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Welcome to ‘Inside Baseball’ (or should I say ‘Inside the Boxing Ring’)
So now pointing out facts which dispel Mr. Dienhart’s lies are considered “personal attacks” and “diatribes” and “lies” in and of themselves…
No wonder Sen. Obama’s suggestion that we Americans ought to ignore these distractions and instead focus on actually solving the weighty matters before us has led him to a consistent and evermore substantial lead over Sen. McCain since the Democratic nomination process ended.
And little wonder too that Mr. Dienhart’s own updates and comments have devolved into the very things he and his supporters claim of my fact-based presentations: diatribes full of personal attacks on my integrity and lies about both what I’ve written and what Sen. Obama has said.
As if his first post in this debate wasn’t fibbing enough, George Dienhart has updated his most recent, very carefully parsed post and — again — cherry-picks out only the parts which fit his narrow, bizarro alternate reality all while continuing to falsely claim that somehow my pointing out facts which negate his fibs are “lies” in and of themselves.
Does Mr. Dienhart not know how to read the entire proposal Sen. Obama originally put forth in January of 2007? Does he not understand that taking only a few bullet points out of my own posts (post 1 and post 2) debunking his junk while ignoring the conclusions thereof doesn’t make his fibs any more true than before?
Sadly for his readers, this appears to be the case.
Perhaps Mr. Dienhart will bother to actually link to these posts and quotes of which he whines instead of cherry-picking a few lines from them as he fabricates his misinformation.
Only then would his readers be able to judge for themselves who is referring to fact-based info — such as the actual contents of Obama’s plan from 2007 which included references to the residual forces Mr. Dienhart now lies about being a “flip” — and who is, quite frankly, acting like an irritable troll by clipping quotes in convenient places.
Then again, in his partisan fog, perhaps Mr. Dienhart really thinks that Obama is somehow flipping his consistent positions simply because he’s not repeating every single line item of every single policy proposal every single time he mentions said proposals during 30 second debate points and soundbyte interviews… (Of course if he did do that then partisan Obama-haters would start complaining that Obama is overanalytical and elitist… Oh, wait, they’re saying that too. Hard to believe, I know.)
That said, the hypocritical Mr. Dienhart may want to discontinue crying about “partisan talking points”. Everything I’ve linked to was pre-existing information which I simply (and all too easily) referred to shine the light of truth on Mr. Dienhart’s lies.
On the other hand, several points Mr. Dienhart makes come straight from GOP talking points. Here’s but one example… Mr. Dienhart quotes something from what he calls a “Democrat” National Committee meeting (not sure what that is since the actual meeting on that day was the Democratic National Committee).
So right off the bat we know he’s using a unique misspelling. A quick Google search including that typo reveals that Mr. Dienhart pulled “his” talking point from an equally half-witted July 5th Republican talking point memo PDF hosted at GOP.com. GOP.com is, of course, the website of the Republican National Committee (or is it the “Republic” National Committee?).
In attempting to defend his lies about Sen. Obama, Illinois Review whiner George Dienhart continues to parse the finest of lines and blatantly make up baloney. He complains that my earlier post pointing out the facts behind his fibs claiming Sen. Obama has somehow “flipped” his Iraq position missed his intended point and that I should get reading lessons. It seems he needs to look in the mirror.
Readers should know Mr. Deinhart is so enamored with me he once called my office just to check on my whereabouts. I suppose he probably made the trip from beautiful Bull Valley one day and knows all about my ugly green kitchen countertops (a la conservative stalker extraordinaire Michelle Malkin) and he probably even looked up my DMV records and knows all about that junky old green Mazda Protege I got rid of years ago (my first new car, ah memories).
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First, the Dienhart parsing…
Here’s what he originally wrote:
[...] The latest flip was on the war. It seems that Obama will not pull the troops out . Liberals can now collectively whine about how this isn’t a flip. All done now? Here is the quote from Sen. Obama.
“I have put forward a plan that will get our troops out by the end of 2009. We already saw today reports that the Iraqi minister suggests that we’re going to be in there at least until 2018, a decade-long commitment. Currently, we are spending $9 to $10 billion a month. The notion is that we are going to sustain that at the same time as we’re neglecting what we see happening in Afghanistan right now, where you have a luxury hotel in Kabul blown up by militants and the situation continues to worsen.”
Notice that first sentence? “I have put forward a plan that will get our troops out by the end of 2009.” What did Sen. Obama say in his recent Op/Ed piece in the New York Times? “’We can safely redeploy our combat brigades at a pace that would remove them in 16 months. That would be the summer of 2010 - two years from now, and more than seven years after the war began. After this redeployment, a residual force in Iraq would perform limited missions: going after any remnants of Al Qaeda in Mesopotamia, protecting American service members and, so long as the Iraqis make political progress, training Iraqi security forces.”
I’ll leave the bizarre, yet historically correct reference to Mesopotamia alone for the moment. Let’s call this what it is- a flip. Oh, and lets just be honest about what he is proposing- the same “residual force” that John McCain was crucified on earlier in the campaign. [...]
(emphasis added for clarity)
Now, my post called Dienhart out on the “Notice that first sentence” bit… not the “Oh, and” bit which took up a much smaller portion of his post.
Again, there is no “flip” here.
Obama’s Plan for Iraq is the same 16 month strategy he first proposed as binding legisltion in the Senate in January 2007.
- January 2007 (when it was first introduced) + Obama’s 16 Month Strategic Redeployment = March 2008
- January 2008 (when Obama again mentioned it in a Dem debate) + Obama’s 16 Month Strategic Redeployment = March 2009
- January 2009 (when the next president is sworn in) + Obama’s 16 Month Strategic Redeployment (should it be Obama who is elected) = March 2010
…In other words, the Obama Plan for Iraq is exactly the same. The only thing changing is the timing and the obstructionist Republicans — from the filibustering Senate GOP to the veto-ready Republican president — are the ones causing the delays in implementation.
