Tuesday, March 10, 2009

Katie Couric's Sarah Palin Interview Wins Cronkite Award

And well WELL-deserved!

Katie Couric has won a Cronkite Award for her revealing, multi-part interview of Republican Vice Presidential candidate Sarah Palin.

The Cronkite Awards have been presented biannually by the USC Annenberg School for Communication, in honor of CBS News legend Walter Cronkite, since 2000.

Couric won her award in the category 'Special Achievement for National Impact on the 2008 Campaign.' In the awards announcement, judges called Couric's interview with Palin a 'defining moment in the 2008 presidential campaign,' and described it as 'extraordinary, persistent and detailed.'


Read more at HuffPo.


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Monday, January 19, 2009

Places to watch the inauguration online

CNN offers a cheatsheet of where to watch online!

• The Joint Congressional Committee on Inaugural Ceremonies, which is in charge of all the inaugural activities at the Capitol, will stream the entire event at its Web site, complete with closed captioning. The site has a wealth of information about what happens on Inauguration Day, including a handful of inaugural videos dating back to President Dwight Eisenhower's 1957 swearing-in ceremony, as well as videos of presidential luncheons dating back to the inauguration of John Kennedy. (It also reveals, for those interested, the recipe for Obama's luncheon meal, which features a main course of pheasant and duck served with sour cherry chutney.)

• Our sister site CBS News will have day-long live coverage January 20 on TV and the Web, starting at 7 a.m. EDT. Katie Couric will also host a special Webcast that night with reporters and punditry, for which viewers can submit questions.

• CBS streaming coverage will also be Webcast on Joost's Everything Obama page, which also features interviews, campaign highlights, and satire clips.

• MSNBC will be live streaming the event on its home page and politics section, and visitors can embed the video into their own sites. Its inauguration page also features videos of inaugurations from decades past.

• Fox News will provide live streaming coverage via Hulu beginning at noon for about two hours. After the live stream, Hulu will provide on-demand access to the ceremony. The live stream is embeddable, as is an inauguration countdown from Hulu. The video site's Obama Presidency page also features related content like speeches, commentary, satire, and past inaugural speeches.

• C-SPAN will debut its Inauguration Hub on January 20, featuring an online "control room"--a multichannel grid designed by Mogulus with Webcasts of inauguration activities. Visitors will be able to choose from one of four live feeds featuring events like the swearing in at the Capitol, the parade, and a number of inaugural balls.

• CNN is partnering with Facebook to provide live streaming of the swearing in and Obama's speech. Viewers can "RSVP" for the event on Facebook, and as they watch, they will be able to provide status updates with their thoughts on the events. A Facebook window on the CNN.com Live channel will show viewers their friends' relevant status updates.

• Current TV and Twitter are teaming up, as they did during the election, to add real-time tweets to Current's broadcast and Webcast of the swearing in, which starts at 11:30 a.m. EDT and will be replayed throughout the day.

• The New York Times, the AP's online video network, and the Online NewsHour will also live stream inauguration coverage.



Rest of post here.

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Wednesday, October 29, 2008

McCain Campaign Progress Report

Denial (check!) ==> Anger (check-check!) ==> Bargaining (check!) ==> Depression (check!)

Next up ACCEPTANCE. Acceptance that you have royally screwed up your election campaign and that Barack Obama will win, that is. Just to be clear.

HuffPo reports on more infighting at the McCain Palin camp. What else is new? "The McCain campaign continues to snipe at each other over the handling, and subsequent effect, of Sarah Palin on the campaign trail. According Nicole Wallace, a senior McCain aide who is one of Palin's handlers and helped to orchestrate her initial rollout, there is an 'organized campaign to lay blame' for things at her feet. Robert Draper, however, offers a defense of Wallace, saying she's kept quiet about things that a couple of McCain higher-ups have leaked to him, and that Wallace was in a very unenviable position." Yeah, well, she's been in an unenviable position since he joined the McCain campaign.

The Palin Pity Party: "It's a grim binary choice, but apparently it came down to whether to make Palin look like a scripted robot or an unscripted ignoramus. I was told that Palin chafed at being defined by her discomfiting performances in the Couric, Charlie Gibson, and Sean Hannity interviews. She wanted to get back out there and do more. Well, if you're Eskew and Wallace, what do you say to that? Your responsibility isn't the care and feeding of Sarah Palin's ego; it's the furtherance of John McCain's quest for the presidency."

In case you're not irritated enough by Palin's "Wink" Obama's latest ad reminds you of how annoying it is.

And start the GOP Pity Party: After Ted Stevens' um... awkward felony conviction, the Alaska GOP grits its teeth and backs...Ted's...re-election..."Under that chain of events, a special election would be held later to replace Mr. Stevens, giving the party the chance to find a new candidate and keep the seat out of Democratic hands. 'That's the reality,' said McHugh Pierre, a party spokesman. 'Unfortunately, the situation's the situation.'" 'Kay...ALASKA! ARE YOU LISTENING? Hello? Reclaim some shred of your dignity!!! Vote Begich. Jeez, Louise, people.

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Friday, October 17, 2008

Night of the New Media

setstatsIn case you didn't get enough of that fabulous comedy duo, Obama & McCain, they were headliners last night at the Al Smith white-tie fundraiser dinner in New York City. A larf a minute folks. They broadcast it conveniently on Larry King Live and you can see it, of course, on YouTube. (My God, how BORING was the last election, before we had YouTube?) McCain went first, with far better jabs than you typically see from him these days. This McCain was relaxed, unflustered, funny. "Maverick I can do but messiah is above my paygrade." After watching it, I can't help feeling sorry for a nanosecond for the man. If he'd shown THIS kind of graciousness and good humor earlier on, we might not necessarily be celebrating [cautiously!] Obama's inroads into Ohio.

"I don't want it getting out of this room, but my opponent is an impressive fellow in many ways," McCain said. "Political opponents can have a little trouble seeing the best in each other. But I've had a few glimpses of this man at his best and I admire his great skill, energy and determination. It's not for nothing, but he's inspired many folks in his own party and beyond. Senator Obama talks about making history and he's made quite a bit of it already. There was a time when the mere invitation of an African-American citizen to dine at the White House was taken as an outrage and an insult. Today is a world away from the cruelty and prideful bigotry of that time – and good riddance. I can't wish my opponent luck, but I do wish him well."

Obama went next with some good lines interspersed with nervous chuckles. "Many of you know that I got my name from my father. 'Barack' is Swahili for 'That one.' I got my middle name from somebody who obviously didn't realize I would run for president." Still, as Eric points out, though comedy is clearly not Obama's metier, he still manages to conclude his speech by putting the whole dinner, what the actual fundraiser is for and campaign into a larger perspective.

You know, the fact that each October, in the closing weeks of a hard-fought campaign, people of all political persuasions can come to this dinner and share a meal and honor the work of this foundation underscores the reality that no matter what differences or divisions or arguments we're having right now, we ultimately belong to something bigger and more lasting than a political party. We belong to a community. We share a country. We are all children of God.

And in this country, there are millions of fellow citizens, our brothers and sisters, who need us very much, especially now. We are being battered by a very serious economic storm, and for many Americans it's only deepened the quiet storms they've been struggling through for years. Beyond the walls of this hotel, on the streets of one of the greatest cities in the wealthiest nation on earth, there are men and women and children who have fallen on hard times and hard luck, who can't find work, or even a job that pays enough to keep a roof over their heads. Some are hanging on just by a thread...

Before Al Smith was a candidate who made history, he was a man who made a difference, a man who fought for many years to give Americans nothing more than a fair shake and a chance to succeed. And he touched the lives of hundreds of thousands -- of millions as a result. Simply put, he helped people. That's a distinction we can all aspire to, that we can all achieve, young or old, rich or poor, Democrat or Republican or independent. And I have no doubt that if we come together at this moment of crisis with this goal in mind, America will meet this challenge and weather this storm, and, in the words of Al Smith, "walk once more in eternal sunshine."

West Wing fans might remember an episode from the last season of the series title "The Al Smith Dinner." In it, the Republican candidate considers condemning a negative 527 ad against his opponent because he feels the ad opens the door to negative campaigning. Ahhh, for a fake Republican candidate.

Before the Al Smith dinner, McCain was a busy bee, with a scheduled appearance on, yes, Dave Letterman's show. The Caucus reports that plane delays almost caused McCain to almost MISS his appointment with Destiny...er...Dave AGAIN. Only an emergency airlift by helicopter to NY saved the day. Because to diss Dave again would be...not good. So he got to the taping ontime. HuffPo reports that "The band played the Who's 'I Can't Explain' as McCain walked onstage at the Ed Sullivan Theater. After he sat down, Letterman asked, 'Can you stay?' 'Depends on how bad it gets,' McCain answered."

I have to give McCain credit, he was walking into the lion's den, because Dave is still not quite over it. He fired off a bunch of excellent starters, including pointed questions about why the heck did you bail on me, on Palin's qualifications ( "I didn't know her well at all."), and how Obama's association with Ayers is different from McCain's association with Gordon Liddy (Thanks to Dina for sending along this timely reminder on the facts about Obama-Ayers association). Once again, I gotta ask, why is that the comedy shows, the variety shows are where we get the candidates' feet held to the fire?

setstatsOther little media tidbits:


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Thursday, October 16, 2008

Winkin' and Blinkin'

Sarah Palin drew some boos and shouts of confusion today, when while speaking in New Hampshire she mistakenly claimed that the Granite State was part of the "great Northwest." "I like being here," she told the crowd in Laconia, "because it seems like here and in our last rally too -- other parts around this great Northwest -- here in New Hampshire you just get it." Yeah, and they can see Russia from there too...

Speaking of Russia, Ms. Winkin' also appears not to have been aware that eight high-level RUSSIAN ENERGY officials were in ALASKA on Monday to meet with the Alaska Department of Natural Resources. They were there to talk with Conoco Phillips and Alaska officials about energy projects. Yeah, she's an Energy/Russian policy expert. Right on it, baby.

And I know that we've thoroughly established how little Senator Blinkin' understands about new media, but here is yet another bit of evidence. The Bits technology blog on the NY Times reports: "Trevor Potter, the general counsel for the McCain-Palin presidential campaign, sent a letter on Monday to Chad Hurley, the chief executive of YouTube, complaining that the video service, now owned by Google, had inappropriately removed McCain commercials from its site. The commercials incorporated snippets of television news broadcasts. Using provisions of the Digital Millennium Copyright Act, the news organizations demanded that the commercials be removed from YouTube because they violated the organizations' copyrights...[Potter] argued that the excerpts of news broadcasts represented a fair use, which exempted them from control by the copyright owner...In one case, a McCain commercial included a clip of the CBS anchor Katie Couric talking about sexism in coverage of Senator Hillary Clinton. CBS argued that the use of the clip implied that it was endorsing the McCain campaign." Gotta fight for your right to Mash Up.

And just one more "Really?" moment: McCain called Hillary for advice on the economy??? "It's hilarious. It's like McCain is trying to copy her, but he's using a busted Xerox machine," said one of Clinton's top campaign advisers. "We were out in front on the economy. She was the first one to really pay attention to people's anxieties, and both Obama and McCain have been playing catch-up ever since." Hillary confirmed the story in a post-debate interview on CNN, although she said McCain called her several weeks ago, which at the rate that events are unfolding, might as well have been years ago.

