Sen. Clinton is air-dropping attack ads on Wisconsin, but isn't showing up in Wisconsin to talk to the voters.
20 debates aren't enough for Clinton. There must be 21. Meanwhile, Clinton is absent from Wisconsin and its voters all week.
Obama has debated and will debate about his health care plan. Obama has debated and will debate about his record. Obama has debated and will debate about strengthening Social Security. Contrary to Clinton's negative attacks, Obama has answered Clinton's questions in 18 debates so far, and Clinton will be free to continue these attacks to Obama's face in two more debates to come.
But while attack politics may be "the fun part," it's not what the voters want. You'd think South Carolina would have taught Clinton that. Voters also don't want their votes overturned by party insiders, as Clinton is openly strategizing. And they don't want First Amendment-free elections, in which candidates are denied the freedom of speech or assembly, but are nevertheless voted upon. Sen. Clinton is doing whatever it takes, from "going all-out negative" to anti-democratic maneuvering. This is not the way to win the nomination of The Democratic Party. This is not the way to win the nomination of any democratic party.
Update: Thanks to davidkc, a fact check from ABC:
Then comes the proverbial scare tactic in the TV ad: Clinton's charge that Obama "said he might raise the retirement age and cut benefits for Social Security. But Hillary won't."
That statement is misleading.
Obama has never advocated those steps, he's never expressly said he might raise the retirement age or cut benefits.