt through central London, collecting bits of information in teams. We saw Wicked Monday night.
Tuesday we were up bright and early to Stonehenge and then the town of Salisbury for lunch. Then it was on to Portsmouth for the Channel crossing to Caen, France. We spent the night in Caen and were up Wednesday for the Normandy tour to Gold and Omaha beaches, D-Day museums in Caen and Arromanches, and the American Cemetry near Omaha beach. Then on to Paris.
We visited Montmarte on Wednesday night for dinner on the hill. Thursday morning was the city bus tour, a stop at the Louvre, and then Napoleon's tomb. We ascended the Eiffel Tower that night for some great views of the city, followed by a cruise down the Seine. Friday we visited Notre Dame. A couple of us, the Phantom fans, made the visit to the Opera House before lunch. Then on to Versailles. We spent our last night shopping on the Champs E'lysees and catching great views from atop the Arc di Triomphe.
I didn't really use my camera in London. Mostly retreads of familiar territory for me. I snapped some shots in Normandy and my best captures from Omaha beach are below. We were at (and on) the Eiffel at sunset, and I got some good shots that night, including one of about the half the kids. Ted went to the Opera House with me, so I took some pictures for him, including the one below of him on the grand staircase. That group shot is while we were waiting for our bus, near Notre Dame.
The kids
Sunday, February 17, 2008
Presidential Prognostications
I guess we can continue to safely say John McCain will be the Republican candidate. It's still not over on the Democratic side, but I think the odds are very much in Barack Obama'a favor. I'll put it at about 70-30 (his vs. Clinton's chances at scoring the nomination). She must win in Texas and Ohio on March 4th. An Obama victory in either, and I think it is over.
Watch Wisconcin on February 19th. I think he will win there, but if she keeps it close, it could mean things are still very close in general. If he takes it comfortably, then there is no doubt that momentum is on his side. She will need to do better than 55-45 to "keep it close."
Earlier I wrote that the Republicans might be wise to diversify their ticket, perhaps by adding a female VP candidate. I expected Hillary to be the Democratic nominee at the time, and did not anticipate McCain on the GOP side. With the way things have turned out, a woman is less important. McCain will continue his struggle to shore up conservative support. But they will either vote for him or stay home in November (as opposed to vote for the Democrat). Thus a
VP candidate who appeals to the right wing of his party is unessential. McCain's goal should be to pick a VP candidate who does two things: helps him hold the centrists / moderates/ independents (which will be HUGE if Obama is the nominee) and potentially delivers a state in November that would ordinarily go Democrat.
I'm looking at Tim Pawlenty, the governor of Minnesota, as the name that stands out.
If Hillary beats the odds and wins the nomination, then her VP choice should probably be Obama. But I think a military figure (e.g., Wesley Clark) would serve her well too. But it would be tough to brush aside the momentous support a Clinton-Obama ticket would get.
But if Obama keeps doing what he has been doing, then Hillary's VP pick becomes a moot point. As for his own VP selection, as the candidate of youth and change, he would do well to look for someone older than himself, especially someone with "experience," since that argument will be used against him until the end. And that experience would work best if it were in foreign affairs and military matters.
The name I keep coming back to for an Obama VP is Jim Webb, the senator from Virginia. He served in the military, has a son serving in Iraq (as does McCain), was the assistant Secretary of Defense and the Secretary of the Navy in the Reagan administration, and has been steadfastly against the current war in Iraq. He beat, albeit barely, the popular incumbent Republican George Allen in 2006. He puts Virginia into play for the Democrats in November. He is a centrist/moderate Demoract, which balances Obama's more left-leaning positions.
Having said all that, part of me believes Obama will need his Dick Cheney. In 2000, Bush was wise to pick the ultimate insider, with the connections and gravitas to do his dirty work in the campaign and provide assurances that even if the guy at the top of the ticket lacked experience, the other one didn't . I'm not sure any single name stands out on the Democratic side in 2008, as far as this kind of figure goes. I think of former Senator Tom Daschle and former Congressman Dick Gephardt.
My dream scenario would be if Republican Senator Chuck Hagel of Nebraska crossed over and agreed to run as Obama's VP. The chances are slim to none, but the power of that kind of ticket would be impressive and insurmountable.
Watch Wisconcin on February 19th. I think he will win there, but if she keeps it close, it could mean things are still very close in general. If he takes it comfortably, then there is no doubt that momentum is on his side. She will need to do better than 55-45 to "keep it close."