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Sunday, October 5, 2008

The Lesions of History

History, history! We fools, what do we know or care?
--William Carlos Williams

setstatsSad News from CNN: Joe Biden's mother-in-law, Bonnie Jacobs, died on Sunday. Biden, who had been conferring with doctors as to her care shortly before the bailout vote last week, had already canceled his campaign appearances this weekend to be with her and his wife Jill. Indiana Senator Evan Bayh filled in for him on stops in Virginia.

In Newsweek, Joe Biden talks about that choked up moment during his debate with Sarah Palin: "in the moment, he 'could picture Beau in the bed' after the 1972 car accident that killed Biden's first wife, Neilia, and their baby girl and critically injured his young sons. Now Beau, the 39-year-old attorney general of Delaware, was off to war, a judge advocate general traveling to obscure regions of Iraq, where the road isn't exactly the safest place to be. The memory of being a single parent mixed with worries about Beau to create 'a lot of bundled emotions. It surprised me. I was hoping nobody noticed.' Only 70 million or so did."

The Lesions of History

You've probably already noticed this, but sometimes when I type too fast, odd things appear. At the moment, my "s" key only works if I SMACK it, which you would think wouldn't be a problem, given the way I've been madly pounding away at my keyboard on a violent tear about...well, just about everything. But as I become more and more upset in my ranting, my typing gets worse-- much worse. Occasionally though, I produce unintentionally humorous results. When I typed the headline above, I intended to say "The Lessons of History," but it came out as the "Lesions of History." I decided to leave it.

setstatsOkay, let's start with Palin. Her disturbingly blithesome reply during Thursday's debate, to the question, "Do you believe as Vice President Cheney does, that he and his army of Necromongers and Quasideads must hold sway over the Universe and all it contains?" has sufficiently moved the NY Times to write in an editorial Saturday, "It is hard to tell from Ms. Palin's remarks whether she understands how profoundly Dick Cheney has reshaped the vice presidency — as part of a larger drive to free the executive branch from all checks and balances. Nor did she seem to understand how much damage that has done to American democracy. Mr. Cheney has shown what can happen when a vice president — a position that is easy to lampoon and overlook — is given free rein by the president and does not care about trampling on the Constitution.Mr. Cheney has long taken the bizarre view that the lesson of Watergate was that Congress was too powerful and the president not powerful enough. He dedicated himself to expanding President Bush's authority and arrogating to himself executive, legislative and legal powers that are nowhere in the Constitution." (Thanks Helene, btw for that photo -- I love it!)

Thank God for people with memories longer than mine. In his NY Times blog, Paul Krugman takes us back to the Reagan quote that Palin invoked at the debate: "It was Ronald Reagan who said that freedom is always just one generation away from extinction. We don't pass it to our children in the bloodstream; we have to fight for it and protect it, and then hand it to them so that they shall do the same, or we're going to find ourselves spending our sunset years telling our children and our children's children about a time in America, back in the day, when men and women were free." Krugman notes: "When did he say this? It was on a recording he made for Operation Coffeecup — a campaign organized by the American Medical Association to block the passage of Medicare. Doctors' wives were supposed to organize coffee klatches for patients, where they would play the Reagan recording, which declared that Medicare would lead us to totalitarianism."

On Meet the Press' roundtable this morning, Gwen Ifill had some observations about the debate (after watching a clip from SNL's sendup of the debate --more on that below). Ifill laughs about Palin's averred plan to ignore the moderator's questions, "She blew me off, I think is the technical term..." David Gregory notes that Palin "made a decision to be rhetorical and not substantive on the issues. Her primary job was to excite the conservative base. Joe Biden made a decision not to take her on." It's not on this particular clip, but during the same discussion, Peggy Noonan observed, "I think she showed that she is a woman of great and natural competence about the show-business of politics, if you will: the ability to look over the camera, to think that the camera is your friend, all of that stuff. But there are questions about other areas." The whole episode was pretty interesting, so if you have time, it's worth a watch.

Palin, Footloose and Fancy Free

So I ask you, if YOU were from Alaska would you find Palin's display embarrassing or what? "Sarah Palin may be making new friends as she campaigns the nation, but at home, she's making new enemies. She better get elected vice president. If she returns to Alaska as governor, the reception will be frosty -- and not because winter has arrived. In the last month, Palin has become something inconceivable during her first two years as the state's chief executive: A polarizing figure rapidly emptying the storehouse of good will she accumulated."

setstatsIn an interview with Fox News correspondent Carl Cameron, Palin claimed that Couric's questions -- which produced a series of staggeringly embarrassing responses -- put her in a lose-lose position. "The Sarah Palin in those interviews was a little bit annoyed," she said. "It's like, man, no matter what you say, you are going to get clobbered. If you choose to answer a question, you are going to get clobbered on the answer. If you choose to try to pivot and go to another subject that you believe that Americans want to hear about, you get clobbered for that too."

Sarah was annoyed, huh? Wow, that's an interesting coincidence, because the Mary Ellen watching those interviews was a little bit apoplectic...

Back on the trail, Palin headed onto some dangerous ground by going back again to the nature of Obama's connection with the Vietnam War-era domestic terrorist William Ayers of the Weather Underground. Douglass Daniel at the AP notes that it may backfire on the McCain campaign. "By claiming that Democrat Barack Obama is 'palling around with terrorists' and doesn't see the U.S. like other Americans, vice presidential candidate Sarah Palin targeted key goals for a faltering campaign. And though she may have scored a political hit each time, her attack was unsubstantiated and carried a racially tinged subtext that John McCain himself may come to regret."

And the gaffes just keep coming. I think it's sorta just a habit for them now. "Palin regaled the cheering crowd with a story about how she was reading her Starbucks mocha cup yesterday, which featured a quotation from former Secretary of State Madeleine Albright. 'Now she said it, I didn't,' Palin said of Albright. 'She said, "There's a place in Hell reserved for women who don't support other women."' The crowd roared its approval, but according to several sources, Albright actually said, 'there's a place in Hell reserved for women who don't help other women.'" As usual, Palin gets the key point wrong. That's right, Sarah, let me help/support you...right to the exit.

Albright replies: "This is yet another example of McCain and Palin distorting the truth, and all the more reason to remember that this campaign is not about gender, it is about which candidate has an agenda that will improve the lives of all Americans, including women."

I think I'll help/support Campbell Brown, who is fast becoming my favorite TV news anchor: "As journalists, and certainly for me over the last few years, we've gotten overly obsessed with parity, especially when we're covering politics," Ms. Brown said. "We kept making sure each candidate got equal time — to the point that it got ridiculous in a way. So when you have Candidate A saying the sky is blue, and Candidate B saying it's a cloudy day, I look outside and I see, well, it's a cloudy day," she said. "I should be able to tell my viewers, 'Candidate A is wrong, Candidate B is right.' And not have to say, 'Well, you decide.' Then it would be like I'm an idiot. And I'd be treating the audience like idiots."

Oh Campbell, treating us like we have brains and all, how dumb do you think we are?? Maybe the question is how dumb is the McCain campaign, which popped out with this little bizarre item last week:

(I'm not making this up, you know. Some days this stuff just writes itself...) "Sen. John McCain's senior foreign policy advisor cites a steamy romance 50 years ago with a Brazilian babe among the things that illustrate the candidate's decades-long interest in Latin America. Speaking at an Americas Conference panel discussion Friday on the next U.S. president's Latin American policy, McCain advisor Richard Fontaine started out by mentioning an old Brazilian flame of McCain's, who recently emerged in the press." From the photo she's holding, looks like Maria Gracinda used to be a ballet dancer--and you know about ballet dancers...

''Talking a little about his personal experience, he was famously born in Panama and has traveled all over the hemisphere for many years.'' Fontaine said. ``In fact, I saw, I guess it was last week, that his old girlfriend in Brazil has been found from his early days when he was in the Navy and was interviewed. She's a somewhat older woman now than she was then, but it sorta speaks to the long experience he has had in the region -- in the most positive terms.'' Asked afterward about whether he was suggesting that McCain's fling with a Latin hottie counted as Latin America foreign policy experience, Fontaine said: ''The only thing I was trying to convey was that his experience goes back a long way,'' Fontaine said. ``He was born in Panama, which illustrates a lifetime spent in Latin America. He has known a lot of people. The thing about the Brazilian girlfriend was in his first memoir, and it stuck in my brain. Look at the two candidates and contrast his extensive experience. That's the only point I was trying to make.''

Wow, I guess that means that guy who makes the Girls Gone Wild Ultimate Spring Break DVDs, Joe Francis has TON more experience in foreign policy. Maybe HE should be running for President. Oh, no wait, he's too busy doing his "community service." Ah the irony.

And, of course, "enquiring minds want to know"... when are Bristol Palin and Levi Johnston tying the ole' knot? Apparently, it's not in October, as much as Mommy and that funny Senator McWeird might want it to be...."The two have been considering getting married next summer, 'but that could change,' [Johnston's mother] said during a short interview outside her Wasilla home. The baby is due in late December.'


Sunday Morning Quarterbacking

A round up of some of the best commentary and humor from this weekend:

At the top of the list, as always, Saturday Night Live. Tina Fey should be Palin's biggest fan, seeing as how Fey can expect another Emmy for playing the Contestant #8 to such excruciating perfection. SNL has hit video gold with Palin:

LATIFAH AS IFILL: "Senator Palin. Address your position on global warming and whether you think it's man-made or not."

FEY AS PALIN: "Gwen, we don't know if this climate change hoozie-what's-it is man-made or if it's just a natural part of the 'End of Days.' But I'm not gonna talk about that I would like to talk about taxes, because with Barack Obama, you're gonna be paying higher taxes. But not with me and my fellow maverick. We are not afraid to get maverick-y in there and ruffle feathers and not got to allow that. And also, too, the great Ronald Reagan."

