Get Real, Johnny Boy

Andrew Simon

WASHINGTON (AP) -- Democratic presidential candidate John Edwards said Tuesday that he worked for a hedge fund to learn more about financial markets and their relationship to poverty in the United States.

Edwards won't disclose how much he got paid as a consultant to Fortress Investment Group, but said he did keep the money.

Wanted to learn more about financial markets and their relationship to poverty? That's cute but one of the stupidest things I've ever heard from anyone running for anything.

It's like a McDonalds employee saying that he or she works there for the great experience in the culinary industry.

No! If you are doing it for the paycheck, don't be afraid to say so. I don't think Americans would be turned off by someone who wanted to make money, even if it's in the millions.

C'mon, John. I haven't crossed you off my list yet but you gotta get in the game and stop the BS.

EDIT: Here's an interesting local connection. The current Chairman and CEO of Fortress Investment Group is Wesley R. Edens, an Oregon State grad who was in Portland last week to give a keynote speech at an OSU College of Business event.

  • je (unverified)
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    I thought Edward's answer when asked about hedge funds at the first Democratic presidential debate was lame, and he quickly changed the subject.

    Now I know why.

    Yes, Edwards is a poverty fighter all-right.

    And I got a bridge in Brooklyn to sell you.

  • Chuck (unverified)
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    There is another Oregon connection. Fortress is the firm that recently purchased Salem-based Holiday Retirement Corp. right before the end of last year. Holiday is the firm whose CEO, Bill Colson, was one of Ron Saxton's biggest contributors in the governors race.

    Edwards must have learned about a lot more than just about poverty - he learned a lot about hanging around with rich Republicans.

  • ellie (unverified)
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    I would be interested to hear what he has to say about this -- what his role was, how much he was paid, what he did to earn it, etc.

    There is a Washington Post article regarding this same subject here.

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    I'm disappointed that Edwards jumped into this slime, but as the Post article points out, Hillary and Obama are into the hedge funds just as deep.

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    here's an interesting paragraph from the WaPost article:

    One of Sen. Barack Obama's biggest presidential fundraisers is a hedge fund manager — Orin Kramer, general partner of Boston Provident Partners LP in New York and a longtime Democratic fundraiser. Along with Sens. Carl M. Levin (D-Mich.) and Norm Coleman (R-Minn.), Obama (D-Ill.) has proposed legislation to drastically reduce offshore tax havens that includes a provision to crack down on offshore hedge funds. The senators introduced the bill after an investigation last year documented how wealthy U.S. investors had used hedge funds to evade taxes.

    one of the things that appeals to me about Obama is that following his graduation from Harvard Law, he didn't go after the big bucks that were waiting (imagine what he could have made as a big firm's "colored" attorney). he's never gone after the money that was waiting. and now he is working to limit the business of a major backer; that's putting his principles first.

    i like him more and more.

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    I'm somewhat surprised at how vulnerable Edwards appears to be to these kinds of bullshit attacks this early in the campaign and how poorly his campaign is responding.

    It's strange, too, because the real news about the Edwards campaign this week should be that he's spending campaign money to pressure the Democrats in the legislature to show some backbone and end the war.

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    Of course, you left out the fourth paragraph - which seems to dispute the second paragraph.

    He said the amount he was paid will be revealed when he releases his financial disclosure forms.

    For those who want to actually read the article, it's here.

  • pedro (unverified)
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    well, it certainly doesn't dispute the 2nd paragraph, mr. oregon for edwards steering committee, (he still refused to disclose the amount), it does amend it, though, and i'm sure it will hit the news when the amount is disclosed; the media seems to like this john edwards narrative.

    i do wish he would have gone into some more depth about the relationship between financial markets and poverty, though...

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    Fair enough, it clarifies it. It's not "won't disclose". It's "will disclose, later".

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    This thread really hit a raw nerve with me.

    In what bizarro version of America, is being a self-made man with a social conscience a bad thing?

    If more people aspired to be a little more like John Edwards, this country would be a whole lot better off (and I say that as someone who is currently leaning towards supporting Obama).

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    It's strange, too, because the real news about the Edwards campaign this week should be that he's spending campaign money to pressure the Democrats in the legislature to show some backbone and end the war.

    Not that strange, Sal. The backbone-less need to divert attention to something else. I think Edwards' anti-war advocacy is the most important thing any of the candidates are doing to date.

