Live Debate Coverage From The Root and This Week in Blackness
Elongated Thoughts: Join us here at 8 p.m. Wednesday for live tweeting and a Google+ Hangout.
(The Root) -- I don't know if you've heard about this, but there're going to be some "debates" happening pretty soon.
On Wednesday, Oct. 3, the first of three presidential debates will kick off in Denver, and apparently everyone is terrified. Both Mitt Romney and Barack Obama have been actively downplaying expectations and participating in rigorous debate preparation. Romney and the entire Republican Party realize that he needs a win. If he gets decimated in the debates, his chances of gaining the presidency are pretty much done.
Barack Obama and the entire Democratic Party realize that it's their race to lose. If Obama gets hurricane-kicked with zingers and responds with aloofness and annoyance, he'll seem arrogant. Conservatives would love to be able to hammer him on being "uppity."
So this is going to be terribly interesting.
And it's because of this that I'm proud to announce that This Week in Blackness will be teaming up with The Root to provide live coverage for the first presidential debate. We'll be broadcasting live from Brooklyn, N.Y., and streaming to TWIB, The Root and Google+. We'll be discussing and breaking down everything leading up to the debate and will also provide immediate postdebate analysis. Tune in at 8 p.m. ET and join the conversation in our chat room and on Twitter (#TWIB2012).
And in the meantime, check out a recent segment from This Week in Blackness Radio in which #TeamBlackness (L. Joy Williams, Aaron Rand Freeman and I) discuss Romney's commentary on what to do with the uninsured in America.
Elon James White is a writer and satirist and host of the award-winning video and radio series This Week in Blackness. Listen Monday to Thursday at 1:30 p.m. EST at TWIB.FM and watch TV.TWIB.ME/LIVE. Follow him on Twitter, Facebook, Google+ and Tumblr.
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Paul Ryan Has No Time for Explanations
Elongated Thoughts: The veep contender says that it would be too hard to explain how his budget does the thing everyone says it can't do.
( The Root) -- The Romney-Ryan team has one thing and one thing only on their side: the appearance that they understand the economy better than President Obama. So when the Romney budget hit the ground and was found to be mathematically impossible by the Brookings Institution and Tax Policy Center, many people watching this unfold had two words to say:
"Wait ... what?"
This was their bread and butter! Obama's weak on the economy, everyone says. Romney made a lot of money! Ryan is a budget mastermind. Yet your budget is mathematically impossible?
Wait ... what?
You can't explain it? You sort of have to be able to explain the thing you claim you can do that experts don't think is possible.
"We're going to travel through time!"
"That's impossible at the moment."
"No, we're totally going to do it."
"How?"
"Listen -- I don't have time to explain it to you. Just know we're doing it."
Well, then, I totally believe you. #SayAnything2012
Elon James White is a writer and satirist and host of the award-winning video and radio series This Week in Blackness. Listen Monday to Thursday at 1:30 p.m. EST at TWIB.FM and watch on TV.TWIB.ME/LIVE. Follow him on Twitter, Facebook, Google+ and Tumblr.
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Ann Romney on Mitt's Mental Wellness
Elongated Thoughts: The possible future first lady of the United States isn't doing her husband any favors on the campaign trail.
(The Root) -- Ann Romney is worried. When asked what her biggest concern would be if her husband, Mitt Romney, becomes president, she had this to say: "You know, I think my biggest concern, obviously, would just be for his mental well-being.
"I have all the confidence in the world in his ability, in his decisiveness and his leadership skills, in his understanding of the economy, in his understanding of what's missing right now in the economy -- you know, pieces that are missing to get this jump-started," she continued. "So for me I think it would just be the emotional part of it."
But ... did you just say ... are you implying ... ? This is nothing, right? It's just a significant other of a presidential candidate saying that she's worried about the mental state of her husband if he becomes president. You know -- that thing Romney is actively trying to do.
Um ... yay! Mental and/or emotional instability in the White House?
Elon James White is a writer and satirist and host of the award-winning video and radio series This Week in Blackness. Listen Monday to Thursday at 1:30 p.m. EST at TWIB.FM and watch TV.TWIB.ME/LIVE. Follow him on Twitter, Facebook, Google+ and Tumblr.
Like The Root on Facebook. Follow us on Twitter.
Mitt Romney Wants You to Know He Cares
Elongated Thoughts: Mitt Romney is nervous about how he's being perceived. Does this new ad make him seem more compassionate?
( The Root) -- Mitt Romney wants you to know he cares. No, no -- he really cares. He cares so much that he needs to tell everyone how much he cares in a new ad. He knows that the polls say that America believes Obama cares, so he can't even bad-mouth the president on that. What does a presidential candidate do?
Well, apparently he turns to the camera and makes an impassioned plea. Check out the ad and the discussion that followed from TWiB! Radio.
Elon James White is a writer and satirist and host of the award-winning video and radio series This Week in Blackness. Listen Monday to Thursday on TWiB.FM and watch on TV.TWIB.ME. Follow him on Twitter, Facebook, Google+ and Tumblr.
Like The Root on Facebook. Follow us on Twitter.
Reflections on CBC Week 2012
Elongated Thoughts: The importance of voting was a running theme at the conference.
(The Root) -- My second time at the Congressional Black Caucus Foundation's Annual Legislative Conference was interesting, to say the least. Last year I attended as a newbie. My expectations were all based on what I had heard about the ALC, which is better known as CBC Week. I had jokingly referred to it as "political black freaknik" because of the overwhelming emphasis that many place on the parties and after-parties. However, after attending and working with the organization, my tone soon changed.
This isn't to say that the ALC isn't full of parties. There are parties on top of parties inside of parties. But what's really interesting is the number of panels and discussions that occur when the partying stops. Discussions range from voter suppression to the state of black America as a whole. You see civil rights leaders walking through the exhibit hall, black and white politicians actively showing their faces -- making sure people know that they were there and they weighed in on the topics that are close to black America's heart.
This year I was fortunate to attend the closing event, the Phoenix Awards, where first lady Michelle Obama was lavished with applause and adulation as she delivered a hard-hitting speech with an emphasis on the importance of voting. I also got the opportunity to sit down briefly with a living civil rights icon, Rep. John Lewis (D-Ga.), who also trumpeted the need for voting with the passion of a much younger man. Everywhere I turned in this crucial election year, the urgency of voting was being hammered over and over again. And I'll be honest with you: When John Lewis, a man who was beaten on Bloody Sunday in 1965, tells you that voting is important, you hear those words in your soul. History doesn't often stare into your eyes, but when it does, you have no choice but to listen.
This isn't to say that I don't have critiques of the ALC. I hope that as time goes on, they reach out to different segments of the black community that don't normally gravitate to such events. I would love to see more of a push to get their messages, which they are spending so much time on, out to more people through social media.
There are various ways in which the overall event can improve and be more inclusive, but this doesn't negate the positives that come along with it. Having the opportunity to deal directly with many of the leaders within black America is something I don't think anyone who cares about our future should miss.