Heck, even the Iraqi leadership is now essentially agreeing with Obama on the concept of a strategic timetable.
But, Dienhart’s second post goes on and on about how he wasn’t really talking about the timing (despite what he wrote about 2009 vs 2010). No, instead he now says he was really emphasizing the last few sentences so ignore all the other stuff. To wit, he now writes:
“Ahh, that’s not what the piece was addressed. Quite clearly, I stated that the flip occurred when Obama went from advocating a total pullout from Iraq to leaving behind sixty thousand troops as a “reaction force”.”
As I demonstrated above, Mr. Dienhart wrote about the 2009 vs 2010 timing for the majority of that first diatribe and didn’t really get into discussing the point about residual forces until after he says “Oh, and…”
Bizarre, but it leads to…
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Second, the Dienhart baloney…
Mr. Dienhart originally wrote, “It seems that Obama will not pull the troops out” and “Oh, and lets just be honest about what he is proposing- the same “residual force” that John McCain was crucified on earlier in the campaign.” (Again, emphasis added.)
This too is not a flip, despite Mr. Dienhart’s deepest partisan wishes.
You see, from the get-go Sen. Obama has said the same thing about having a limited number of troops in country after the strategic redeployment of the combat brigades. Surely Mr. Dienhart, as a military man himself, knows the difference in forces. Obama has never said he would pull out every single GI (our embassies are guarded by Marines after all, would Mr. Dienhart complain about that too?) but that we do need to focus on redeploying the bulk of our battle forces, a point on which the majority of Americans agree with him.
Recall that Sen. Obama first introduced his plan to the Senate in January of 2007. From his Senate website, dated January 30, 2007:
“The plan allows for a limited number of U.S. troops to remain as basic force protection, to engage in counter-terrorism, and to continue the training of Iraqi security forces. If the Iraqis are successful in meeting the thirteen benchmarks for progress laid out by the Bush Administration, this plan also allows for the temporary suspension of the redeployment, provided Congress agrees that the benchmarks have been met and that the suspension is in the national security interest of the United States.”
In other words, there is no “flip” and Dienhart flops again.
Perhaps it is Mr. Dienhart who needs that reading lesson. Or, perhaps he’d like that thinking lesson instead since both his first and second post merely mimic the bogus and hollow yelps of “Flip!” from other partisan conservatives.
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And some miscellany…
By the by, Dienhart complains that the trackback on the original posts appeared twice. Horrors.
I hadn’t realized the trackback popped up twice on the original Dienhart screed. I’m not sure why that would’ve happened other than I was thinking about posting an update about other cons writing about non-flips so I stopped in on that post’s edit feature later in the day (I ended up not doing the update). I suppose those darn Internets may have taken that as a double-post.
If I could fix the quirk to soothe Mr. Dienhart’s poor feelings I would but really it’s nothing he should worry his pretty little head about though.
As for why I write about Illinois Review contributors… they keep posting malarkey and rational folks like me will keep debunking it. If the Reviewers don’t like that, it’s well within their means to stop writing their spurious essays and start writing honestly. (It’s funny how the non-Ill Review peeps I debunk have the same complaints, as if I’m hurting their egos instead of pointing out facts. Go figure.)
I get that Mr. Dienhart apparently loathes what Sen. Obama has proposed and all the values for which he stands. But does he really need to continue to make up such claptrap? Apparently doing so, just like calling random people just to check in on them, fulfills some sort of desire for him.
To each their own.
PS: Mr. Dienhart may consider the 63% of Americans who say the Iraq War was not worth it as “anti-war” (ABC News Poll, 7/10-13, 2008). But, really, most of us rational Americans are simply anti-lying our way into war and, more importantly, anti-bungled war. Same goes for Democrats or Republicans who worm their way into needless wars — they both tend to get clobbered at the ballot box.
He says the pain is in his neck, but it’s apparently really just a brain cramp from cherry-picking those darn facts.
In his too-cute-by-half post “Flip!” George Dienhart squeals that Sen. Obama has somehow “flipped” on strategic withdrawal from Iraq. The problem for George is that he pulls a quote from January 2008 and removes all context of time from it.
Why does the timing matter? Because Sen. Obama said at the January 15, 2008 Democratic debate in Las Vegas: “I have put forward a plan that will get our troops out by the end of 2009.” (The full quote, which to his credit George picked up directly, is half-way through this debate transcript.)
The Obama Plan on Iraq is based on redeploying one to two brigades out of Iraq every month, which would take about 16 months to get the bulk of our forces out…
Makes sense: 16 months from January 2008 would be in 2009.
George now whines that Obama has flipped because he is — get this — still saying his plan would take about 16 months.
Where’s the flip?
George has to make it up by gurgling that Obama is now stating the redeployment wouldn’t be complete until 2010. That year, 2010, is of course 16 months after Obama would be sworn into the Presidency if he is elected. In fact, his actual plan was introduced to the Senate in early 2007 — with 16 months actually falling in March of 2008 at that point — and was unfortunately DOA given the obstructionist Senate Republicans’ 24/7 filibustering. I wonder why George didn’t get the brilliant idea to make up baloney about that date.
Sen. Obama’s 16 month strategy is still a 16 month strategy — the Republicans’ obstinance keeps pushing the actual implementation date further away.
Why is the Obama Plan on Iraq important and just what is so “strategic” about it? Just read the news reports about Afghanistan and what Obama has to say about concentrating on the real war on terror (in Afghanistan against the Taliban) and focusing on the real culprits behind 9/11 (Osama bin Forgotten and al Qaida).