  • Anon (unverified)
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    Edwards is a personal injury lawyer. The B/S rolls effortlessly off his tongue without any forethought. It's like breathing is to the rest of us.

    If you value the truth, you won't support John Edwards.

  • pat malach (unverified)
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    If I value the truth I won't put much weight behind the opinions or statements from people without the courage to put their name behind it.

    I understand the need for some people to use a psuedonym, but anonymously wrrting stuff like the post above is really lame and cowardly and displays a true lack of character.

    Edwards made the vast majority of his fortune, and that's what it is, by suing large corporations whose negligence profoundly injured people. Edwards was so persuasive about these corporation's reprehensible behavior that in at least one case the jury awarded more than his cleint was asking for.

    It's an honorable way to make a living.

  • Miles (unverified)
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    What a strange and bizarre thread. I'm with Sal on this one.

    First, Edwards does say in the article that earning the money was nice -- so he admits that he partially did it for the paycheck. Second, it's not inherently a bad thing to learn about or work in the financial markets. Frankly, the power of the markets is much stronger than the power of government in a lot of areas, and poverty is one of them. Using the market for good instead of evil should be a liberal goal. Third, there are a lot of powerful Dems already in the investment banking sector -- a huge number of Clinton's top policy people came from Goldman Sachs and other investment banking firms.

    Whether Edward's answer was politically wise is another matter, but the attacks here are absurd.

  • Scott in Damascus (unverified)
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    First, a question: Was John Edwards a private citizen when he accepted the job at a hedge firm?

    Second question: Did the work and/or the work produced by the firm legal?

    Now a comment: In the last 25 years our current Vice-President has only worked 5 of those years in the private sector and the remaining 20+ years in government, yet Dick Cheney's estimate net worth exceeds $100 million dollars. Also Mr. Cheney is currently on the payroll of Halliburton via stock options.

    So I guess my question to Andrew Boy is, what's your point?

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    And the flood of non-stories about the Democratic candidates continues. Another example is the nonsense about Pelosi engineering a bill to help her husband's real estate portfolio--despite the fact that she was ASKED to carry the bill, and in the AP article alleging some kind of funny business, it was admitted there were no facts whatsoever to support the charge.

    I don't have much of a beef with our Oregon AP correspondents, but some of the national reporters are little more than conduits for the GOP noise machine. Time and time again they pull hatchet jobs with naught but unsourced allegations. Think Reid getting boxing passes, Pelosi going to Syria, etc. Ridiculous.

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    (obviously Reid and Pelosi aren't candidates...)

  • Scott in Damascus (unverified)
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    Here's a hot tip for your next story Andrew Boy:

    Al Gore lives in a house with (wait for it .... gasp) ELECTRICITY!!

    discuss

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    I've said it, and said it again: any one of our top four candidates would be excellent in the Presidency. So the question is for me, who can actually win?

    I'm sorry to disappoint Kari and Jesse on this, but these kinds of stories really do have an impact on me. Candidates who try too hard to be perfect come off as being phony. And that (plus the Republicans' 100 billion dollar investment in mainstream media so they can suborn it) will sink a Democratic candidacy. Yes, even in an election in which we should be a shoo in.

    Edward's comment isn't quite to the level of Clinton's "I didn't inhale" gaffe. But remember, that was a rare mistake in Clinton's otherwise flawless candidacy. Stories about Edwards - stories that however spun, are actually true - keep coming out. And it's really impacted my faith in his message management.

    Obama should be the one vulnerable to making these kinds of rookie mistakes, but he isn't. That guy keeps sailing smoothly along. And the more electable he looks, the more I'm leaning towards supporting him.

    I'm still open to be persuaded that Edwards has a better chance in the general than Obama. Anyone here want to take a stab at making that argument?

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    Scotty Boy in Damascus:

    I don't think that you actually read what I wrote.

    Here is my point (which I think that I made pretty clear in my post) -

    It's irrelevant that Edwards was involved in a hedge fund. If I had the know-how and the connections, I would be too. There's nothing wrong, immoral, un-American or politically questionable about making money through a legal and ethical venture, and we don't know enough about this particular hedge fund to judge if it is legal or ethical so we should give him the benefit of the doubt and assume it is both.

    The problem is how he explained it. Wanted to learn more? Who does he think he's kidding? He should have just come out and say that he wanted to make money to support his family. If he said that, a few people might still be pissed off because he worked for a hedge fund but most, like myself wouldn't care at all. It's only an issue because I feel like that I'm expected to believe that someone really got involved with a hedge fund to learn more about financial markets and their relationship with poverty. I'm only 18 years old but I can see right through that.