On the opening night of the Annual Legislative Conference, the chairman of the Congressional Black Caucus, Rep. Emanuel Cleaver (D-Mo.), with the managing editor of The Root, Sheryl Huggins Salomon.

Rep. James E. Clyburn (D-S.C.) at the Phoenix Awards.

Democratic Chairwoman Debbie Wasserman Schultz and Assistant Treasurer of the CBCF Kimberly Woodard share a laugh at the Phoenix Awards.

Michael Eric Dyson and the Rev. Al Sharpton spoke only for a few minutes, but it was obviously about something very interesting at the Phoenix Awards.

Civil rights icon John Lewis immediately after an interview with This Week in Blackness radio.

Former Secretary of State Colin Powell cracks up at some commentary by a fan who just bought his book at the author pavilion at the ALC.

The Chairman's Reception was made complete with a performance by the Stylistics.

Two civil rights icons share a serious moment at the Phoenix Awards.

Sharpton and first lady Michelle Obama share a few words directly after her speech at the Phoenix Awards.
Elon James White is a writer and satirist and host of the award-winning video and radio series This Week in Blackness. Listen Monday to Thursday at TWIB.FM and watch at TV.TWIB.ME. Subscribe on iTunes. Follow Elon on Twitter, Facebook, Google+ and Tumblr.
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