Suppose you were stopped in the street and asked the same questions that Senator Biden and Governor Palin had to answer last night. How would you answer? Would you be smooth and coherent or so rickety you would be told to be on your way? I wondered how I would answer the questions so I found a transcript of the debate and copied the questions into a file, leaving a space between each question. I printed the file and then quickly wrote my response to each question, kind of simulating being asked the questions in real-time. Here are my answers. Remember, I answered them quickly without benefit of thought or research, so go easy on me. If you wish, answer some of them yourself in the comments. I’ve edited the questions for brevity and relevancy.
1. The Senate passed a big bailout bill and the House is wrestling with it still tonight. Is this the worst of Washington or the best of Washington that we saw play out?
This is the worst of Washington. They even added $150-billion in side-issue tax measures. Those who voted this measure in should be voted out.
2. If you were vice president, would you work to shrink this gap of polarization which has sprung up in Washington?
Just treat those who you meet with respect and value their point of view. Give credit to the opposing party where it is due.
3. Who do you think was at fault in the sub-prime lending meltdown? Was it the greedy lenders? Was it the risky home-buyers who shouldn’t have been buying a home in the first place? And what should you be doing about it?
If you want to be greedy in your lending that is your affair. If you want to take a risk and buy more home than you can afford that is your prerogative. Once you get a taxpayer funded bailout then that’s everyone’s business. Lenders, borrowers, and government are all to blame. But especially government for adding billions of dollars in debt with a foolhardy bailout.
4. Is proposing to raise taxes on people who earn over $250,000 a year not class warfare? A proposal to tax employer health benefits which some studies say would actually throw five million more people onto the roles of the uninsured. I want to know why that isn’t taking things out on the poor.
One of the best ways to tax is by everyone paying the same percentage of their income, if you must tax income. That way the poorest to the richest pay towards running their country. This is also not the time to tax health benefits.
5. What promises have you made that you’re not going to be able to keep?
I suspect there will always be promises that politicians won’t be able to keep. As for myself, I rarely make promises so there are precious few to break.
6. Last year, Congress passed a bill that would make it more difficult for debt-strapped mortgage-holders to declare bankruptcy, to get out from under that debt. Would you have supported this?
Yes. It should be difficult to declare bankruptcy. Debt should be paid off, even if it takes a long time.
7. What is true and what is false about what we have heard, read, discussed, debated about the causes of climate change?
As in the past the earth’s climate is changing today. This is probably due to natural climatic changes. More research is needed to establish if there is a man-made component.
8. Do you support caps on carbon emissions? Do you support clean coal technology?
I don’t support either. Coal should be used until there is a better domestic substitute.
9. Do you support, as they do in Alaska, granting same-sex benefits to couples?
No.
10. Would you support expanding that beyond Alaska to the rest of the nation?
No.
11. What is a clear plan for an exit strategy in Iraq?
An exit can begin immediately. Financial resources need to be conserved. We can no longer afford to be an army of occupation.
12. What’s the greater threat, a nuclear Iran or an unstable Afghanistan? Explain why.
Afghanistan should be left to itself. It hasn’t the resources to be a threat and any army of occupation will eventually grow weary and have to withdraw. Iran is more of a threat because of future nuclear capability. However, with the United States out of Iraq and Afghanistan the U.S. becomes a viable check against Iran.
13. Secretaries of state Baker, Kissinger, Powell, they have all advocated some level of engagement with enemies. Do you think these former secretaries of state are wrong on that?
You don’t need to talk to enemies, just defend against any malfeasance they try to inflict.
14. What has this administration done right or wrong — this is the great, lingering, unresolved issue, the Israeli-Palestinian conflict — what have they done? And is a two-state solution the solution?
This administration has done no worse than prior administrations. Two separate states is the solution.
15. Interventionism, nuclear weapons, what should be the trigger, or should there be a trigger, when nuclear weapons use is ever put into play?
Each situation is different. In wartime, the use of nuclear weapons should be an option.
16. How would a Biden administration be different from an Obama administration?
It would be different, just as a Palin administration would be different from a McCain administration. Reviewing their passions and voting and governing records would give some clues as to their direction.
17. What do you think the vice presidency is worth now?
The vice president is the first in the presidential line of succession. The vice president is also the President of the Senate. Support of personal charities and good causes could be promoted.
18. Do you believe as Vice President Cheney does, that the Executive Branch does not hold complete sway over the office of the vice presidency, that it it is also a member of the Legislative Branch?
Yes.
19. Gov. Palin’s Achilles heel is that you she lacks experience. Sen. Biden’s Achilles heel is that he lacks discipline. What do you think it really is?
After listening to both candidates I think they would both make fine vice presidents and even presidents.
20. Can you think of a single policy issue in which you were forced to change a long-held view in order to accommodate changed circumstances?
I would think that some views would have to be changed depending upon circumstances.
Dan says
Sometimes I think politicans should simply answer yes or no to a question instead of a misleading ‘maybe’ to both a yes and no. In the debate Governer Palin answered a quick yes to a question and went on to talk about another thing to use the rest of her time. I was impressed by that.
rickety says
Good observation. I noticed that you watched all of the debate. As a former SBO you would know all about politics.
josh says
Sarah Palin is smart, Sexy and a great if new politician. I would like to see her on her own ticket someday. Mccain sure has changed since 2000 – He used to be more principled, but now he seems like he will say anything, be vicious, whatever he has to do to win. I don’t like obama either – what’s a moderate to do?
rickety says
I wasn’t planning on voting for McCain until Palin was added to the ticket. But even so I am still undecided. Thanks for your comments. Those custom beams shown on your website look cool.
Unknown says
Thank you for your share! Wish you the best!