    I don't want my elected officials to play games with me. I want honesty and candor.

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    I'm still open to be persuaded that Edwards has a better chance in the general than Obama. Anyone here want to take a stab at making that argument?

    Here's some evidence that suggests Edwards' strength in the general...

    where Clinton and Obama tie Guiliani at this point, Edwards sports a lead just inside the MoE. Against McCain, Clinton and Obama both have small leads, while Edwards is strongly ahead. (All three candidates tend to blow out the rest of the GOP field, which is a great sign this early).

    These are not predictors of course, but it's certainly persuasive of the idea that Edwards more than handles his own in any matchup.

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    Edward's comment isn't quite to the level of Clinton's "I didn't inhale" gaffe. But remember, that was a rare mistake in Clinton's otherwise flawless candidacy. Stories about Edwards - stories that however spun, are actually true - keep coming out. And it's really impacted my faith in his message management.

    Hmmm... You seem to have forgotten the Clinton '92 campaign. "I didn't inhale" wasn't a "rare mistake" in an "otherwise flawless" candidacy.

    From the draft-dodging stuff, to Gennifer Flowers, to the Sister Souljah stuff (which was both bad and good), all of that conspired to put him in THIRD in the polls by May 1992.

    Of course, Ross Perot proved to be even more insane than we thought - and Clinton got his motor running - and by November he won... with 43% of the vote.

    I worked on that campaign, as early as 1991 (as a volunteer), and I'm a HUGE Bill Clinton fan -- but let's not pretend that the campaign was a cakewalk.

  • nina (unverified)
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    oh dear, i am so weary of hearing ultra rich politicians and their like talk about poverty as though it is something they care deeply about. want to know how to put this unnecessary class system to rest once and for all? TALK TO THE FRIGGING PEOPLE LIVING IT. ask them what they need. ask them the changes they wish to see happen.

    until their thoughts are contributed to this discussion, it will continue to be a meaningless conversation.

  • raul (unverified)
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    Andrew Simon said:

    There's nothing wrong, immoral, un-American or politically questionable about making money through a legal and ethical venture, and we don't know enough about this particular hedge fund to judge if it is legal or ethical so we should give him the benefit of the doubt and assume it is both. END

    Who defines ethical? Tax free high dollar hedge funds?

    And using your logic, Cheney and every defense contractor in Iraq right now can make the same claim. What's un-american about making piles of cash via your connections?

    Capitalism beat communism, and it's about to beat democracy as well.

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    You count those as negatives, Kari. I count them as positives.

    NONE of what you mentioned was self-inflicted during Clinton's campaign. It was all stuff from his pat that the Republicans dug up to throw at him, that his team handled with aplomb. Well, except for his criticism of Sister Souljah, which wasn't an accident at all, but rather a carefully calculated tactic to prove that he wasn't in the pocket of special interests that the American public considered offensive.

    Now sure, I'll concede the point that even if a candidate runs a mistake free campaign, his history prior to running for President can give him or her negatives. But when looking at the top tier - Clinton, Edwards, Obama, Richardson(barely) - I simply don't see that as a factor. In fact, the only thing the Republicans have is the "flip-flop" voted for the war thing, but honestly I don't think that will have the same impact in 2008 at it did in 2004. (And, of course, that's only a potential negative for Edwards and Clinton.)

    Torridjoe is much more persuasive with the Rasumssen poll he found. But even then, I think it's still way too early to draw definitive conclusions from numbers within the Margin of Error. So I'm still uncommitted at this point.

    I just hope for his sake that Edwards gets wise to the fact that the U.S. media is nearly completely owned and operated by Republicans.

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    Nina wrote... TALK TO THE FRIGGING PEOPLE LIVING IT. ask them what they need. ask them the changes they wish to see happen. until their thoughts are contributed to this discussion, it will continue to be a meaningless conversation.

    OK, Nina, fire away. Consider this an invitation. What would you do to combat poverty? And what do you think about the solutions proposed by John Edwards.

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    Torridjoe is much more persuasive with the Rasumssen poll he found. But even then, I think it's still way too early to draw definitive conclusions from numbers within the Margin of Error. So I'm still uncommitted at this point.

    Steven, are you really considering which candidate to support based on poll numbers? On trying to divine "which one can win"?

    Shouldn't we all be examining these candidates values, policy positions, and character when making that decision?