Now consider that George’s cherry-picked essay is designed to denigrate Obama’s common sense foreign policy and, more importantly, military policy while also essentially promoting John McCain’s presidential ambitions and his desire to stay in Iraq for 100 years or more. (And yes, McCain did say he’d like our troops to stay for 50… 100… 1,000… even a million years after peace has broken out — as if the Taliban and al Qaida did not exist and we had endless numbers of GIs.)
Is this sort of cherry-picked partisan proselytizing what John McCain’s economic adviser (and architect of the current mortgage crisis with his Gramm Act) Phil Gramm had in mind when he complained Americans are whiners? Did he mean to reference criers like George who have to cherry-pick facts and ignore context in order to promote their alternate realities?
Sadly for George his post “Flip!” is nothing but a flop.
Over the weekend, former NATO Commander Gen. Wesley Clark (Ret.), a Barack Obama supporter, was discussing Sen. John McCain’s qualifications (or lack thereof) for office on CBS’ Sunday morning news show.
Bob Schieffer: Well you, you went so far as to say that you thought John McCain was, quote, and these are your words, “untested and untried,” And I must say I, I had to read that twice, because you’re talking about somebody who was a prisoner of war. He was a squadron commander of the largest squadron in the Navy. He’s been on the Senate Armed Services Committee for lo these many years. How can you say that John McCain is un- untested and untried? General?
GENERAL WESLEY CLARK: Because in the matters of national security policy making, it’s a matter of understanding risk. It’s a matter of gauging your opponents, and it’s a matter of being held accountable. John McCain’s never done any of that in his official positions. I certainly honor his service as a prisoner of war. He was a hero to me and to hundreds of thousands and millions of others in Armed Forces as a prisoner of war. He has been a voice on the Senate Armed Services Committee, and he has traveled all over the world. But he hasn’t held executive responsibility. That large squadron in Air- in the Navy that he commanded, it wasn’t a wartime squadron. He hasn’t been there and ordered the bombs to fall. He hasn’t seen what it’s like when diplomats come in and say, ‘I don’t know whether we’re going to be able to get this point through or not. Do you want to take the risk? What about your reputation? How do we handle it-’
Bob Schieffer: Well-
GENERAL WESLEY CLARK: ‘ -it publicly.’ He hasn’t made those calls, Bob.
[...]
Bob Schieffer: I have to say, Barack Obama has not had any of those experiences either, nor has he ridden in a fighter plane and gotten shot down. I mean-
GENERAL WESLEY CLARK: Well, I don’t think riding in a fighter plane and getting shot down is a qualification to be President.
Unfortunately, in their race to find the lowest common denominator and most sensationalist soap opera soundbite, the media (at the bidding of the faux outraged McCain Campaign [video]) has seen fit to only repeat the very last sentence which, clearly from the entire context, was set up by that most liberal (not) of networks, CBS.
And while the quote, “I don’t think riding in a fighter plane and getting shot down is a qualification to be President,” is technically accurate (note the Republicans said the same of President John F. Kennedy’s boat in WWII) it is “inartful” as Sen. Obama noted in today’s Quote of the Day. (Keep in mind that while Sen. McCain had been shot down and held as a POW, Gen. Clark was carried off the Vietnam battlefield on a stretcher. He’s no stranger to the crucible of combat.)
You see, on Monday Sen. Obama made a speech in which he said that no one should denigrate anyone’s military service. Many folks naturally took that as a repudiation of Gen. Clark’s comments from the day before.
Turns out that that Obama phrase has been part of the working draft of that speech for about two months. So unless Sen. Obama can look into the future, it was simply coincidence that he said that just after Gen. Clark’s off-the-cuff response to CBS’ Bob Schieffer.
And so on to the Quote of the Day, wherein Sen. Obama reminds us that the kerfuffle over Sen. McCain’s military service means little in the face of McCain’s lack of judgment and pandering to the political winds on the key issues facing we Americans. After being asked again about the Clark remarks:
“I guess my question is why, given all the vast numbers of things that we’ve got to work on, that that would be a top priority of mine?” he said. “I think that, you know, right now we’re here to talk about how we can make sure that kids in Zanesville and across Ohio get the kind of support that they need and communities that are impoverished can start to rebuild. I’m happy to have all sorts of conversations about how we deal with Iraq and what happens with Iran, but the fact that somebody on a cable show or on a news show like Gen. Clark said something that was inartful about Sen. McCain I don’t think is probably the thing that is keeping Ohioans up at night.”
While it may be giving McCain’s lobbyist campaign staffers and lying swiftboat backers a touch of insomnia, it’s probably not the thing keeping most other Americans up at night either.
(h/t Bob Sackamento)
Is it ok to produce a graphic that is reminiscent of the presidential seal or isn’t it?
Partisan conservatives like those mocking birds at Illinois Review, among many other nattering nabobs, are downright apoplectic that Obama’s graphic design team came up with a graphic that looks kinda sorta like a presidential seal. (Of course, the Obama campaign had been using an engraved image of an eagle for a while before this non-issue was raised anyway. Why didn’t cons gripe about it before? Must’ve been a slow news weekend.)
Problem is, plenty of Republicans have done the exact same thing — producing graphics that mimic the presidential seal and the seals of other branches of government. In fact, Republicans from local replacement candidate Martin Ozinga to presumptive presidential nominee John McCain have also been mimicking Obama’s other graphics so it’s abundantly clear that conservatives used to be ok with echoing earlier design work.
So which is it? Either it’s ok for all candidates to ‘borrow’ graphic design or it isn’t. Conservative partisans can’t whitewash and ignore instances of their candidates parroting designs but then go bonkers when the presidential front-runner (who also happens to be a Dem) does it.