Earlier I wrote that the Republicans might be wise to diversify their ticket, perhaps by adding a female VP candidate. I expected Hillary to be the Democratic nominee at the time, and did not anticipate McCain on the GOP side. With the way things have turned out, a woman is less important. McCain will continue his struggle to shore up conservative support. But they will either vote for him or stay home in November (as opposed to vote for the Democrat). Thus a
VP candidate who appeals to the right wing of his party is unessential. McCain's goal should be to pick a VP candidate who does two things: helps him hold the centrists / moderates/ independents (which will be HUGE if Obama is the nominee) and potentially delivers a state in November that would ordinarily go Democrat.
I'm looking at Tim Pawlenty, the governor of Minnesota, as the name that stands out.
If Hillary beats the odds and wins the nomination, then her VP choice should probably be Obama. But I think a military figure (e.g., Wesley Clark) would serve her well too. But it would be tough to brush aside the momentous support a Clinton-Obama ticket would get.
But if Obama keeps doing what he has been doing, then Hillary's VP pick becomes a moot point. As for his own VP selection, as the candidate of youth and change, he would do well to look for someone older than himself, especially someone with "experience," since that argument will be used against him until the end. And that experience would work best if it were in foreign affairs and military matters.
The name I keep coming back to for an Obama VP is Jim Webb, the senator from Virginia. He served in the military, has a son serving in Iraq (as does McCain), was the assistant Secretary of Defense and the Secretary of the Navy in the Reagan administration, and has been steadfastly against the current war in Iraq. He beat, albeit barely, the popular incumbent Republican George Allen in 2006. He puts Virginia into play for the Democrats in November. He is a centrist/moderate Demoract, which balances Obama's more left-leaning positions.
Having said all that, part of me believes Obama will need his Dick Cheney. In 2000, Bush was wise to pick the ultimate insider, with the connections and gravitas to do his dirty work in the campaign and provide assurances that even if the guy at the top of the ticket lacked experience, the other one didn't . I'm not sure any single name stands out on the Democratic side in 2008, as far as this kind of figure goes. I think of former Senator Tom Daschle and former Congressman Dick Gephardt.
My dream scenario would be if Republican Senator Chuck Hagel of Nebraska crossed over and agreed to run as Obama's VP. The chances are slim to none, but the power of that kind of ticket would be impressive and insurmountable.
Oscar Prognostications
'Tis the season, afterall. But barely, given the recently ended writer's strike. But the show will go on next Sunday. I wrapped up my movie-going early this season, so here they are...
Get my vote:
Picture - No Country for Old Men
Actor - Daniel Day-Lewis (There Will Be Blood)
Actress - Marion Cotillard (La Vie en Rose)
Supporting actor - Javier Bardem (No Country for Old Men)
Supporting actress - Cate Blanchett (I'm Not There)
Director - Joel and Ethan Coen (No Country for Old Men)
Most of these will win as well: No Country for Picture, Day-Lewis for actor, Bardem for supporting actor, and the Coen brothers for director. Cotillard will lose to Julie Christie (Away from Her) for actress and Blanchett will fall to Ruby Dee (American Gangster).
Get my vote and will win:
Original Screenplay - Juno
Adapted Screenplay - No Country for Old Men
Animated Film - Ratatouille
Art Direction - Atonement
Cinematography - No Country for Old Men
Sound Mixing - Transformers
Sound Editing - Bourne Ultimatum
Score - Atonement
Song - Falling Slowly
Costumes - Elizabeth, The Golden Age
Make up - La Vie en Rose
Visual effects - Transformers
Film editing - No Country for Old Men
Documentary feature - No End in Sight
Get my vote:
Picture - No Country for Old Men
Actor - Daniel Day-Lewis (There Will Be Blood)
Actress - Marion Cotillard (La Vie en Rose)
Supporting actor - Javier Bardem (No Country for Old Men)
Supporting actress - Cate Blanchett (I'm Not There)
Director - Joel and Ethan Coen (No Country for Old Men)
Most of these will win as well: No Country for Picture, Day-Lewis for actor, Bardem for supporting actor, and the Coen brothers for director. Cotillard will lose to Julie Christie (Away from Her) for actress and Blanchett will fall to Ruby Dee (American Gangster).
Get my vote and will win:
Original Screenplay - Juno
Adapted Screenplay - No Country for Old Men
Animated Film - Ratatouille
Art Direction - Atonement
Cinematography - No Country for Old Men
Sound Mixing - Transformers
Sound Editing - Bourne Ultimatum
Score - Atonement
Song - Falling Slowly
Costumes - Elizabeth, The Golden Age
Make up - La Vie en Rose
Visual effects - Transformers
Film editing - No Country for Old Men
Documentary feature - No End in Sight
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