    Frankly, the folks in Iowa tried to use "electability" as their criterion in 2004 - and look where that got us.

    (And besides which, if electability really is your yardstick -- ignore the national polls. Figure out which one can win in Ohio, Pennsylvania, and Florida. But, ugh, what a soulless way to pick a president.)

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    (...and in Nevada, Arizona, New Mexico, and Colorado - to repeat the point I've made repeatedly.)

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    I'm an enthusiastic Obama supporter, but I think some of the coverage of Edward's campaign has been generally unfair. But life's unfair, and coverage of Presidential politics? Often unfair too.

    The bigger problem for Edwards -- and it reminds me of Gore 2000 -- is that it seems media have decided that he's a hypocrite and are filtering their stories through that frame. I think that charge is total crap, btw, just as it was for Gore in 2000. Offensive, actually. Still, this is actually a problem for him.

    The other surprising thing to me is that there's not that much of a perceptible backlash against the coverage and rallying behind Edwards, like there was for Howard Dean after his allegedly disasterous performance on Russert in early 2004. I just don't see it.

  • CBurr (unverified)
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    Sorry, first sentence should read: Edwards'

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    Raul:

    I don't want to debate the virtues of capitalism, etc. but I'd like to point out two things.

    1. It's presumptuous to decry ANY hedge fund as unethical on the mere basis of it being a hedge fund.

    2. Using my logic, American defense contractors in Iraq cannot make the same claim. Given the unethical nature of the war, their participation in and profiting of the war is unethical. In terms of legality, I'm not in a place to make any judgments.

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    I agree with the fine Mr. Burr that the media often filters their stories of Edwards through an unfair frame. Especially with the haircut incident...

  • Miles (unverified)
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    It's only an issue because I feel like that I'm expected to believe that someone really got involved with a hedge fund to learn more about financial markets and their relationship with poverty. I'm only 18 years old but I can see right through that.

    Perhaps it is your age that's the problem. Financial markets have a huge impact on poverty in America, and John Edwards is exactly the kind of person who would want to learn more about that. The financial firms wanted advice on what Edwards saw happening economically in America and the rest of the world, and so he took them up on it while at the same time learning more about how hedge funds work and the impact they have on poverty. There is nothing even remotely unbelievable about that.

    I'm willing to agree with you that politically the answer falls short (due mainly to a national outbreak of drug-resistant cynicism). But you aren't limiting your attack to his spin, you're calling Edwards a liar. And you're wrong.

  • Scott in Damascus (unverified)
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    Kari almost got it right.

    When evaluating a canidate for either side, I look for 2 things: 1. policy position 2. voting record on each position

    Edwards talks a good game regarding poverty, but what has he really done? Oh, that's right - John Edwards was the former Director for the Center on Poverty, Work and Opportunity at UNC. Score one of Edwards.

    If we had applied the same criteria to Bush, then we would have seen what he did to Texas as Governor and he would have never made it past the primaries. Instead people decided he was "moral" and they wanted to have a drink with him.

    I don't care what the perceived values of John Edwards are. Give me substance over haircuts, snipets of sentences, or size of house. Otherwise you're just wasting my time.

  • pat malach (unverified)
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    oh dear, i am so weary of hearing ultra rich politicians and their like talk about poverty as though it is something they care deeply about.

    The sad truth is that poverty and politcal apathy often walk hand in hand. That's not fault of people who've got more important things to worry about. But it's a reality, and demographic groups that don't vote in large numbers will find very few politicians willing to go to bat for them.

    If it wasn't for "ultra-rich" politicians like John Edwards speaking for them, poor people would have no voice at all.

    The idea John Edwards cannot feel empathy for the less fortunate, simply because he worked his way into a higher tax bracket, is a pretty dark view of humanity. In fact, it sounds more like a closed-minded conservative point of view than a liberal one.

  • pat malach (unverified)
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    By the way, Andrew, the disrespectful (Johnny Boy) tone of your headline speaks much louder about your feelings toward Edwards than does the apparently disengenuous statement that "I haven't crossed (Edwards) off my list yet but (he's) gotta get in the game and stop the BS."

    Me thinks thou doth protest too much about your lack of bias in this matter.

    To paraphrase the wise statesman who defended Bill Clinton in the Senate, "If they preface their statements by 'it's not about the money.' It's about the money. If they say 'it's not about the sex,' it's about the sex. If they say 'I don't have a dog in this fight, but...' they have a dog in the fight.