Which is it, con whiners? Or are the cons perhaps really just upset because McCain didn’t think of it first instead of borrowing a chiseled star from graphics related to the US military?
(And so much for the tattered, faded myth of “liberal” media seeing as how this non-issue seems to be all they can talk about, now that they’ve stopped overanalyzing Michelle Obama’s pantyhose, or lack thereof…)
(h/t Mark Nickolas)
The latest info-pimped non-issue to be drummed up as a “scandal” by the conservative partisans involves Sen. Obama’s birth certificate; which the campaign released today.
It’s a pretty standard form and reveals no new information.
But why the cons would run around yelping “he won’t release his birth certificate” is unclear when it’s such an asinine demand that his campaign probably didn’t consider anyone could be so asinine as to invent such a non-issue in the first place… And these con partisans then created a slew of blatantly false rumors as to why he wouldn’t meet their demands to see the document on top of that.
Maybe these Jerry Fletchers need to remove their tin foil hats and stop drinking that kool-aid.
What’s next, terrorist pineapples?
…And now that the bar has been lowered further by these hyper-partisan cons when will John Sidney McCain III release his birth certificate from the Panama Canal Zone?
I wrote on Sunday about another of the lies Sen. Lindsey Graham told America during his “This Week” appearance on ABC.
Sen. Graham’s bit was ostensibly to talk up John McCain but in reality he ended up mostly muddying waters and blurring lines. In the process, he told the whopper I noted last Sunday about McCain’s campaign not being full of lobbyists when the fact is not only are there lobbyists working at the highest levels of Camp McCain but they even do their lobbying from the back of his Straight(ish) Talk Express and are clearly influencing his policy statements, both foreign and domestic.
But enough about the Mac team’s attempts at smoke and mirrors on lobbyists.
Sen. Graham, of course, lied about other stuff too. To wit, on the heels of the discussion of McCain’s cozy association with lobbyists came this whiney subject-changer in the form of a weak try at guilt-by-association:
“John McCain didn’t borrow money from a guy going to jail to build his house.”
- Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) discussing Barack Obama on Sunday’s “This Week with George Stephanopoulous.”
Neither did any other presidential candidate, including front-runner Barack Obama.
Eric Zorn of the Tribune describes 8 basic points as he tries to set Sen. Graham, and the record, straight on Rezko. In short:
1. The deal could have gone down without Rezko. …
2. The Obamas did not get a special discount on the house. …the sellers have confirmed that the sale price was the result of routine real estate negotiations and was the best offer they received on the house.
3. The sellers rejected two lower bids from the Obamas. …
4. The Rezkos did not pay an inflated price for the vacant lot. …
5. The Obamas did not get a special discount from the Rezkos when they later purchased a one-sixth strip of the vacant lot to enlarge their yard. …
6. The Obamas did not receive or borrow any money from the Rezkos to buy their house. …
7. Obama hasn’t done any political or personal favors for Rezko since this saga began. …
8. The reason Obama is nevertheless correct in describing his actions here as “boneheaded” is that Rezko is and was a sleazeball.
ArchPundit has a ton more details in his series on Tony Rezko for anyone who’s actually interested in the truth.
If all the Republicans have on Sen. Obama are lies (which would fit an emerging pattern of other lies)… what does that mean for the McCain campaign?
On this morning’s This Week with George Stephanopolous Senators Lindsey Graham (Bush and McCain supporter) and John Kerry (Obama supporter) decided to tell a little fib and George let it slide…
The topic was lobbyists’ influence and DC status quo. Sen. Kerry correctly pointed out that GOP nominee John McCain’s campaign is full of lobbyists including those who’ve tried to spin away the mortgage crisis because they lobby for the very banks at the heart of the bad loans…
Sen. Graham carried water for McCain and his lobbyist friends everywhere by laughably claiming there are no lobbyists in the McCain camp…
(No wonder some of his ’staff’ could forego pay when his campaign tanked earlier.)
Umm. What?
I must’ve been changing a diaper or getting a jar of pureed pears ready when McCain (who agrees with President Bush that healthcare for kids is bad) said this because I don’t remember this from his speech at the suburban New Orleans ‘high school gym’.
I have to say, I disagree with McCain on giving bottled hot water to babies — thirsty or not. I don’t believe in scalding infants; not my thing.
(Yes, people. He clearly misspoke. It’s a Friday funny.)
Break out the Courvoisier…
The Trib had a front page article today describing how presumptive Republican nominee Sen. John McCain might be able to pick up some women who are former Hillary Clinton supporters. Indeed, there are now groups of former Clinton supporters vowing to back McCain simply out of spite.
That’s too bad because, knowing Sen. McCain’s record on women’s and family issues, it’s a bit difficult to imagine that anyone who had previously supported Hillary Clinton would willingly support McCain.
If the intent is simply to spite the Dems then piching support for Green Party nominee Cynthia McKinney I could understand… but John McCain?
The Trib quotes a professor who explains why some may be so persuaded…
“To the extent that McCain can make Obama look like a big risk—make them feel a little leery about the change he might bring about—he might be successful in attracting them,” said Susan Carroll, senior scholar at the Center for American Women and Politics at Rutgers University. “He does have that independent reputation and that reputation of thinking for himself and not necessarily going along with the Republican Party line, which I think a lot of people find appealing.”
Ah, so that’s it. The media-propped myth that Sen. McCain somehow has an “independent” aura and doesn’t toe the Republican party line…
Sure. Once one actually looks at the facts, it’s clear that this “reputation” is not deserved but is instead carefully manicured with a mix of sweet and sour: tasty bbq ribs when the media is good and does something McCain likes but belligerence against the media when they dare tell an unflattering, but true, story.