And tell me we're still playing the Drinking Game! Fey, as Palin, finishes up with: "I liked being here tonight answering these tough questions without the filter of the mainstream gotcha media with their 'follow-up questions,' 'fact-checking' or 'incessant need to figure out what your words mean and why ya put them in that order.' I'm happy to be speaking directly to the American people to let them know if you want an outsider who doesn't like politics as usual or pronouncin' the 'g' and the end of words she's sayin' I think you know who to vote for. Oh, and for those Joe Six-packs out there playing a drinking game at home -- Maverick."
  • I love YouTube mashups. Sarah Palin meets Francis McDormand in Fargo. You betcha, yah. You think I have too much time on my hands?
  • Letterman also gives us Palin...in her own words.
  • Bill Maher notes that Pakistan's president Zardari got into hot water for gushing over Palin and hugging her, "The people in his home country of Pakistan, the Islamists, they issued a fatwa on him for being too flirty. And when Sarah today was told that Zardari had gotten a fatwa because of her, she said I know I felt it when he hugged me."
  • Maureen Dowd at the NY Times has another go at translating Palin's mushy-mouthed Frontier Baroque back into English: "Sometimes, her sentences have a Yoda-like — 'When 900 years old you reach, look as good you will not' — splendor. When she was asked by Couric if she'd ever negotiated with the Russians, the governor replied that when Putin 'rears his head' he is headed for Alaska. Then she uttered yet another sentence that defies diagramming: 'It is from Alaska that we send those out to make sure that an eye is being kept on this very powerful nation, Russia, because they are right there'... She dangles gerunds, mangles prepositions, randomly exiles nouns and verbs and also — "also" is her favorite vamping word — uses verbs better left as nouns."
  • And then there's Frank Rich, "After the debate, Republicans who had been bailing on Palin rushed back to the fold. They know her relentless ambition is the only hope for saving a ticket headed by a warrior who is out of juice and out of ideas. So what if she is preposterously unprepared to run the country in the midst of its greatest economic crisis in 70 years? She looks and sounds like a winner.You can understand why they believe that. She has more testosterone than anyone else at the top of her party."
It's true, Palin does have her appeal to the people that love her. This debate review, from Rich Lowry at the National Review, reminds me of that episode of the Partridge Family, the one with that gorgeous blonde girl who can't sing a note, but all the men in the room think she's fantastic. (The family has to stage an intervention, Keith finally hears her on tape and he realizes that when he isn't looking at her, she's a horrible singer. With Palin, it's the same effect you get when you read her transcript.)

"A very wise TV executive once told me that the key to TV is projecting through the screen. It's one of the keys to the success of, say, a Bill O'Reilly, who comes through the screen and grabs you by the throat. Palin too projects through the screen like crazy. I'm sure I'm not the only male in America who, when Palin dropped her first wink, sat up a little straighter on the couch and said, "Hey, I think she just winked at me." And her smile. By the end, when she clearly knew she was doing well, it was so sparkling it was almost mesmerizing. It sent little starbursts through the screen and ricocheting around the living rooms of America. This is a quality that can't be learned; it's either something you have or you don't, and man, she's got it."

I hope your girlfriend smacked you upside the head, Rich.

===================================

Author, Author

So I've run into several people now who actually believe that Obama has never authored legislation in the three years he's been in the Senate. It was a crack made by Sarah Palin at the RNC back in early September, if you recall, so one might wonder why ANYone would believe something Sarah Palin said. John McCain should have CRINGED because Obama has co-sponsored legislation with him in the Senate. But the question of authoring legislation actually came up much earlier in the year, during the primaries, and oddly enough in an email forward supporting Obama and levelling an attack on Hillary Clinton's record. Nevertheless, more than one person now has said to me, "Oh, Obama's never written any legislation," and I feel it's up to us to get the truth out there circulating. Again.

While it's true that Obama has not been in Congress long enough to have a list of enacted legislation as long as McCain's or Biden's or Clinton's, he has an extraordinarily impressive and prolific track record. In just three years in the US Senate, Obama was the sole original sponsor of 129 bills and co-sponsored an additional 427.

Newsweek and FactCheck.org covered this issue fairly thoroughly back in February during the primaries, so I'm only including a shortlist of legislation Obama has authored--you can look up a complete list of co-sponsored bills at the Library of Congress. (For convenience, I'm also creating a wallet-sized version--feel free to print it out, fold it up and carry it with you.) Charles Peters in the Washington Post also examines how Obama developed bipartisan support at the state-level for a controversial law mandating videotaping for police interrogation.

A shortlist of 59 out of the 129 bills Obama has authored or sponsored:

  1. S.114 : A bill to authorize resources for a grant program for local educational agencies to create innovation districts
  2. S.115 : A bill to suspend royalty relief, to repeal certain provisions of the Energy Policy Act of 2005, and to amend the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 to repeal certain tax incentives for the oil and gas industry
  3. S.116 : A bill to authorize resources to provide students with opportunities for summer learning through summer learning grants
  4. S.117 : A bill to amend titles 10 and 38, United States Code, to improve benefits and services for members of the Armed Forces, veterans of the Global War on Terrorism, and other veterans, to require reports on the effects of the Global War on Terrorism, and for other purposes
  5. S.133 : A bill to promote the national security and stability of the economy of the United States by reducing the dependence of the United States on oil through the use of alternative fuels and new technology, and for other purposes
  6. S.433 : A bill to state United States policy for Iraq, and for other purposes
  7. S.453 : A bill to prohibit deceptive practices in Federal electionsS.674 : A bill to require accountability and enhanced congressional oversight for personnel performing private security functions under Federal contracts, and for other purposes
  8. S.692 : A bill to amend title 38, United States Code, to establish a Hospital Quality Report Card Initiative to report on health care quality in Veterans Affairs hospitals
  9. S.713 : A bill to ensure dignity in care for members of the Armed Forces recovering from injuries
  10. S.737 : A bill to amend the Help America Vote Act of 2002 in order to measure, compare, and improve the quality of voter access to polls and voter services in the administration of Federal elections in the States
  11. S.767 : A bill to increase fuel economy standards for automobiles and for other purposes
  12. S.768 : A bill to increase fuel economy standards for automobiles and for other purposes
  13. S.795 : A bill to assist aliens who have been lawfully admitted in becoming citizens of the United States, and for other purposes
  14. S.823 : A bill to amend the Public Health Service Act with respect to facilitating the development of microbicides for preventing transmission of HIV/AIDS and other diseases, and for other purposes
  15. S.906 : A bill to prohibit the sale, distribution, transfer, and export of elemental mercury, and for other purposes
  16. S.976 : A bill to secure the promise of personalized medicine for all Americans by expanding and accelerating genomics research and initiatives to improve the accuracy of disease diagnosis, increase the safety of drugs, and identify novel treatments
  17. S.1067 : A bill to require Federal agencies to support health impact assessments and take other actions to improve health and the environmental quality of communities, and for other purposes
  18. S.1068 : A bill to promote healthy communities
  19. S.1084 : A bill to provide housing assistance for very low-income veterans
  20. S.1151 : A bill to provide incentives to the auto industry to accelerate efforts to develop more energy-efficient vehicles to lessen dependence on oil
  21. S.1181 : A bill to amend the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 to provide shareholders with an advisory vote on executive compensation
  22. S.1222 : A bill to stop mortgage transactions which operate to promote fraud, risk, abuse, and under-development, and for other purposes
  23. S.1271 : A bill to provide for a comprehensive national research effort on the physical and mental health and other readjustment needs of the members of the Armed Forces and veterans who served in Operation Iraqi Freedom and Operation Enduring Freedom and their families
  24. S.1306 : A bill to direct the Consumer Product Safety Commission to classify certain children's products containing lead to be banned hazardous substances
  25. S.1324 : A bill to amend the Clean Air Act to reduce greenhouse gas emissions from transportation fuel sold in the United States
  26. S.1389 : A bill to authorize the National Science Foundation to establish a Climate Change Education Program
  27. S.1430 : A bill to authorize State and local governments to direct divestiture from, and prevent investment in, companies with investments of $20,000,000 or more in Iran's energy sector, and for other purposes
  28. S.1513 : A bill to amend the Higher Education Act of 1965 to authorize grant programs to enhance the access of low-income African-American students to higher education
  29. S.1574 : A bill to establish Teaching Residency Programs for preparation and induction of teachers
  30. S.1713 : A bill to provide for the issuance of a commemorative postage stamp in honor of Rosa Parks
  31. S.1790 : A bill to make grants to carry out activities to prevent the incidence of unintended pregnancies and sexually transmitted infections among teens in racial or ethnic minority or immigrant communities, and for other purposes
  32. S.1811 : A bill to amend the Toxic Substances Control Act to assess and reduce the levels of lead found in child-occupied facilities in the United States, and for other purposes
  33. S.1817 : A bill to ensure proper administration of the discharge of members of the Armed Forces for personality disorder, and for other purposes
  34. S.1818 : A bill to amend the Toxic Substances Control Act to phase out the use of mercury in the manufacture of chlorine and caustic soda, and for other purposes
  35. S.1824 : A bill to amend title XVIII of the Social Security Act to establish a Hospital Quality Report Card Initiative under the Medicare program to assess and report on health care quality in hospitals
  36. S.1873 : A bill to amend the Public Health Service Act to establish demonstration programs on regionalized systems for emergency care, to support emergency medicine research, and for other purposes
  37. S.1885 : A bill to provide certain employment protections for family members who are caring for members of the Armed Forces recovering from illnesses and injuries incurred on active duty
  38. S.1977 : A bill to provide for sustained United States leadership in a cooperative global effort to prevent nuclear terrorism, reduce global nuclear arsenals, stop the spread of nuclear weapons and related material and technology, and support the responsible and peaceful use of nuclear technology
  39. S.1989 : A bill to provide a mechanism for the determination on the merits of the claims of claimants who met the class criteria in a civil action relating to racial discrimination by the Department of Agriculture but who were denied that determination
  40. S.2030 : A bill to amend the Federal Election Campaign Act of 1971 to require reporting relating to bundled contributions made by persons other than registered lobbyists
  41. S.2044 : A bill to provide procedures for the proper classification of employees and independent contractors, and for other purposes
  42. S.2066 : A bill to establish nutrition and physical education standards for schools
  43. S.2111 : A bill to amend the Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965 to allow State educational agencies, local educational agencies, and schools to increase implementation of early intervention services, particularly school-wide positive behavior supports
  44. S.2132 : A bill to prohibit the introduction or delivery for introduction into interstate commerce of children's products that contain lead, and for other purposes
  45. S.2147 : A bill to require accountability for contractors and contract personnel under Federal contracts, and for other purposes
  46. S.2202 : A bill to amend the Clean Air Act to increase the renewable content of gasoline, and for other purposes
  47. S.2224 : A bill to require a licensee to notify the Nuclear Regulatory Commission, and the State and county in which a facility is located, whenever there is an unplanned release of radioactive substances
  48. S.2227 : A bill to provide grants to States to ensure that all students in the middle grades are taught an academically rigorous curriculum with effective supports so that students complete the middle grades prepared for success in high school and postsecondary endeavors, to improve State and district policies and programs relating to the academic achievement of students in the middle grades, to develop and implement effective middle school models for struggling students, and for other purposes
  49. S.2330 : A bill to authorize a pilot program within the Departments of Veterans Affairs and Housing and Urban Development with the goal of preventing at-risk veterans and veteran families from falling into homelessness, and for other purposes
  50. S.2347 : A bill to restore and protect access to discount drug prices for university-based and safety-net clinics
  51. S.2392 : A bill to direct the Secretary of Education to establish and maintain a public website through which individuals may find a complete database of available scholarships, fellowships, and other programs of financial assistance in the study of science, technology, engineering, and mathematics
  52. S.2428 : A bill to direct the Secretary of Education to establish and maintain a public website through which individuals may find a complete database of available scholarships, fellowships, and other programs of financial assistance in the study of science, technology, engineering, and mathematics
  53. S.2433 : A bill to require the President to develop and implement a comprehensive strategy to further the United States foreign policy objective of promoting the reduction of global poverty, the elimination of extreme global poverty, and the achievement of the Millennium Development Goal of reducing by one-half the proportion of people worldwide, between 1990 and 2015, who live on less than $1 per day
  54. S.2519 : A bill to prohibit the awarding of a contract or grant in excess of the simplified acquisition threshold unless the prospective contractor or grantee certifies in writing to the agency awarding the contract or grant that the contractor or grantee has no seriously delinquent tax debts, and for other purposes
  55. S.3047 : A bill to provide for the coordination of the Nation's science, technology, engineering, and mathematics education initiatives
  56. S.3077 : A bill to strengthen transparency and accountability in Federal spending
  57. S.3142 : A bill to amend the Public Health Service Act to enhance public health activities related to stillbirth and sudden unexpected infant death
  58. S.3358 : A bill to provide for enhanced food-borne illness surveillance and food safety capacity
  59. S.3506 : A bill to amend the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 to increase the credit for purchase of vehicles fueled by natural gas or liquefied natural gas and to amend the Safe, Accountable, Flexible, Efficient Transportation Equity Act: A Legacy for Users to reauthorize the Clean School Bus Program of the Environmental Protection Agency

In addition, Obama has also cosponsored:

Coburn-Obama Government Transparency Act of 2006 (which became law), Lugar-Obama Nuclear Non-proliferation and Conventional Weapons Threat Reduction Act (which became law) Comprehensive Immigration Reform Act (passed the Senate) 2007 Government Ethics Bill (which became law) and the Protection Against Excessive Executive Compensation Bill (In committee).