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    Miles:

    I'm naturally skeptical and I'm willing to call a spade, a spade. It's not unreasonable to be skeptical about someone who goes into hedge fund consulting and, when running for the Democratic nomination, says that it was to learn about the connection between the financial markets and poverty. It might be a different issue if he refused payment but he didn't and he shouldn't have! He can, just like anyone else in America, make money on the market and he shouldn't have to cover that up when running for the Democratic nomination.

    pat malach:

    "Johnny Boy" is disrespectful? I guess you never got picked on in the schoolyard because that's about as tame as it gets.

    Interestingly enough, his first name is Johnny. See Sheryl Gay Stolberg's July 7, 2004 article in the New York Times. (I didn't provide a link because you can't access it unless you have Times Select.)

    Not that it matters what his name is... Point is that I didn't cross him off my list and the fact that I referred to him as "Johnny Boy" is pretty much the weakest substantiation that I did.

  • andy (unverified)
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    Hedge fund, who cares. What about his record of extorting money from companies while he was a trial attorney thru the use of junk science? I'd think that liberals and progressives would be concerned about that. Or don't you care since the money was extorted from corporations and not poor people?

  • Scott in Damascus (unverified)
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    Andy: Please site the case, the company, the amount, and the specific "junk science" that Mr. Edwards allegedly "extorted" from said company.

    Thank you in advance for that information.

  • Scott in Salem (unverified)
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    I like the Democrats this year if they do not have another John Kerry running. The problem for John Kerry was he had to explain everything to the American people and in today's political climate that does not work.

    Every time the media hits John Edwards with questions about the haircuts, home, and now hedge funds he gets hurt. Edwards' gets hurt because he then has to explain it in a detailed manner that comes off sounding fake and takes too long.

    I think the American People want something more authentic, not another person who is wealthy and cares about the poor. The people spinning it here on this blog, if it takes too long to defend you have lost already. This should have been a lesson learned three years ago. The polls keep changing, and yes Edwards is winning in Iowa, but in the national polls he comes up third every time.

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    Shouldn't we all be examining these candidates values, policy positions, and character when making that decision?

    Well, sure Kari. I've already done that. And this is what I've discovered. Of all the candidates I've seen so far, I like all the ones with the big (D) letter behind their names. I absolutely hate all the candidates with that (R) tag.

    It really is as simple as that. I don't have any bad feelings whatsoever about any of our top-tier people. And the differences between them are so small as to be indistinguishable.

    Don't believe me? Try it yourself. Have a friend get the policy statements or speeches of Clinton, Obama, Edwards, and Richardson on some topic you're not familiar with, then remove the identification of who said what. Then read them try to tell the difference.

    You can't. Because they're all using different words to say the same thing.

    Republicans similarly say the same thing. Well, except for Guliani being pro-choice, which is why he isn't going to win the nomination, but on just about any other issue you can immediately tell who is the (R) and who is the (D). Health care? The (D)s are for it, the (R)s are against. Getting out of Iraq? (D)s for (R)s against. Reversing the no-plutocrat-left-behind tax giveaways? (D) for. (R) against.

    I could go on, but I hope you get the point. Primary partisans like to pretend that there are huge - or even significant - differences in positions between the contenders for the nominations. But they're wrong. The actual laws we'll get out of our next batch of people will almost entirely be dictated by the makeup of the Senate. It will have absolutely nothing to do with the rhetorical emphasis of our of our candidate's primary stump speech.

    So if you really want to help the poor, drop this Edwards gig, and go find someone who can actually beat Gordon Smith.

    (I'd say more, but I really have to work now.)

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    Posted by: andy | May 9, 2007 1:56:44 PM

    You mean the "junk science" like the case where the Wisconsin company Sta-Rite a pool equipment company, having their said product previously injure 12 other children, which by 1993 because of a 2 cent screw not being in place a five-year-old girl named Valerie Lakey in NC got caught over the uncovered drain so forcefully in a pool with a Sta-Rite pump, that the suction pulled out most of her intestines so that while she survived, for the rest of her life will need to be hooked up to feeding tubes for 12 hours each night... that sort of "junk science"...?

    I eagerly await your clarification about what "junk science" was used to "extort" what money from which companies exactly you are referring to.

  • Miles (unverified)
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    He can, just like anyone else in America, make money on the market and he shouldn't have to cover that up when running for the Democratic nomination.