That’s why he voted with the Bush agenda 95% of the time last year and 100% of the time so far this year. Might independent there.
I’m sure that’s also why McCain decided that Bush’s veto of healthcare for kids was a good idea. Little kids don’t ever get sick or hurt, do they? So what if their moms and dads can’t afford health insurance. It’s not like moms care about their children anyway, right Senator?
John McCain’s “not necessarily going along with the Republican Party line” must also be why he supported his party’s filibuster and eventually sinking of the Lilly Ledbetter Equal Pay Act. The Lilly Ledbetter Act was named after a woman who found out her employer, Goodyear Tire, was paying her less then men. It would’ve rebuffed the recent conservative Supreme Court’s legislation from the bench decision to essentially allow companies to continue paying women less, so long as they don’t get caught. Instead of being concerned about whether or not women were being paid less for doing the same work as men, McCain was instead so concerned about companies being sued that he completely skipped the vote.
Speaking of paying women an honest day’s pay for an honest day’s work, McCain also voted against increasing the national minimum wage. What one demographic has far more people at minimum wage than any other? Women. Yet John McCain voted to filibuster an increase in the minimum wage.
Finally, it’s also abundantly clear that, after much flippity-floppity dilly-dallying, John McCain finally came out and admitted he’d like to overturn Roe v. Wade. After all, who best to decide what a woman should do than (no, not her and her doctor) some Senator from Arizona? It is quite surprising that supposedly liberal women who were supporting a pro-choice such as Sen. Clinton are now planning to switch gears and work for an anti-choice and anti-privacy candidate like McCain.
So, right here, in the span of just a few paragraphs and a few minutes of research are four pieces of legislation directly affecting women which clearly illustrate McCain’s positions — positions that are decidedly in line with his party and against women.
Unfortunately, this sort of research appears to be too much work for Trib reporters who comment on this stuff on the front page of a national newspaper. (To be fair, the Trib did devote a baker’s dozen words to McCain’s opposition to equal pay and the minimum wage… buried in the second to last paragraph… after Obama supporter Sen. Claire McCaskill [D-Missouri] apparently mentioned it.)
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UPDATE: So-Called Austin Mayor notes that there is likely to be little to worry about. I agree (Clinton Supporters for McCain had all of about 5k members nationwide … If they all lived in Florida
it might be one thing, but let’s be honest: 5000 people out of the millions who will vote in November is a drop in the bucket.
Still, I find the boiling threats of “but we’ll vote for McCain” to be hokum given how his adherance to the Bush legacy and failed conservative policies is completely antithetical to all the issues for which Sen. (and Pres.) Clinton stand.
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UPDATE 2: London’s Daily Mail newspaper notes that McCain’s own associates consider him to be a womanizer:
‘My marriage ended because John McCain didn’t want to be 40, he wanted to be 25. You know that happens…it just does.’
Some of McCain’s acquaintances are less forgiving, however. They portray the politician as a self-centred womaniser who effectively abandoned his crippled [first] wife to ‘play the field’. They accuse him of finally settling on Cindy, a former rodeo beauty queen, for financial reasons [...]
Ted Sampley, who fought with US Special Forces in Vietnam and is now a leading campaigner for veterans’ rights, said: ‘I have been following John McCain’s career for nearly 20 years. I know him personally. There is something wrong with this guy and let me tell you what it is – deceit.
‘When he came home and saw that Carol was not the beauty he left behind, he started running around on her almost right away. Everybody around him knew it.
‘Eventually he met Cindy and she was young and beautiful and very wealthy. At that point McCain just dumped Carol for something he thought was better.
‘This is a guy who makes such a big deal about his character. He has no character. He is a fake. If there was any character in that first marriage, it all belonged to Carol.’
With leaders like these, why is it that the partisan conservatives keep (falsely) blathering on about “family values”?
Much has been made of Presidential candidate Barack Obama’s willingness to talk to other world leaders, even adversaries.
John McCain, who has been supporting Bush’s Iraq policy of shoot first/ask later, is of the opinion such talk amounts to appeasement. He’s been oddly quiet on that notion since it was revealed in recent weeks that Israel was holding high level talks with long-time opponent Syria, but still. (And, as is turning out to be true with so much of the Bush legacy that McCain hopes to continue, the American people agree with the Obama position, not the McCain stance.)
Even so, one may wonder how such talks may proceed. Obama has described his vision for it by describing Reagan’s talks with Gorbachev and Nixon’s talks with Mao, but sometimes it’s difficult to imagine what it would be…
Wonder no more: Obama gave caucuses-with-Dems-but-endorses-Republicans Senator Joe Lieberman (CT-Connecticut for Lieberman) what has been described as a cordial, but very stern, talking-to on the floor of the Senate the day after Obama secured the likely presidential nomination.
Sure, there was a handshake or two… and a few pats on the back… but it was clear what Sen. Obama expected of his adversary, and the likely consequences of not meeting those expectations.
IlliniPundit thinks he sees a pattern of unfamiliarity…
Sen. Barack Obama yesterday on Tony Rezko: “This isn’t the Tony Rezko I knew…”
Obama on April 29 on Rev. Jeremiah Wright: “the man I saw yesterday was not the man I knew for 20 years.”
Anyone sensing a theme?
First, the same could be asked of straightish talker Sen. McCain’s constant chatter about opposing lobbyists even as he employs scads of them on his campaign staff (some of whom brag about doing their lobbying work while riding on his campaign bus — and I don’t mean telecom lobbyist Vicki Iseman) and even as he mysteriously, and routinely, bends over backwards to help them.
But more importantly, Sen. Obama was not involved in any of the stuff Rezko was charged with (but Gov. Blagojevich and Republicans Bob Kjellander and Bill Cellini allegedly were). So no, Obama wouldn’t have known the guy was running around committing fraud because he wasn’t involved in it, etc.