In 2005, he co-sponsored the "Secure America and Orderly Immigration Act" (which John McCain should recognize, because he introduced it!) He later added three amendments to the "Comprehensive Immigration Reform Act", which passed the Senate in May 2006, "Honest Leadership and Open Government Act", which was signed into law in September 2007. Obama also introduced the "Iraq War De-Escalation Act", Obama sponsored with Kit Bond (R-MO) an amendment to the 2008 Defense Authorization Act, provision from the Obama-Hagel bill was passed by Congress in December 2007 as an amendment to the State-Foreign Operations appropriations bill, Obama also sponsored a Senate amendment to the State Children's Health Insurance Program (SCHIP)

By the way, if you're looking for more info on any bill in Congress past or present, the Thomas.loc.gov site is a terrific resource, but you can also use OpenCongress to actually track bills with RSS feeds. You can even tag them with your vote to remind yourself that your opinion is part of this too.

====================================

Buh-Bye

I love stuff like this: the NY Times points out the obvious, that Obama is gaining ground and playing a better game than McCain. "By using his fund-raising advantage to compete in so many places, Mr. Obama has forced Mr. McCain to spend money to hold on in what had been viewed as safe Republican states, like Indiana and Missouri, while limiting Mr. McCain's ability to play offense on Democratic turf." Republican candidates all over the country are worried for their own campaigns. WaPo points out that "Republicans are trying to defend at least 18 House seats in Michigan, Ohio, Pennsylvania and Florida, economic trouble spots that double as election battlegrounds. Rising unemployment, the meltdown in the housing market, and a credit crunch besieging consumers and manufacturers alike were factors in Sen. John McCain's decision Thursday to pull campaign resources out of Michigan. The McCain campaign's exit from the state leaves a pair of vulnerable Republicans, Reps. Tim Walberg and Joe Knollenberg, with a weakened party infrastructure heading into Nov. 4."

Over at HuffPo, some voters are feeling a little more than just pleased. "Maybe in the last Presidential election there were voters who were swayed by the fact that they liked George Bush -- by the fact that they wanted to have a beer with him. But not in this election. This time around, just liking someone is not gonna be enough. At least not in Michigan."

In Florida-- where Obama has actually been LEADING 3 to 8 points in the latet polls-- the economic crisis has certianly helped focus the race, but the NYTimes sounds a few warnings about a repeat of the 2000 election shenanigans, "
Add to the mix a new voting system that lost 3,000 votes in a local election this summer, rumors that new laws to prevent voter fraud will lead to long lines or legal battles... and the Sunshine State starts to look cloudy."

Even KARL ROVE gave Obama 273 electoral votes on his website. I think I'm going to throw up..with joy.

setstats setstatsWith all the good news for Obama, it's utterly unsurprising to learn that McCain's camp plans a new series of unimaginative attacks, as I mentioned above, that will try to revive the Obama connection to William Ayers of the Weathermen. Over the weekend, Palin referred to a NY Times article on the topic by saying Obama "was palling around with terrorists" although she didn't mention Ayers by name. (Hey, Sarah! Enough is enough with your ticket, on constantly looking backwards.)

Unlike John Kerry, who seemed blindsided by the SwiftBoating in 2004, the Obama campaign looks alert and is pre-emptively striking with a new ad, "Three quarters of a million jobs lost this year. Our financial system in turmoil. And John McCain? Erratic in a crisis. Out of touch on the economy. No wonder his campaign wants to change the subject."

For god's sake, John McCain, you used to deplore the culture wars--isn't this election more important than this? Our economy and the world of finance is in a shambles, and a recent survey by The Economist found that out of 142 economists, a substantial majority believe Obama has the better economic plan and 80% felt that he has a better grasp of economics. We have a war on terror being fought in the wrong countries. The climate is changing and we've got torrential storms and snow in October in Europe. The world is falling apart and this is what you want to talk about???

Frankly I'm feeling a little bipolar with all the alternating euphoria and then worrying over polling that I've been doing lately. I'm finding large amounts of my own hair in the shower drain. Judith Warner captures a particular feeling that I've been trying to identify during this whole financial blowup in her editorial "Waiting for Schadenfreude" (there's that word again...). The current financial crisis has, I think, proven to be a similar sort of emotional Rorschach test. People who felt impotent feel even more powerless. Those who felt lied to see new levels of conspiracy. Demagogues are engaging in even more demagoguery. And those of us who felt, well, like losers, are feeling like even bigger losers, as we shove our unopened 401K or (if we're double-loser freelancers) SEP-IRA statements into bottom desk drawers and wait for a cathartic burst of schadenfreude that simply refuses to come."

Helpful tip: When you're feeling desperate, look at the map at ElectoralVote.com. And there's always donation therapy-- when you hear some infuriatingly untrue remark about Obama's personal, legislative or policy history, send $5 to his campaign.

==============================

FYI, TUESDAY October 7, 2008 is the next Presidential Debate, at Belmont University's Curb Event Center in Nashville, Tennessee, moderated by Tom Brokaw, special correspondent for NBC News. This debate will have a town-hall meeting format.

Only 30 days to the election, folks! Reminder again that time is running out--for many states, you must register to vote well in advance of the elections. RockTheVote's list of voter registration deadlines. Here are some upcoming dates--forward this on to your friends in the appropriate states (swing states in bold):
  • Monday, Oct 6: Arizona, Arkansas, Colorado, DC, Florida, Georgia, Hawaii, Indiana, Kentucky, Louisiana, Michigan, Mississippi, Montana, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Tennessee, Texas, Virginia.
  • Tuesday, Oct 7: Illinois, New Mexico
  • Wednesday, Oct 8: Missouri
  • Friday, Oct 10: New York, North Carolina, Oklahoma
  • Saturday, Oct 11: Delaware
  • Tuesday, Oct 14: Maryland, New Jersey, Oregon
  • Wednesday, Oct 15: Massachusetts, West Virginia, Wisconsin
If you're voting absentee, you may have to get your ballot in weeks before the Nov 4th Election date. Declare Yourself has links to each state's voter information page where you can find out how to get your absentee ballot. Ohio, your absentee ballot program is now open for business.

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Thursday, October 2, 2008

Palindrome

Betcha thought we'd never get here.... Yes, it's Thursday, and I am offering a Very Special Sarah Palin Salute to Schadenfreude.

But First, the News...
I have to crow. ElectoralVote.com this morning has Florida, Ohio, Pennsylvania and Virginia in Obama' corner, PLUS Nevada, Colorado and New Mexico! AND McCain is losing ground in Indiana and Missouri! Even Georgia, Mississippi and TEXAS? Oh, baby...

Over at Real Clear Politics, the more conservative estimator, the news is even BETTER: If you go to the scenario with no toss-up states, they give 353 electoral votes to Obama.

The Princeton Election Consortium show Obama with a "safe" 273 electoral vote today, and Obama is retaining his 6-point lead at Gallup Daily tracking is holding.

I'm barely breathing.... I do hasten to remind everyone that Obama's been at this level before, over the summer. And we've seen this kind of lead take a dip. However, we are only 33 days out from the election, AND in sme states millions of people have been voting already by absentee ballot -- to avoid the problem of impossible lines at the polls on election day. Most people assumed this would be an advantage to McCain, but I'm not so sure...

Sittin' Here on Capitol Hill

Well, the Senate passed it. The bill -- the BILL. And they passed it with such little drama that you wondered if everyone. Here's the Roll Call. [Dusts off hands] Done. What? That's it. Just vote, pass, done? Where's my haranguing? My filibustering? I want my high-drama reality show! House Republicans? Over to you.

France figures, if American's are going to try it, maybe the Europeans might buy it too... "France heaped pressure on Gordon Brown last night by floating an ambitious plan for a 300 billion Euro (£237 billion) bailout fund to rescue crippled banks across Europe. As the world held its breath on the fate of America's $700 billion bank bailout plan, President Sarkozy was seeking the backing of European leaders for his own lifeboat...Amid the confusion and bickering between governments, France denied at first that it had put forward a proposal for a fund at all and then, after admitting that it had done so, denied that it would cost ¤300 billion. Paris said that the figure had come from the Dutch Government. Officials in The Hague said that they had no idea what the French were talking about."

setstats
Debatable, Part Deux

So McCain's new strategy is to discredit Gwen Ifill -- really? Gwen Ifill??? "On the eve of Thursday's vice-presidential debate in St. Louis, the McCain campaign is voicing confidence in moderator Gwen Ifill's professionalism while simultaneously sowing doubts about her ability to be fair after learning that she is working on a book about a new generation of black leaders called, 'Breakthrough: Politics and Race in the Age of Obama.'" For her part Ifill responds somewhat slyly--maybe it's the painkillers for her broken ankle talking. "Ifill questions why people assume that her book will be favorable toward Obama. 'Do you think they made the same assumptions about Lou Cannon (who is white) when he wrote his book about Reagan?' said Ifill, who is black. Asked if there were racial motives at play, she said, 'I don't know what it is. I find it curious.'"

================================

setstatsThe Long and Winding Road....

You know, I'm quite amazed when I think that a month ago we barely knew Sarah Palin. Now we know more than we could ever possibly want to know about Sarah Palin. Think of all those brain cells we've had to waste on her. I know I know, she shouldn't be the focus in this very important election, she should be beneath focus, but obsessing over her is like a good, juicy trash-novel-- I know I shouldn't waste the time, but it's a nasty, delicious indulgence. Talking Points Memo did a nice 5 minutes "Greatest Hits" video which is disturbing and I think has damaged my eyeballs.

I thought on this day, of all days, it might be fun to recall how much we've learned about Sarah Palin. A little trip down Memory Lane.