    That you are certain it's a cover-up is the problem. Did it ever occur to you, even briefly, that Edwards might be telling the truth? And if he is, does that change your view of him?

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    The people spinning it here on this blog, if it takes too long to defend you have lost already.

    Wait a minute, Scott in Salem. Are you saying that once a charge is made, that person has already lost? That merely to mount a defense is to have acknowledged defeat? Really?

    If that's the criteria, is there a candidate left standing?

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    Steven Maurer, I agree - all the Ds are better than all the Rs. We are talking about shades and distinctions.

    So if you really want to help the poor, drop this Edwards gig, and go find someone who can actually beat Gordon Smith.

    One clarification: I don't have an Edwards "gig". I'm just a volunteer - and most of my work is done for a while now that he's come and gone (and packed every room he was in.)

    And I'm definitely working on the Smith thing. But I'm not sure I like the inference here that it's my job to "go find someone" to run. It's no more my job than it is yours.

    America is run by the people who show up. So, show up. Decide for yourself which candidate you think would be a great challenger to Gordon Smith. Call 'em up and ask 'em to run. Find a few friends to do the same.

    Never doubt the power of a dozen honest and authentic phone calls from real people. And there's not a state-level politician in Oregon that won't return a phone call from a decent person that leaves a nice message and a working phone number.

  • Stephen Holland (unverified)
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    Scott in Salem: I think the American People want something more authentic, not another person who is wealthy and cares about the poor.

    Why is it so difficult to believe that someone who has money actually does care about the poor? To my recollection, the last major presidential candidate who focused on poverty in America was Robert Kennedy, and we all know that he hardly came from a modest background. John Edwards' wealth should have nothing to do with how his policy is formed or perceived.

    John Edwards' answer wasn't bad because it was long or convoluted. It was a bad answer because it seems unbelievable to the skeptical American. Was it true? I don't know and neither does anyone else. The problem was that it seems like he's trying to politic his way out of it. He should have acknowledged a different premise; he is the American dream and wants to give that to more people. Sure, his "Two Americas" speech has been played out a bit, but his story doesn't get old.

    In short, Edwards' answer was a bad one, but it's nothing compared to "I voted before it before I voted against it." Most importantly, though, this will end up meaning nothing to me and most other primary voters. We want substance, and while I haven't made up my mind on him yet, Edwards seems to be showing a lot of it.

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    He should have acknowledged a different premise; he is the American dream and wants to give that to more people.

    He said exactly that before 1000 people in Portland last week.

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    I saw this in the rec list at Daily Kos...

    In response to Ann Coulter's latest screed about how Newsweek was "doing push-polling for Al Qaeda" when their latest polls showed Barack Obama leading all Republican candidates in the race for president, Edwards unleashed the following broadside:

    Just when we thought Ann Coulter couldn't take the politics of personal destruction any lower, she proved us wrong. Her outrageous comments are inexcusable and should not be tolerated in the public dialogue. This is the latest example of how the political doctrine of Bush's Global War on Terror has created a climate where people think it's okay to use the threat of terrorism as a guise for hateful political attacks. There is no superior 'Republican' way to fight terrorism. The exercise of raw power alone does not make you a world leader, and will not make us secure. Our capacity to lead requires that we be strong - and that we have the moral authority to do it.

    I'm still leaning Obama, but that's exactly the kind of politics that is going to win people like me over to Edwards camp.

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    The exercise of raw power alone does not make you a world leader, and will not make us secure. Our capacity to lead requires that we be strong - and that we have the moral authority to do it.

    Worth repeating...that's a great Edwards quote. Thanks for sharing it, Sal.

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    I mostly agree with Steve Maurer on this one, although I'd exclude Clinton from my list.

    As for the rest, we need to see rapid and effective repsonse to smear attacks, since that is the single most important attribute for the person taht winds up facing the slime machine in the general.

    So far, Edwards is not showing me rapid effective responses to attacks. Obama is. Desn't mean that I've made up my mind on this, but my recurring nighmare another hapless stiff like Kerry spending the next 18 months looking like a deer in the headlights.......

    <hr/>

    We all know how unfair this is, but it's the playing field that we are currently working with........

  • Steve R (unverified)
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    To assume that everyone who works for a hedge fund only takes the job for the money is absolutely not correct.

  • gl (unverified)
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    <h2>finally disclosed that edwards made 400-500k salary, and 1.3m in investment gain working at fortress. hmm looks like he was studying poverty, he made the smallest paycheck in the hedge fund industry.</h2>

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