By the way, Mr. Rezko also raised thousands of dollars for Pres. Bush’s White House run, money which (to my knowledge) was not given back or donated to charity. (That BuzzFlash article is a bit off on its numbers. Rezko co-hosted the 2003 $3.8 million Bush/Cheney fundraiser in Chicago. He didn’t necessarily raise all $3.8 mil by his lonesome. But, the “minimum” amount to qualify as a co-host was $100,000 — and Rezko had given a few grand directly to Bush/Cheney in addition to that 100k over the years.)
And as for Rev. Wright, obviously Sen. Obama has been in Washington serving as our Senator for the past 4 years or so. Before that, he spent a good deal of time in Springfield. It’s not too difficult to imagine that no, he was not sitting in a pew when those 30 seconds of out-of-context, YouTubed tape loops were filmed and thus that, no, he didn’t recognize the National Press Club version of limelight-seeking Rev. Wright…
That is, if one is intellectually honest.
Presumptive Republican presidential nominee Sen. John McCain needs to decide whether he wants to be George Bush’s best bud or just throw him under the bus and be done with it.
On Tuesday evening, we learned from Sen. McCain that despite his 95% Bush voting record in 2007 and his 100% Bush voting record in 2008, that suddenly:
I disagreed strongly with the Bush administration’s mismanagement of the war in Iraq.
Now, it’s rather odd that Sen. McCain would try to tell his national audience that he “disagreed strongly” with Bush on Iraq since just a few weeks ago he told us all on the Michael Gallagher Show:
No one has supported President Bush on Iraq more than I have.
So… which is it?
No wonder the ‘applause’ was delayed from his Republican audience. They were clearly confused by the flip-flops he was wearing on his sleave.
Don’t believe the audio? Unfortunately for the Straightish Talker there’s also plenty of video…
(That said, it’s also rather odd that he would go to a suburb of New Orleans to make his speech. Sen. McCain has not only repeatedly worked against supporting that great American city while it rebuilds, he was also caught eating his cake with George Bush while the two ignored all the people literally drowning in NOLA.)
First it was replacement GOP candidate Marty Ozinga (IL-11) ripping off Obama’s logo with a very similar looking Ozinga08 logo…
Then, in his failed attempt at a presponse to Presidential nominee Obama’s gracious, balanced victory speech, Sen. John McCain splashed a new slogan all across his kelly green backdrop… a new-to-McCain slogan very similar to the slogan Obama has been using this whole time.
Now, we find out Sen. McCain is also mooching not just Obama’s “Change We Can Believe In” slogan, but also his logo and website graphic design.
Why vote for John “mimicks Obama” McCain when you can vote for the real thing?
Then again, seeing as how John McCain has been imitating George Bush these past many years — voted with the Bush agenda 95% in 2007, and 100% so far in 2008 — yet is now suddenly playing Peter by denying the Bush legacy it’s clear his strategy seems to be simply having his finger to the wind … at least, depending on which audience McCain is pandering to.
On Memorial Day, Sen. Obama was speaking and told the story of his uncle, a veteran of the 89th ID, and his recollections of WWII. The 89th liberated Ohrdruf, a part of the Buchenwald concentration camp. Sen. Obama mistakenly said they liberated Auschwitz, which was actually liberated by the Soviets.
He immediately owned up to the error and noted the correct information.
That didn’t stop the attack poodles at the Republican National Committee and all across conservative partisandom from pouncing by inhumanely pitting one concentration camp against another as if such torture and murder were a contest from which they could somehow extract political points.
Jeff Lieber notes there is no difference between the deaths endured at Auschwitz and those at Buchenwald and implies that the Republican partisans ought to be ashamed of themselves, if they had consciences that is. And this comment about Dachau is particularly poignant… just read it.
This is what the Republican National Committee calls “an exaggeration”?
The only things the RNC managed to “win” in this is to both clearly illustrate how desperate they are to twist whatever they can and to also get the media to avoid talking about Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder, the original point behind Sen. Obama’s retelling of his uncle’s story.
In fact, Sen. Obama’s veteran uncle spent days alone in his attack and didn’t leave his house for 6 months to cope with what he’d witnessed in the war and at Ohrdruf.
…But all the Republicans can do is act “gleeful,” as MSNBC puts it.
Disgusting.
If we have no rule of law, we have only anarchy. But, this doesn’t seem to matter to self-proclaimed “law and order” conservative partisans.
To wit: McCain Message Coordination w/ Anti-Obama “Veterans For Freedom” organization
If the coordination (which seems obvious) is proven, it is illegal based on current election law. This, of course, comes after the McCain campaign apparently violated his own campaign finance law.
The Republican party’s conservative base can’t both be mum when a well-known Iraqi immigrant to America (who also happens to be the Imam of the largest mosque in America) visits with and even advises Pres. Bush — in the White House no less — but then get hopping mad with hysteria when Presidential candidate Sen. Barack Obama meets with that same guy for a few minutes…
So which is it, either conservative partisans hate Muslims even if Pres. Bush and Sen. Obama meet with them or they don’t…
From DHinMI, in his reaction to reporting by Oliver Willis:
It makes sense that Obama would meet with the Imam. Qazwini came to the United States in 1992. He was first in California, but eventually ended up in Dearborn Michigan, home of the largest population of Middle Eastern Arabs outside the Middle East. The Arab-American population in Detroit—between a quarter and a half million—is diverse, but the largest group is Lebanese Shiite Muslims. Beginning in the 1990’s, the Shiite Lebanese were joined by Iraqi Shiites.