July, 31 2008: The Prologue

  • "As for that VP talk all the time, I'll tell you, I still can't answer that question until somebody answers for me what is it exactly that the VP does every day?" says Gov. Sarah Palin, in an interview with CNBC's "Kudlow & Co."
  • Draft Sarah Palin for VP. No...really, John, this person ISN'T your Vetting Team.
  • "When they were vetting her for this job, like three seconds ago, she said, quote, I'm not making this up, 'What is it exactly that the VP does every day?' Let me field that for you, Sarah. They start wars, they enrich their friends, they subvert the Constitution, and they shoot people in the face. That's what the vice president does." –Bill Maher

August 29: Who?

Sept 1: Getting to know her... getting to know all about her...
Sept. 2: Family (De-)Values
  • Why is there disbelief and speculation about Trig Palin's parentage? Palin's own account of the birth: she says she sensed her water broke while she was in Texas the morning before an important speech. Although she was aware the baby had Down Syndrome and she was then only eight months pregnant, she gave her speech and then made a 12 hour trip from Houston, Texas to Wasilla, Alaska. With two flight connections. I suppose that's to show us how tough she is? Humorous Palin decision map.
  • Palin, seven months pregnant, in the photo at right... You tell me. (And no, I will not let this go.)
  • Sarah Palin announces that her 17-year old unmarried daughter is pregnant. "Bristol Palin is about five months pregnant and is going to keep the child and marry the father, the Palins said in a statement released by the campaign of Republican presidential candidate John McCain. (UK Independent) 'Cause,see, that PROVES that Trig couldn't be Bristol's baby...
  • THIS is 7 months pregnant. To the right, Demi Moore --seven months pregnant-- in a Vanity Fair cover shot by Annie Lebovitz. (No, I will not let this go! )
  • McCain's aide says statement should refute internet speculation that four-month old baby Trig is actually Bristol Palin's child. (Daily Kos) Update: The Kos link has been scrubbed and is no more. Read Gawker for more.
  • Levi Johnston, aka Bristol Palin's fiance, to appear at GOP convention.
  • "Speaking of Sarah Palin, she said she's a life-long member of the National Rifle Association. Which may explain why she's in favor of shotgun weddings." --Conan O'Brien
setstats setstatsSept 3: Conventional
Sept 8: Gaffe-talk Express takes off
Sept 9: Have you seen the little piggies...?

Sept 12: Media Access
  • And speaking of the Palinista--SHE SPEAKS! Palin finally answers questions from what McCain was really, really, really hoping would be a sympathetic and softball Charlie Gibson on ABC. I know, Most of you don't even want to watch-- you can read the excerpts.
  • Was Charlie tough enough? Ehn, coulda been more. Did Sarah stumble? She made Charlie a little testy, it's true, but she also had her lines pretty well memorized. Still there were some obvious bumps in the road. She kinda declared war on Russia (calling the Georgian invasion unprovoked--um, those Georgians are nice and all, but....even I wouldn't say "unprovoked"), couldn't figure out what Bush's doctrine was, and yes, she STILL says "nukular."
  • Gloria Steinem compares the Palinista to Phyllis Schlafly. But she also reminds us "the culprit is John McCain. He may have chosen Palin out of change-envy, or a belief that women can't tell the difference between form and content, but the main motive was to please right-wing ideologues; the same ones who nixed anyone who is now or ever has been a supporter of reproductive freedom. If that were not the case, McCain could have chosen a woman who knows what a vice president does and who has thought about Iraq; someone like Texas Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison or Sen. Olympia Snowe of Maine." (LAT)
  • If you watched TV last night, you know that Charlie Gibson did something John McCain has never done: interviewed Sarah Palin. --Jay Leno
Sept 13: TIna Fey Leads the Multimedia Goldrush
Sept 17: An EXPERT on Energy Policy
  • Heard at a town hall meeting, Grand Rapids, MI--from Sarah Palin's lips:"Oil and coal? Of course, it's a fungible commodity and they don't flag, you know, the molecules, where it's going and where it's not. But in the sense of the Congress today, they know that there are very, very hungry domestic markets that need that oil first. So, I believe that what Congress is going to do, also, is not to allow the export bans to such a degree that it's Americans that get stuck to holding the bag without the energy source that is produced here, pumped here. It's got to flow into our domestic markets first."
Sept 20: Speed Dating Diplomacy and Delusions/Illusions of Grandeur
Sept 23: Free Sarah Palin!
Sept 24: Mean Girl
  • setstatsAnd not that we didn't know this about Sarah Palin, but David Talbot at Salon recounts how Palin's mayoral election in Wasilla took on tones of nastiness that echo the current campaign. "According to some political observers in Alaska, this pattern -- exploiting 'old-boy' mentors and then turning against them for her own advantage -- defines Sarah Palin's rise to power. Again and again, Palin has charmed powerful political patrons, and then rejected them when it suited her purposes."
  • Oh, and in case you're not outraged enough about Palin's utter insensitivity as a human being, note that while Palin was mayor in Wasilla, the town began charging rape victims for the costs of their own rape kits.
  • Sarah Palin Troopergate Update: The Plank pointed out that even the AP newswire is getting snarky, putting out this lead in a story covering the investigation: "Less than a week after balking at the Alaska Legislature's investigation into her alleged abuse of power, Gov. Sarah Palin on Monday indicated she will cooperate with a separate probe run by people she can fire."
  • The National Enquirer, which we never believed, until they nailed the John Edwards story, releases the next "-gate" on Governor Family-Values: an affair with her husband's business partner.
  • Andrew Sullivan at the Atlantic sticks to his guns on the Twelve Lies of Sarah Palin. "Just for the record, I asked an intern to go back and double fact-check the twelve documented lies that Sarah Palin has told on the public record. These are not hyperbolic claims or rhetorical excess. They are assertions of fact that are demonstrably untrue and remain uncorrected."
  • Craig Ferguson pointed out that it is very strange that Sarah Palin had a tanning bed installed in the governor's mansion, because the Republican Party is usually focused on making their candidate as white as possible.
Sept 25: Ow. Hurts Brain.
  • The BIG interview, with Katie Couric of CBS playing "Stump the Candidate." Particularly delicious is the moment when Couric asks Palin to cite "specific examples in [McCain's] 26 years [in the Senate] of pushing for more regulation."
  • More of Katie interviewing Sarah Palin: COURIC: You've cited Alaska's proximity to Russia as part of your foreign policy experience. What did you mean by that? PALIN: That Alaska has a very narrow maritime border between a foreign country, Russia, and on our other side, the land-- boundary that we have with-- Canada. It-- it's funny that a comment like that was-- kind of made to-- cari-- I don't know, you know? Reporters-- COURIC: Mock? PALIN: Yeah, mocked, I guess that's the word, yeah. (HuffPo)
  • setstatsHere's the special irony: Alaska's governors DO often enjoy more contact with Russian officials because Anchorage is the base for the Northern Forum, an organization representing leaders and sub-leadership from countries around the Arctic Circle including Russia, Finland, Iceland and Canada, Japan, China and South Korea. The Seattle Times reports: "Yet under Palin, the state government — without consultation — reduced its annual financial support to the Northern Forum to $15,000 from $75,000, according to Priscilla Wohl, the group's executive director. That forced the forum's Anchorage office to go without pay for two months. Palin — unlike the previous administrations of Gov. Frank Murkowski and Gov. Tony Knowles — also stopped sending representatives to Northern Forum's annual meetings, including one last year for regional governors held in the heart of Russia's oil territory." Great. Twenty years of glasnost down the drain. Plus, she doesn't even have the brains to mention that this organization exists when the Russia question comes up.
  • The LA Times reports: "Soon after Sarah Palin was elected mayor of the foothill town of Wasilla, Alaska, she startled a local music teacher by insisting in casual conversation that men and dinosaurs coexisted on an Earth created 6,000 years ago -- about 65 million years after scientists say most dinosaurs became extinct -- the teacher said." That's TOTALLY true. I saw it on TV once.
  • Sarah Palin, going for the all-important Sleestack vote. It's paying off: McCain is now polling at 52% among Sleestacks likely to vote.
  • Is Sarah Palin qualified?" poll on PBS NOW's website. I sent it out, and many of you have sent it to me. Well, the poll, which only ran a week in early September on PBS' homepage, became the single most viewed page on their entire site, even though nothing links to it now that the homepage link is gone. But it's remained so popular via email that PBS was moved to post this notice. As many people noticed, voting "da Chicago way" seemed to be entirely possible, and apparently was until yesterday, when they embedded cookies so you can only vote once per computer.
  • "Vice presidential candidate Sarah Palin has many views. She says she's opposed to same-sex marriage. Did you know that? Yeah, Palin says everyone knows marriage isn't for gay people; it's for pregnant teenagers." --Conan O'Brien
Sept. 26: Out of the Tank for Palin.
  • setstatsEven the National Review's Kathleen Parker, once "in the tank" for Sarah Palin, now says, "As we've seen and heard more from John McCain's running mate, it is increasingly clear that Palin is a problem. Quick study or not, she doesn't know enough about economics and foreign policy to make Americans comfortable with a President Palin should conditions warrant her promotion."
  • Over on Leno, Wanda Sykes goes OFF on Sarah Palin. "They say, 'Oh, she's meeting with the world leaders.' But there's no reporters. I'm like, is she meeting with the world leaders, or did you take her to the Epcot Center? Let her drink around the world? You know, because I've done that. Maybe I should be Secretary of State..."
  • "Well, it's a very strange political campaign. I mean, out on the campaign trail, John McCain and Sarah Palin are talking about how they stood up to the Republican party, they fought the Republican establishment, and they battled Republicans. Their message: vote Republican." --Jay Leno
Sept 28: Point/Counterpoint
  • Whoopsie. McCain appeared on George Stephanopoulos' show on Sunday on ABC, and um... had to retract the statement his esteemed running mate made the night before: "Saturday night, while on a stop for cheesesteaks in South Philadelphia, Palin was questioned by a Temple graduate student about whether the U.S. should cross the border from Afghanistan into Pakistan. 'If that's what we have to do stop the terrorists from coming any further in, absolutely, we should,' Palin said."
  • Hmmm, that sounds familiar... wait, what was it Barack Obama said during Friday night's debate? "If the United States has al Qaeda, bin Laden, top-level lieutenants in our sights, and Pakistan is unable or unwilling to act, then we should take them out."
  • At that point, McCain, you might remember, said testily, "Now, you don't do that. You don't say that out loud. If you have to do things, you have to do things, and you work with the Pakistani government."
  • McCain, gently corrected Palin's statements: "She would not…she understands and has stated repeatedly that we're not going to do anything except in America's national security interest," McCain told ABC's George Stephanopoulos of Palin. "In all due respect, people going around and… sticking a microphone while conversations are being held, and then all of a sudden that's—that's a person's position… This is a free country, but I don't think most Americans think that that's a definitive policy statement made by Governor Palin."
  • Palin is still PERKY [read, "adorably catty"] saying of Thursday's debate with Biden. "I'm looking forward to meeting him, too. I've never met him before, but I've been hearing about his Senate speeches since I was in, like, second grade.''
  • Joining in on the growing chorus of aghast conservatives, Ron Dreher, the Crunchy Conservative, says, "Palin is mediocre, again, regurgitating talking points mechanically, not thinking. Palin's just babbling. She makes George W. Bush sound like Cicero"
  • "Palin and McCain are a good pair. She's pro-life and he's clinging to life." - Jay Leno
Sept 29: Pre-Debate
Sept 30: She's An [Nearly Illiterate, Below-Average] American Girl (but she plays flute)
  • As part of their "media blitz" this week, Palin went on the radio telling America about how she's just average working class..."Todd and I, heck, we're going through that right now even as we speak, which may put me again kind of on the outs of those Washington elite who don't like the idea of just an everyday working class American running for such an office.
  • As HuffPo notes, it was the bastion of conservativism, The Washington Times, that pointed out that Palin is hardly working class: "A check of financial records, though, shows the Palins live anything but a common life when compared with their fellow residents of their hometown of Wasilla. Their combined income of nearly a quarter-million dollars last year was five times the median household income for Wasilla's 7,000 residents. They own a single-engine plane, two boats, two personal watercraft and a half-million-dollar, custom-built home on a lake that is worth three times the average of other homes in town. For the future, they also have a 401(k) retirement account compliments of Todd Palin's years as an engineer with oil giant BP." Hmmm, that wasn't what I meant by "above average."
  • ANYway. Yes, it's true, just by reading my daily rant, YOU can become More Qualified to Be Vice President than Sarah Palin. From HuffPo: "Asked what newspapers and magazines she reads, Palin - a journalism major in college - could not name one publication. "I've read most of them, again with a great appreciation for the press, for the media," she said at first. Couric responded, "What, specifically?" "Um, all of them, any of them that have been in front of me all these years." "Can you name a few?" "I have a vast variety of source where we get our news," Palin said. "Alaska isn't a foreign country, where it's kind of suggested, 'wow, how could you keep in touch with what the rest of Washington, D.C., may be thinking when you live up there in Alaska?' Believe me, Alaska is like a microcosm of America." Vast variety,eh? No, honey, _I_ have a vast variety of sources. You have People Magazine.
  • But with all the trash-talking about elitist media, Palin had a little problem embedded in that question (besides the obvious problem of being completely incurious about anything):
Oct 2: Gotcha.
Post Turtle
  • While suturing a cut on the hand of a 75-year old rancher whose hand was caught in a gate while working cattle, the doctor struck up a conversation with the old man. Eventually the topic got around to Sarah Palin and her bid to be a heartbeat away from being President.

