
NEW YORK, Oct. 10, 2008
The Highs And Lows Of Attack Ads
CBS Evening News Breaks Down The Good, The Bad And The Ugly Of The Campaigns
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A Look At Negative Ads
The presidential campaign is becoming more negative out on the trail and on television. More attacks ads are being released because they can be effective, but not always. Jeff Greenfield reports.
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Sens. John McCain and Barack Obama are certainly not the first to go negative in advertising. (CBS/ AP)
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Campaign 2008
Profiles of the candidates, polls, fund-raising, blogs, video and more.
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CBS Evening News
Presidential Questions
Katie Couric asks Barack Obama and John McCain questions of politics, policy and character.
The Good
"Read my lips: no new taxes," George H.W. Bush said, as quoted in an ad from Bill Clinton's campaign. The ad continued: "And then passed the second-largest tax increase in history."
The best negative ads are those that quote a candidate's words - accurately - and turn them against the candidate, as with the above 1992 Clinton campaign ad. It finished: "Don't read his lips, read his record."
Or the famous "weathervane" ad from 1972, highlighting George McGovern's changes of mind. It said: "Last year ... this year ... the question is, what about next year?"
And in 2004, the Bush campaign used John Kerry's hobby to make their point.
"Where does John Kerry stand? Any way the wind blows," it said, to images of Kerry windsurfing.
The Bad: Over The Top
So what makes a bad negative ad? When it goes too far ... take the Bush '92 campaign ad which tried to present Clinton's home state of Arkansas as something out of a Stephen King novel.
"America can't afford to take that risk," it said.
And then there are ads which are either distortions or flat-out untrue, which candidates run even after fact checkers call them out.
John McCain has done it. He attached Barack Obama to "skyrocketing taxes on life savings, electricity and home heating oil." Not true.
And another ad claimed: "Obama's one accomplishment? Legislation to teach 'comprehensive sex education' to kindergarteners." Also an exaggeration.
McCain has said: "He voted 94 times for higher taxes." Untrue.
But so has Obama.
One ad says: "Washington sold them out with the help of people like John McCain." Another: "John McCain refused to support loan guarantees for the auto industry." That's an exaggeration.
Obama's "Promise" ad says: "McCain voted three times in favor of privatizing Social Security. Cutting benefits in half." That's also not true.
The Ugly: "Who Ya Gonna Call?"
But for this week's a jaw-dropper, here's an ad from a 2006 Congressional race, where the famous "3 a.m. phone call" argument takes on a whole new meaning.
"Who calls a fantasy sex hotline - and then bills taxpayers? Michael Arcuri," one ad said.
And, well, that candidate won.
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Wow, stay tuned Sarah--you are in the big leagues now--and you can''''t hide behind moose dressing or a misunderstanding--no respect for the law, no respect for the Constitution...when this is over, you may wish YOU were Bill Ayers.
http://www.rr.com/view/content
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Posted by harbinger09 at 02:46 PM : Oct 11, 2008
I have watched for years, all the corruption, agency after agency failing left and right. I myself am one of hundreds of thousands of Americans who were denied our Constitutional right to due process, denied for years!!! I have watched unimaginable numbers of professionals loosing their jobs, shipped overseas. And I could go on and on.
Politics as usual only robs me of all hope for the future of my country and myself. How long has it been since the CBSnews report on the Social Security Administration''s abuse of disabled persons, denying due process? Not so much as even an apology from Washington, no effort whatsoever to right the wrong! That is not honorable.
Thomas Jefferson said "A nation as a society forms a moral person, and every member of it is personally responsible for his society."
That is the kind of example our country needs now, not campaign strategies that would more closely resemble Ralph Waldo Emerson''s quote, "Society is a masked ball, where every one hides his real character, and reveals it by hiding"
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by albertw40
October 13, 2008 6:19 AM PDT
- McCain uses attack ads to try to make us forget. McCain has to somehow make folks like me forget that he and those around him were the ones who helped cause the economic meltdown in the first place. He has surrounded himself with lobbyists like Rick Davis who got millions from Fannie and Freddie. McCain and his next Secretary of the Treasury Phil Gramm voted for and promoted the very deregulation which led to all this. His advisers (like Carly Fiorina) got huge golden parachutes for laying people off work. While people were losing jobs, homes, pensions, health care, retirement funds (2 Trillion in the last two weeks), and while ordinary people were paying the highest inflation in 27 years, the rich kept getting richer, all because of the "deregulate at any cost" philosophy. Bush-Cheney, McCain-Gramm forgot a basic fact. The Middle Class working people are the backbone of this country. When you encourage corporations to become more profitable (temporarily) by laying off half their workers, you are encouraging eventual economic downfall. That''s what McCain-Gramm, Bush-Cheney did. I''ll never forget Bush''s "compassionate conservatistm." It turned out to be compassion for the rich and shaft the poor. No matter what he says or claims, I would expect more of the same from John McCain.
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