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I apologize for breaking the long silence with something as volatile as politics. I think the quote from the Obama friendly paper below will sum up my sentiments…
By Perry Bacon Jr.
Washington Post Staff Writer
Tuesday, September 30, 2008
Introducing Sen. Barack Obama at a rally in Detroit on Sunday, his running mate did not hold back.
“John McCain said he’d follow Osama bin Laden to the gates of hell,” said Sen. Joseph R. Biden Jr. “Well, let me tell you something: President Barack Obama will follow him to where he lives and then send him to hell.”
Biden’s latest ad-lib drew laughter and cheers from the crowd, but there has been a downside to the Democratic vice presidential nominee’s freewheeling style: a string of comments that either don’t reflect campaign positions or misstate basic facts.
Unlike his Republican counterpart, Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin, Biden has not been shy about talking to reporters, but comments he has made since Obama chose him last month have presented Democrats with their own problems and revived the longtime senator’s reputation for gaffes.
In an interview with CBS News that aired last week, Biden described how Franklin D. Roosevelt had appeared before the country on television in 1929 to explain the stock market crash. But Herbert Hoover was president in 1929, and televisions sets did not start appearing in American homes until a decade later.
In that same interview, asked about an Obama campaign commercial that mocked Sen. John McCain’s lack of computer skills, Biden called the ad “terrible.” A few hours later, after McCain’s campaign highlighted the remark in several news releases, Obama aides put out a statement under Biden’s name in which the senator from Delaware said he had not personally seen the commercial and did not have any concerns once he watched it.
The next day, confronted with a interview in which Biden had said he opposed the bailout of the insurance company American International Group, a move that Obamasupported, the Democratic nominee said that “I think Joe should have waited” before commenting.
And Obama aides spent much of the week defending the candidate’s backing of the construction of “clean coal” plants, after a video surfaced on the Internet that showed Biden at a campaign event saying he opposed clean coal. The coal industry is a major employer in Ohio and Pennsylvania, two key swing states where Biden is doing much of his campaigning, and Obama has pledged support for coal plants that emit less carbon dioxide than traditional plants.
Biden has long been known for speaking for too long and making occasionally odd remarks, such as when he declared Obama “the first mainstream African American who is articulate and bright and clean and a nice-looking guy” when Biden launched his White House bid in early 2007. A few months earlier he had spoken of the prevalence of Indian accents in Dunkin’ Donuts and 7-Eleven stores.
‘Nuff said…