    The old rancher said, 'Well, ya know, Palin is a post turtle.' Not being familiar with the term, the doctor asked him what a post turtle was.

    The old rancher said, 'When you're driving down a country road and you come across a fence post with a turtle balanced on top, that's a post turtle.'

    The old rancher saw a puzzled look on the doctor's face, so he continued to explain.

    'You know she didn't get up there by herself, she doesn't belong up there, she doesn't know what to do while she is up there, and you just wonder what kind of dumb ass put her up there to begin with.'

====================================

Memories...hurt the corners of my mind...

Beyond the Palin

ABC's recent poll indicated that 60% of Americans think Palin does not have the experience needed for the job.
46% think she "understands complex issues," while 49 percent think she doesn't. Who--WHO are you, you 46% who thinks she understands complex issues???? Even in her home state, America's most popular governor is slipping, as everyone begins to figure out that she's ignorant AND obnoxious. "McClatchy reports today that her approval rating in her home state has tumbled to 68% -- still high but surely not the country's best. The poll by a local firm that works for both parties was taken Sept. 20-22."

One more time before we go... I just LOVE looking at that electoral map.

It occurs to me again, and with greater force how well Obama has picked his team and how poorly McCain has chosen his. In the last four weeks, Obama has sent his wife Michelle Obama to Allentown, PA with Jill Biden, to Saginaw and Clinton townships in Michigan, to Greensboro, NC. And of course, while he and Joe Biden have been campaigning together in Virginia, he's also sent Joe out to major swing states by himself -- because he can. I haven't seen Sarah Palin (forget Todd) or Cindy McCain out there in Wisconsin stumping for John--I don't think the campaign could possibly trust any of them out by themselves.

So actually, it's no surprise (although it is really, really pleasant to see) that Obama is opening leads in key swing states. As reported yesterday, he's over 50% in Ohio, Pennsylvania and FLORIDA according to Quinnipiac, but new polls from CNN/Time reflect the same trend.

  • Florida: Obama 51%, McCain 47%
  • Minnesota: Obama 54%, McCain 43%
  • Missouri: Obama 49%, McCain 48%
  • Nevada: Obama 51%, McCain 47%
  • Virginia: Obama 53%, McCain 44%
Plus, Obama is polling at his highest ever in the CBS/NYTimes poll: 49% to McCain's 40%. This is the first statistically significant lead he's taken in that poll. "The election cycle is entering a time when voters historically begin to make final judgments; this year, in fact, many of them are actually beginning early voting in states."

33 days to the election, folks!
Reminder again that time is running out--for many states, you must register to vote well in advance of the elections. RockTheVote's list of voter registration deadlines. Here are some upcoming dates--forward this on to your friends in the appropriate states (swing states in bold):
  • THIS Saturday Oct 4: Alaska, Rhode Island, South Carolina, Washington
  • NEXT Monday, Oct 6: Arizona, Arkansas, Colorado, DC, Florida, Georgia, Hawaii, Indiana, Kentucky, Louisiana, Michigan, Mississippi, Montana, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Tennessee, Texas, Virginia.
  • NEXT Tuesday, Oct 7: Illinois, New Mexico
  • NEXT Wednesday, Oct 8: Missouri
If you're voting absentee, you may have to get your ballot in weeks before the Nov 4th Election date. Declare Yourself has links to each state's voter information page where you can find out how to get your absentee ballot. Ohio, your absentee ballot program is now open for business.

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Wednesday, October 1, 2008

Social Life

"We live in the midst of alarms; anxiety beclouds the future; we expect some new disaster with each newspaper we read."

--Abraham Lincoln

My God, is it really October? It's been a whole month since I started this Rant (can you believe it's only been one month? It's like dog-years) and this is the 21st Edition! I just want to take a moment to thank all of you for keeping me well-nourished with juicy tidbits and also for forwarding it on to your friends!

So with the House of Representative in disarray, the Senate has decided to give things a go today. Obama, McCain and Biden will be headed back to DC to vote on their version of the bill I so carefully outlined yesterday. "I'll see your $700 thousand million and raise you an FDIC limit of $250,000."

Media funnies

A few of my favorite items for today-- always knowing there will be more tomorrow!

Jon Stewart on The Daily Show grabs the conch and goes OFF about Congress' inability to get this bill done and that they're out for the Jewish holiday: "Listen up, Congress! Get the F**K back to work! For the 'Jewish holiday' for God's sake? How many Jews are even in Congress? Wall Street is open-- I'll guarantee you they got more Jews on Wall Street than in Congress. I'm here, The Daily Show is on, and I guarantee we have more Jews at The Daily Show than Congress. So, get back to saving the economy and if you have to do it without Feingold and Lieberman so be it. How about this? The Congressional delegations from Florida and New York can sleep in. How about that? I mean seriously--Utah? You're not coming in for Rosh Hashanah? Wyoming? My rabbi doesn't even have the balls to take two days for Rosh Hashanah."

If you're looking for a little "laughing while I'm crying moment, here is McCain, versus McCain. (Thanks for sending that, Randi, now my eyeliner is all smudged...)

setstatsAnd for flat out sputtering outrage, watch Cenk Uygar go off on Palin's answer to Katie Couric regarding Hamas. Cenk--who's admittedly on the biased side, like me--is convinced Palin has NO IDEA who the Hamas is, and dontcha know, I'm inclined to agree. He also suggests that if you put a map in front of her, she couldn't tell you where the Gaza Strip is. Entirely possible. Cenk wishes selecting a VP candidate were more like gymnastics where you get a big ZERO score if you flub your vault. Don't we wish.

Here's a YouTube nugget I missed earlier this year, a consumer calls up customer service to ask about the Iraq War Charge on her bill.

And this morning Paula Poundtone put a homespun touch on the financial crisis: "Gee, this stuff is hard to follow. I don't think I even know how many zeros are in a trillion. But after listening to the candidates, I realized I can't count on the powers that be to explain the nature of the financial crisis, and it will be up to me to inform myself. So I turned to It's A Wonderful Life for background on liquidity and solvency, which would have filled me with hope if I didn't have a bad feeling that we've already spent George and Mary Bailey's honeymoon funds."

Okay, this one's not really funny, per se, but it is very very interesting. Five economists discuss the crisis at Princeton. (Hyun Shin, Markus Brunnermeier, Harrison Hong, Paul Krugman, Alan Blinder) It's an hour long, so don't click on this if you're in a hurry. But it's extremely enlightening and well worth the time...

Hoisted with Her Own Petard

Eric wants to rescue the post turtle. No, no, no, not Sarah Palin, he mean the poor little turtle in the picture. I love the joke. ('You know she didn't get up there by herself, she doesn't belong up there, she doesn't know what to do while she is up there, and you just wonder what kind of dumb ass put her up there to begin with.') But even so, it's becoming clearer and clearer that the problem with comparing the turtle with Palin is that the turtle didn't put herself up there... Sarah Palin did. Free the Real Post Turtle.

setstatsA little advance taste of the Thursday's event: a photo of Palin in Sedona, prepping for the debate with a practice run with Randy Scheuneman. In my fertile imagination, I picture this photo being snapped in the long silence after a Palin answer, and then Randy saying, "What the hell was that? Okay, okay [shakes head] ya gotta focus, Sarah, ya gotta frackin' FOCUS IN."

So the real question, though, is how will Palin "play" in her debate with Biden tomorrow? So far, consensus is that her performance in interviews has been someplace between abysmal and disastrous. BUT The New York Times has an interesting look at her previous debates. (They also examine Biden's style, noting he'll have to guard againt being "overbearing or condescending." Sorry, Joe, I know that's nigh-on impossible given Palin's utter lack of any brains, but please try.) While they see echoes of the peripatetic blather we've seen before ("I can't tell you how much that will reduce monetarily our health care costs, but competition makes everyone better, it makes us work harder, it does allow reduction in costs, so addressing that is going to be a priority."), there also hints of an "average person who understood the average person's needs and would not be expected to have detailed policy prescriptions." Lord help us. Why would we WANT an "average person"? Should we want an ABOVE average person? Or is that too intimidating?

Still, Andrew Halcro, who debated Palin in the governorship race in Alaska, warns ,"she's a master, not of facts, figures, or insightful policy recommendations, but at the fine art of the nonanswer, the glittering generality."

As part of their "media blitz" this week, Palin went on the radio telling America about how she's just average working class..."Todd and I, heck, we're going through that right now even as we speak, which may put me again kind of on the outs of those Washington elite who don't like the idea of just an everyday working class American running for such an office.