Like these new immigrants, Qazwini is from Iraq. His Grandfather was an Ayatollah in Karbala who Saddam arrested, and he died in prison. The family fled Iraq, Hussein Al-Qazwini came to the US, and unlike most of the Arab-American community, was a strong advocate for overthrowing Saddam. Eventually, however, even many of the Arab-Americans who supported the invasion of Iraq—always a small group–became disillusioned with the US occupation of Iraq and turned on Bush and the GOP.
Which brings us to the fun part about the wingers going crazy over Obama’s meeting with Qazwini. How many of the wingers were going crazy in 2003 when Qazwini gave an opening prayer before Congress? Who complained that Qazwini met with staffers of the Bush administration’s National Security Council to talk about the overthrow of Saddam? Where were the complaints about the four or five invitations to visit Bush at the White House extended to Qazwini? Did the wingers flip out when Qazwini participated in the roll-out of Bush’s Faith Based Initiative, an event that took place at the White House?
(links are original)
Oliver Willis even has photos of a hug and a kiss between Pres. Bush and his friend and advisor, Imam Qazwini. The Imam has even met with Pope Benedict for crying out loud.
But a handshake and a chat with Sen. Obama causes frantic fits among the cons?
Hypocrites.
…Actually, this round of “Which Is It” has a clear-cut answer.
Hard-line con hack Debbie Schlussel, no stranger to conspiracy theories and the originator of this most recent infopimped malarkey, has been attacking Bush, the Pope, and now Obama for the same reason — they’ve met with this Imam from Michigan her rabid, paranoid fear of Muslims…
What one person labels ‘vigilance against all Muslims’ is what most mainstream Americans refer to as “bigotry“… and clearly now the Pope, Bush and Obama are all automatically Muslim Manchurian Candidates simply for being in the same room as this Iraq escapee.
Oy.
John McCain had to write his own jokes for this YouTube piece.
I wonder why the national press following his campaign doesn’t pick up on this more… (Could you pass that sweet BBQ sauce … and a beer?)
And his ideas are different than Pres. Bush’s failed conservative policies how?
Someone pass the ribs basket while we wait for the not-so-liberal media to report on the many shady deals McCain’s chief campaigner and lifelong lobbyist Charlie Black has under his belt…
Is McCain’s chief Charlie Black a…
(a) Lobbyist to the Dictator Stars?
(b) Lobbyist Cashing in on Taxpayer-funded Pork?
(c) Lobbyist with ties to Fake Astroturfing PR Efforts?
Congrats John McCain — thanks to the lobbyists you’ve hired to run your Double Talk Express your “maverick judgment” is going the way of those used wetnaps from your Sedona Resort BBQ For the Media… and it’s unlikely any SNL sketches are going to help.
There must’ve been a run on coo-coo puffs lately…
Despite the fact the bottom is pretty far down on that side of the pool, desperate con partisans are still managing to bonk their beans as they jump off the deep end to wallow in their mucky, vile hatred of Sen. Obama.
If you scroll down at that post, you’ll notice frequent critics of reality and reason such as Citizen Wells and Pat Hickey make an appearance with comments supporting the tripe.
Remember the good ol’ days of oddball but cute/fuzzy presidential sideshows? Why do the conservatives feel the need to act so blatantly desperate?
While it’s fun to joke about this sort of tinfoil hat tripe, we also have to realize that this tripe is precisely why rational people have to be just as engaged and take their right and responsibility to vote just as seriously as these wackos.
If wackos like these are the only ones talking and voting… we all end up living in the same hateful, wacko world in which they appear to be ensnared.
While it’s despicable that GOP “leaders” such as Rep. Eric Cantor (R-VA) and Minority Leader John Boehner (R-OH) would choose to slice out only the few phrases that would make the presumptive Democratic nominee for president look bad (and they have to actually ignore those phrases’ real intent even at that), it’s equally deplorable that a well-respected journalist such as the Sun-Times’ Washington Bureau chief and political columnist Lynn Sweet would let them get away with the distorted half-quoting via her own half-baked he-said/they-said stenography at her to-the-minute blog.
Oh dear. From WaPo:
Sen. John McCain championed legislation that will let an Arizona rancher trade remote grassland and ponderosa pine forest here for acres of valuable federally owned property that is ready for development, a land swap that now stands to directly benefit one of his top presidential campaign fundraisers].
Initially reluctant to support the swap, the Arizona Republican became a key figure in pushing the deal through Congress after the rancher and his partners hired lobbyists that included McCain’s 1992 Senate campaign manager, two of his former Senate staff members (one of whom has returned as his chief of staff), and an Arizona insider who was a major McCain donor and is now bundling campaign checks.
He was reluctant to support it until his campaign-manager-who-is-also-a-lobbyist, his former staffers, and a six-figure bundler were hired?
What is it that John Ruberry, Juliana “Dan Proft” Johnson, and other conservative partisans keep saying about having the judgment to be president?
We know what Sen. Obama says about that mythical McCain judgment: McCain has lost his bearings. Hopefully Sen. McCain won’t get so worked up at having been caught red-handed in this land benefits deal that he hops off and calls the reporter a dirty name.
Read the rest of this entry »
Check out conservative strategist Dan “The Saddest Clown” Proft at about 2:50 into this Chicago Tonight interview with WTTW’s Carol Marin.
Ms. Marin had asked Mr. Proft and Chicago legal eagle and Daily Kos contributor Georgia Logothetis about the effect of the blogosphere in relation to traditional media. Ms. Logothetis stated that the left blogosphere had acted as a fact-checking foiling the traditional media’s meme that the Democratic presidential race was somehow close when, in fact, it was mathematically near impossible for Sen. Clinton to overtake Sen. Obama’s pledged delegate count.