Up is down. Black is white. Thursday is Tuesday. As HuffPo notes, it was the bastion of conservativism, The Washington Times, that pointed out that Palin is hardly working class: "A check of financial records, though, shows the Palins live anything but a common life when compared with their fellow residents of their hometown of Wasilla. Their combined income of nearly a quarter-million dollars last year was five times the median household income for Wasilla's 7,000 residents. They own a single-engine plane, two boats, two personal watercraft and a half-million-dollar, custom-built home on a lake that is worth three times the average of other homes in town. For the future, they also have a 401(k) retirement account compliments of Todd Palin's years as an engineer with oil giant BP." Hmmm, that wasn't what I meant by "above average."

Former Dem strategist Paul Begala offers his ten rules about debates on CNN (Thanks, Jackie for sending that along!) It's a sobering reminder that actually knowing something isn't necessarily a prerequisite oto good debating in this case. He observes: "Politicians are a lot like Little Leaguers (although I don't think I'd trust them with aluminum bats). They crave confidence. And the more confident they are, the better they're likely to do." To me, the question is not if Palin has confidence--she has loads...to start with. But in just about every interview she's done thus far, we see the same thing. At the outset, she's just dumb enough to think she's smart, but then as you watch her keep on talking, you can also see that she's just smart enough to gradually realize that she's dumb.

ANYway. Yes, it's true, just by reading my daily rant, YOU can become More Qualified to Be Vice President than Sarah Palin. From HuffPo: "Asked what newspapers and magazines she reads, Palin - a journalism major in college - could not name one publication. "I've read most of them, again with a great appreciation for the press, for the media," she said at first. Couric responded, "What, specifically?" "Um, all of them, any of them that have been in front of me all these years." "Can you name a few?" "I have a vast variety of source where we get our news," Palin said. "Alaska isn't a foreign country, where it's kind of suggested, 'wow, how could you keep in touch with what the rest of Washington, D.C., may be thinking when you live up there in Alaska?' Believe me, Alaska is like a microcosm of America."

As I mentioned to Betty, with all this trash-talking about elitist media, Palin had a little problem embedded in that question (besides the obvious problem of being completely incurious about anything):

See, the problem with being your kind of maverick is that you don't have any friends now--no lifelines, no one to help you, no one whose name you'd be allowed to mention. Hoisted with your own petard.

(By the way, about "seeing" Russia from Alaska. That's true, but there's only one place in Alaska that you can do that from: Little Diomede island in the Bering Strait. Gary Tuchman on Anderson Cooper 360 visited it --which Palin has never done. "No American mayor resides in a city closer to Russia than Andrew Milligrock, and he says being two miles from Russia doesn't give him any foreign policy expertise."

And is the McCain Campaign going "Jeff Gillooly" on this debate? "PBS' Gwen Ifill has broken her ankle after tripping and falling down stairs at her home last night, a NewsHour insider tells TVNewser. We're told Ifill had been walking up a staircase, carrying research related to her moderating duties at Thursday's Vice Presidential debate in St. Louis, when she took a wrong step.We are also told the show will go on: Ifill is planning to travel to Missouri for the big event." Stay tuned-- if someone takes a whack at Gwen's knees, you know what happened.

============================

setstats

So Thurday's topics may wander all over the place, but I'm betting you'll hear more than a little about Sarah Palin's values. So today's topic is candidate positions on social values issues. (I know, I know, stop rolling your eyes. We gotta cover it. It's in the curriculum.) I focus on the lead candidate positions knowing that a) the policy positions of the person at the top of the ticket is what most people consider more important and b) I'm interested to see if there is any divergence of opinion between the presidential and vice-presidential candidates. A lot of info here from the NY Times' resource on candidate positions, and also the Associated Press' summary-- liberal-biased media elites that they are.

On proposed constitutional amendment that defines marriage as between a man and a woman:

Obama: Opposes constitutional amendment to ban it.

McCain: Opposes constitutional amendment to ban it.

On civil unions between same sex partners:

Obama: Supports civil unions, says states should decide about marriage. Switched positions in 2004 and now supports repeal of Defense of Marriage Act, which denies federal recognition of same-sex marriages and gives states the right to refuse to recognize such marriages.

McCain: Says same-sex couples should be allowed to enter into legal agreements for insurance and similar benefits.

On Roe v. Wade decision

Obama: I have been a consistent champion of reproductive choice and will make preserving women's rights under Roe v. Wade a priority as president. I oppose any constitutional amendment to overturn the Supreme Court's decision in that case.

McCain: I do not support Roe versus Wade. It should be overturned. Has voted for abortion restrictions permissible under Roe v. Wade, and now says he would seek to overturn that guarantee of abortion rights. Would not seek constitutional amendment to ban abortion.

On continuing the current ban on funding for embryonic stem cell research in place

Obama: No. Each year, 100,000 Americans will develop Alzheimer's disease, with impaired memory, ability to understand, and judgment. Over 1 million adults will be diagnosed with diabetes this year, and risk complications that include blindness, damaged nerves and loss of kidney function. We all know or have met individuals with spinal cord injuries, including national celebrities, local war heroes and loved ones from our own families and circles of friends, who are struggling to maintain mobility and independence. For most of our history, medicine has offered little hope of recovery to the 100 million individuals affected by these and other devastating illnesses and injuries. Until now. Recent developments in stem cell research may hold the key to improved treatments, if not cures, for those affected by Alzheimer's disease, diabetes, spinal cord injury and countless other conditions. For this reason, I am a proud supporter of the Stem Cell Research Enhancement Act. The president was wrong to veto it, and I will make sure that it is finally signed into law when I'm president.

McCain: Supports relaxing federal restrictions on financing of embryonic stemcell research.

On the Supreme Court decision upholding a ban on partial birth abortion

Obama: "I strongly disagree with [the] Supreme Court ruling, which dramatically departs from previous precedents safeguarding the health of pregnant women. As Justice Ginsburg emphasized in her dissenting opinion, this ruling signals an alarming willingness on the part of the conservative majority to disregard its prior rulings respecting a woman's medical concerns and the very personal decisions between a doctor and patient."

McCain: "[The] Supreme Court ruling is a victory for those who cherish the sanctity of life and integrity of the judiciary. The ruling ensures that an unacceptable and unjustifiable practice will not be carried out on our innocent children...as we move forward, it is critically important that our party continues to stand on the side of life."

On Gun Control

Obama: Voted to leave gun-makers and dealers open to suit. Also, as Illinois state lawmaker, supported ban on all forms of semiautomatic weapons and tighter state restrictions generally on firearms.

McCain: Voted against ban on assault-type weapons but in favor of requiring background checks at gun shows. Voted to shield gun-makers and dealers from civil suits. "I believe the Second Amendment ought to be preserved — which means no gun control."

On Judicial Nominations as President

Obama has signaled he would nominate judges with expansive, progressive view of the Constitution. "Justice Roberts [John G. Roberts Jr.] said he saw himself just as an umpire. But the issues that come before the Court are not sport; they're life and death. And we need somebody who's got the heart … the empathy to recognize what it's like to be a young teenage mom, the empathy to understand what it's like to be poor or African-American or gay or disabled or old. And that's the criteria by which I'm going to be selecting my judges."

McCain has signaled a dedication to nominating reliable conservatives, but is against naming "Activist judges." "I will look for accomplished men and women with a proven record of excellence in the law, and a proven commitment to judicial restraint. I will look for people in the cast of John Roberts, Samuel Alito, and my friend the late William Rehnquist — jurists of the highest caliber who know their own minds, and know the law, and know the difference. My nominees will understand that there are clear limits to the scope of judicial power, and clear limits to the scope of federal power."

================================

Meanwhile, in the "Keep Your Eye on the Ball" Dept.:

Voter Fraud-- it's not just a slogan."You know it's going to be a heated election when a state attorney general sues his own state agency for not cracking down on voter fraud. But that's just what's happened in Wisconsin. It's indicative of the kinds of legal challenges now being brought in hotly contested states around the country. The outcomes of those challenges will decide whose votes get counted and whose don't — and in a race as close as this one, that could make all the difference."

Folks, I'm happy to see more and more projections turning North Carolina in Obama's favor. The vaguely right-leaning RealClearPolitics has quietly flipped it over to Obama with a 0.3 point lead, but I think given Wachovia's fire sale to Citigroup last week, he may take a more sizable lead in coming weeks. Wachovia's headquarters were in Charlotte, and with 20,000 employees, they were the second largest employer in the region.

And the Quinnipiac poll numbers are up in the most delightful way in three big swing states: Ohio (50-42 Obama), Pennsylvania (54-39 Obama) and Florida (Sit down for this, 51-43 Obama). But all this only says to me that desperate parties will be working on desperate measures. It's time for vigilance.

I leave things with this head-shaking moment from PunditKitchen:

setstats34 days to the election! Reminder again that time is running out--for many states, you must register to vote well in advance of the elections. RockTheVote's list of voter registration deadlines. Here are some upcoming dates--forward this on to your friends in the appropriate states (swing states in bold):
  • THIS Saturday Oct 4: Alaska, Rhode Island, South Carolina, Washington
  • NEXT Monday, Oct 6: Arizona, Arkansas, Colorado, DC, Florida, Georgia, Hawaii, Indiana, Kentucky, Louisiana, Michigan, Mississippi, Montana, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Tennessee, Texas, Virginia.
  • NEXT Tuesday, Oct 7: Illinois, New Mexico
  • NEXT Wednesday, Oct 8: Missouri
If you're voting absentee, you may have to get your ballot in weeks before the Nov 4th Election date. Declare Yourself has links to each state's voter information page where you can find out how to get your absentee ballot.

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Tuesday, September 30, 2008

Oy Gevalt!

"He said that we had to extinguish the lights of the world, and when we would see the lights of New York go out, we would know that our job was done."
-- Ayn Rand, Atlas Shrugged

Welcome to the madhouse. setstatsAbsolute topsy-turvy chaos. Bush is irrelevant. McCain is irrelevant. Conservative Republicans are running wild like an uncontrollable flash mob. The Dow is in freefall. US lost $1.2 trillion in market value. The Nikkei plummeted 544 points on opening. House Minority Leader John Boehner blames Speaker Nancy Pelosi, for her "partisan" speech. John McCain blames Barack Obama. I'm thinking that I need to start looking for John Galt's hidden valley in Colorado. I hope it's not on a McCain property.

Oh, and McCain was all too happy to take the credit for "saving" the bailout... until the vote failed and the Dow took a death dive 777 points. "Shortly before the vote, McCain had bragged about his involvement and mocked Sen. Barack Obama for staying on the sidelines. 'I've never been afraid of stepping in to solve problems for the American people, and I'm not going to stop now," McCain told a rally in Columbus, Ohio. "Sen. Obama took a very different approach to the crisis our country faced. At first he didn't want to get involved. Then he was monitoring the situation.' McCain, grinning, flashed a sarcastic thumbs up."

Well, sadly for McCain, it seems Obama's demeanor is actually um... gaining him points...Liz Sidoti of the AP weighs in with her analysis: "Barack Obama's calmly assured response to the economic crisis and solid debate performance have bolstered the view among voters that he is ready to be chief executive, a crucial threshold he needs to cross to win the presidency.

setstats

Bedfellows, bugaboos and bailouts

As usual, the New York Times comes up with a terrific graphic that pretty much gives you all you need to know about who voted "no" and where they come from. Scroll down to the recall, and note where the "no" voters' districts are, and then compare to this subprime meltdown and foreclosures map. I don't see as much correlation to "swing states" as others do. I think it's more a matter of how the bailout would play with your nearly-homeless constituency. On the hand, those voters don't have permanent addresses now and can be challenged at the polls, so who cares what they think?