Here’s Mr. Proft’s response to the notion that the blogosphere was playing the part of fact-checker to the traditional media’s meme that the Dem primary season was ‘a close race’:
I mean Barack Obama? Until last night, he hadn’t won a primary in about three months. Err, yeah. Since… since Super Tuesday.
He was trying to say that the media got it right because Clinton was indeed somehow “close”… But perhaps Mr. Proft needs his own fact checker.
Some facts…
Super Tuesday was February 5th, 2008.
This Chicago Tonight interview was May 7th, 2008.
Barack Obama won the delegate count in 13 primaries and caucuses in the three months since Super Tuesday.
What’s that? Thirteen wins?
“…Err, yeah. Since… since Super Tuesday.”
(You want to get uber-technical and point out that Mr. Proft said only that Obama hadn’t won a “primary”? Fine. It’s still a a fallacy since among those 13 states he won there were several primaries, including one right next door in Wisconsin a full two weeks after Super Tuesday.)
Either the man was lying or he’s a complete dunce.
Watch Mr. Proft for yourself:
Why did well-respected Chicago telejournalist Carol Marin not call him out?
Surely she knew about the primaries and caucuses in Louisiana, Nebraska, Washington state, the US Virgin Islands, Maine, Washington DC, Maryland, Virginia, Hawaii, Wisconsin, Vermont, Wyoming, and Mississippi…
And will Mr. Proft be asked back to Chicago Tonight … or any other self-respecting media outlet for that matter?
Only time will tell.
But one thing is for certain. No matter how poetic Mr. Proft’s spin and fibs, nobody’s “fearful” of such dim-wittedness.
PS Dan: the garden’s doing fine, thank you very much.
How are your cats and sock puppets?
(h/t Illinois Review “Conservative vs Liberal on Chicago Tonight”)
Newt Gingrich has some advice for worried, “shellshocked” Republican incumbents in Congress:
In a piece published in Human Events, the Republicans’ onetime captain, former House Speaker Newt Gingrich, warned his old colleagues that they face “real disaster” on Election Day unless they move immediately to “chart a bold course of real reform” for the country.
Does he mean this “bold course of real reform“?
Because, in all honesty, just because he’s calling his ideas ’something brand new’, Sen. McCain’s only offering 4 more years of the same (or 100 years, depending on who you ask). …Except for the ribs. The bbq ribs are new.
Republican presidential candidate Sen. John McCain needs to get his facts straight…
“This subsidized (ethanol) program - paid for by taxpayer dollars - has contributed to pain at the cash register, at the dining room table, and a devastating food crisis throughout the world,” McCain said in a statement.
Oh really? Unfortunately for the apparently confused Senator, reality is quite different than the cons’ spin. Also from that Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel article:
…not enough attention was being placed on the role that rising crude oil prices - which surged to $120 a barrel Monday - have played in driving up the cost of food.
“It’s the wrong medicine for the problem,” Wisconsin Agriculture Secretary Rod Nilsestuen said. “If we hadn’t had the significant increase in renewable fuels that we’ve seen in the last five years, we would have higher gas prices today, not lower ones.”
Moreover, an editorial in today’s Chicago Tribune from rocket engineer and mathematician Robert Zubrin and global security expert Gal Luft adds more facts to debunk the cons’ anti-ethanol spin:
Here are the facts. In the last five years, despite the nearly threefold growth of the corn ethanol industry (or actually because of it), the U.S. corn crop grew by 35 percent, the production of distillers grain (a high-value animal feed made from the protein saved from the corn used for ethanol) quadrupled and the net corn food and feed product of the U.S. increased 26 percent.
Contrary to claims that farmers have cut other crops to grow more corn, U.S. soybean plantings this year are expected to be up 18 percent and wheat plantings up 6 percent. U.S. farm exports are up 23 percent. [...]
The increased demand for food from the hundreds of millions of people in China and India rising out of poverty and moving to a more calorie-rich diet affects the price of food the most. Second is the price of [petroleum-based] fuel.
Higher fuel prices increase the cost of production, transport, wages and packaging, the main cost of retail food. For example, a $3 box of cornflakes contains 15 ounces of corn that cost 8 cents when bought from the farmer. So, farm commodity prices have almost no effect on retail prices. But the effect of oil price increases can be huge.
So, given those facts, what should Sen. McCain really be worried about? The current president’s Saudi “uncles”.
Zubrin and Luft again:
According to Merrill Lynch analysts, without biofuel programs, the price of oil would be about $13 a barrel higher than it now is. A $13 savings for each barrel could save the U.S. $65 billion in foreign oil payments.
So, rather than shut down biofuel programs, we need to radically augment them, to the point where we can take down the oil cartel. (emphasis added)
Should we be looking at other alternative fuels beside corn-based ethanol? Absolutely. The whole point to a “free” market is competition.
Give petroleum competition through ethanol, methanol, electric, “100mpg biodiesel“, etc.
Give corn-based ethanol competition through cellulosic-based ethanol, etc. (Shoot, Brazil uses sugar cane ethanol and even exports it to us!)
Much of that will require a reluctant Detroit (and Japan, Germany, Korea, etc.) to lay out an extra $100 or so to upgrade modern vehicle to meet Flexfuel standards. But $100 per vehicle in exchange for saving $65 billion-with-a-B in oil payments to foreign countries? That’s a bargain.
Open it up to actual competition.
Go read the whole Zubrin/Luft column. They raise several good points on how we can be spending our fuel dollars here at home, driving the US economy, rather than shipping that money off to OPEC and other foreign hands.
(h/t Illinois Review)
The Supreme Court recently ruled (in a split decision) that the state of Indiana can require voters to present photo identification in order to cast a ballot.
Conservatives cheered with glee.
The problem with such a stipulation is that it in fact pre