In the accompanying article they say ominously, "
The collapse of the proposed rescue plan for the teetering financial system was the product of a larger failure — of political leadership in Washington — at a moment when the world was looking to the United States to contain the cascading economic crisis." Great. The whole world was waiting for us and we screwed it up AGAIN.

So of course, like everyone else, I've been wondering about the behind-the-scenes dealing. Andrea Mitchell reports that Newt Gingrich may have been up to his old shenanigans (and Mike Barnicle hints perhaps "Turned-Him-into-a-Newt" is thinking about a 2012 Presidential campaign...?) but can we believe Andrea? I mean, she's obviously "in the tank" for Alan Greenspan...oo-oof. I still think that matchup is so weird. Even Ayn Rand called Greenspan "The Undertaker."

Man, I am so confused about this bailout bill. I'm American. Ordinarily, I don't pay attention to actual details with more than .05% of my brain. Usually, I can use the "Oh, I love/hate that movie critic" method. You know, "Mick LaSalle loves that movie, so I know I'm going to hate it..." So, call me knee-jerk, but that's how I generally grok political positions too: Bush is "ag'in" it? I'm for it. Newt Gingrich is for it? I'm against it. But this whole financial bailout issue has blown my logic circuits. Here's a sampling of what I've gathered so far about this bailout proposal:

For it:
George Bush
American Banking Association
Barney Frank (Rep D-MA)
Chris Dodd (D-CT)
Paul Krugman
John McCain (Sen R-AZ)
Barack Obama (Sen D-IL)

Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson

Nancy Pelosi (Speaker of the House D-CA)
Newt Gingrich

Against it:
Labor Unions
Conservative, free-market Club for Growth
Ultra-progressive grassroots MoveOn.org
Dennis Kucinich (Rep D-OH)
Sheila Jackson Lee (Rep D-TX)
John Boehner (House Republican leader R-OH)
Rush Limbaugh
Michael Moore
Newt Gingrich
I am so confused.
==============================
Where is this bill? Where's the text? [heavy sighing and eyerolling.] Aw dang. I'm going to have to actually read the thing, aren't I? Where are the Cliff Notes?

From Reuters, a summary of financial rescue legislation that circulated among lawmakers on Sunday:

SUMMARY OF THE "EMERGENCY ECONOMIC STABILIZATION ACT OF 2008"

  1. Stabilizing the Economy: The Emergency Economic Stabilization Act of 2008 (EESA) provides up to $700 billion to the Secretary of the Treasury to buy mortgages and other assets that are clogging the balance sheets of financial institutions and making it difficult for working families, small businesses, and other companies to access credit, which is vital to a strong and stable economy. EESA also establishes a program that would allow companies to insure their troubled assets.
  2. Homeownership Preservation: EESA requires the Treasury to modify troubled loans - many the result of predatory lending practices - wherever possible to help American families keep their homes. It also directs other federal agencies to modify loans that they own or control. Finally, it improves the HOPE for Homeowners program by expanding eligibility and increasing the tools available to the Department of Housing and Urban Development to help more families keep their homes.
  3. Taxpayer Protection: Taxpayers should not be expected to pay for Wall Street's mistakes. The legislation requires companies that sell some of their bad assets to the government to provide warrants so that taxpayers will benefit from any future growth these companies may experience as a result of participation in this program. The legislation also requires the President to submit legislation that would cover any losses to taxpayers resulting from this program by charging a small, broad-based fee on all financial institutions.
  4. No Windfalls for Executives: Executives who made bad decisions should not be allowed to dump their bad assets on the government, and then walk away with millions of dollars in bonuses. In order to participate in this program, companies will lose certain tax benefits and, in some cases, must limit executive pay. In addition, the bill limits "golden parachutes" and requires that unearned bonuses be returned.
  5. Strong Oversight: Rather than giving the Treasury all the funds at once, the legislation gives the Treasury $250 billion immediately, then requires the President to certify that additional funds are needed ($100 billion, then $350 billion subject to Congressional disapproval). The Treasury must report on the use of the funds and the progress in addressing the crisis. EESA also establishes an Oversight Board so that the Treasury cannot act in an arbitrary manner. It also establishes a special inspector general to protect against waste, fraud and abuse.

Okay, I'm with you so far. What are the objections? 200 economists signed a letter outlining the following problems with the bailout bill:
  • 1) Its fairness. The plan is a subsidy to investors at taxpayers' expense. Investors who took risks to earn profits must also bear the losses. Not every business failure carries systemic risk. The government can ensure a well-functioning financial industry, able to make new loans to creditworthy borrowers, without bailing out particular investors and institutions whose choices proved unwise
  • 2) Its ambiguity. Neither the mission of the new agency nor its oversight are clear. If taxpayers are to buy illiquid and opaque assets from troubled sellers, the terms, occasions, and methods of such purchases must be crystal clear ahead of time and carefully monitored afterwards.
  • 3) Its long-term effects. If the plan is enacted, its effects will be with us for a generation. For all their recent troubles, America's dynamic and innovative private capital markets have brought the nation unparalleled prosperity. Fundamentally weakening those markets in order to calm short-run disruptions is desperately short-sighted.
Other objections to the bill:
  • No enforcement provisions for the oversight group that would monitor Wall Street's spending of the $700 billion
  • No penalties, fines or imprisonment for any executive who might steal any of the people's money. No salary caps for executives of firms that take taxpayer money
  • Not enough protections for homeowners in this bill--it would not force banks and lenders to rewrite people's mortgages to avoid foreclosures
  • Ambiguous language, using words like "suggested" when referring to the government being paid back for the bailout. Vague language around taxpayers getting equity; my guess is that many firms would get taxpayer money without giving up equity.
  • Automatic additional funding unless blocked by a supermajority. If this is a bipartisan solution, why not require affirmative Congressional action for additional funds?
===============================

Frankly, I'm exhausted. It's a good thing it's Rosh Hashanah. I need the time just to catch my breath! I'm also really tired of sorting through the lingo and the numbers and trying to wrap my brain around the whole enormity of the concept. So I have some proposals of my own.

Mary Ellen's Emergency Financial Language and Concept Stabilization Act

setstats
Section 1. ORDER OF MAGNITUDE CLARIFICATION: We shall no longer refer to 1,000,000,000 dollars as $1 billion. This word has been so casually tossed around that I believe the concept of a "billion" has become conflated with a "million" in many peoples' minds. Going forward, "billions" shall be called "thousand millions," so that we are all clear that a "billion" is a MUCH MUCH larger number than a "million."

Section 2. MEANINGLESS NAMES MAY NO LONGER BE BESTOWED UPON RIDICULOUS CONCEPTS: For example, "Credit Default Swaps", "Collateralized Debt Obligations." If the "thingie of value" that you are talking about is not actual paper money or coins, but is instead theoretical, then you must name it using words that I can understand. Conceptual thingies of value will now be termed "Woo-Woo Money."

Section 3. DON'T RUSH ME: If I need time and further explanation to fully understand what's going on, Congress, the Preident and any elected officials shall take HOWEVER MUCH TIME IT REQUIRES to explain it until I understand. All night if need be. And into Rosh Hashanah.

Some of the many cool interactive graphics I found at Portfolio.com on my way through this rant:

============================

And now it's time for my daily "Sarah Palin Salute to Schadenfreude"

setstatsKatie Couric's ratings at CBS MUST be going up. This time, she gets Palin AND McCain -- and it's EVEN WORSE. McCain says, "But, look, I understand this day and age of "gotcha" journalism. Is that a pizza place?" A pizza place. See? He shows that he understands "gotcha" journalism by giving us a "gotcha" moment. I take it that they're going to keep going on Katie's show until Sarah correctly connects a subject with its appropriate predicate. Or at least until she can connect any subject and predicate, forget about the right ones.

So, apparently, Katie Couric has even more footage of Palin and she's holding out! Politico reports: "
Of concern to McCain's campaign, however, is a remaining and still-undisclosed clip from Palin's interview with Couric last week that has the political world buzzing. The Palin aide, after first noting how "infuriating" it was for CBS to purportedly leak word about the gaffe, revealed that it came in response to a question about Supreme Court decisions. After noting Roe vs. Wade, Palin was apparently unable to discuss any major court cases. There was no verbal fumbling with this particular question as there was with some others, the aide said, but rather silence." Oh COME ON! Free Sarah Palin!

setstatsAnd while you're thinking about how TOTALLY READY Sarah Palin is to be a heartbeat away from the presidency, consider Paul Krugman's 3 A.M. phone call scenario. "It's 3 a.m., a few months into 2009, and the phone in the White House rings. Several big hedge funds are about to fail, says the voice on the line, and there's likely to be chaos when the market opens. Whom do you trust to take that call?" Well, apparently you can't even trust Sarah Palin to order a cheesesteak.

Ruth Marcus at WaPo thinks maybe McCain should debate Palin. "McCain's fundamental argument in pursuit of the presidency is that he has the background to do the job. He made this point again and again Friday night. 'I've been involved, as I mentioned to you before, in virtually every major national security challenge we've faced in the last 20-some years. There are some advantages to experience, and knowledge, and judgment.'...And so therefore I picked a running mate who didn't have a passport two years ago? Asked about that by Katie Couric, Palin explained that 'I'm not one of those who maybe come from a background of, you know, kids who perhaps graduated college and their parents get them a passport and a backpack and say, "Go off and travel the world.'"' "

And now, a Sarah Palin Vote of No-Confidence Lightning Round (I am, indeed, including that Sleestack Ticket photo gratuitously, just to give Eric another laugh):
  • David Frum, conservative columnist: "I think she has pretty thoroughly — and probably irretrievably — proven that she is not up to the job of being president of the United States...Dan Quayle never in his life has performed as badly as Sarah Palin in the last month."
  • Jim Greer, the Republican chairman in Florida: "I think the Katie Couric interview shows that she needs to be briefed more on certain aspects."
  • Ron Carey, chairman of Minnesota's Republican Party: "Thanks to the mainstream media, quite a low expectation has been created for her performance."
  • Mike Murphy, former McCain adviser: "She has the opportunity to undo some of the damage with a very strong debate performance," he said. "That's plausible. We'll just have to wait and see."
  • Rick Wilson, a Republican consultant: "I think they ought to toss her into the deep end from the outset; let her get it over quickly. Everything else after that is, you've seen the elephant."

setstatsRebecca Traister at Salon and I agree: "I guess I'm one cold dame, because while Palin provokes many unpleasant emotions in me, I just can't seem to summon pity, affection or remorse...When you don't take your own career and reputation seriously enough to pause before striding onto a national stage and lying about your record of opposing a Bridge to Nowhere or using your special-needs child to garner the support of Americans in need of healthcare reform you don't support, I don't feel bad for you. When you don't have enough regard for your country or its politics to cram effectively for the test -- a test that helps determine whether or not you get to run that country and participate in its politics -- I don't feel bad for you....I don't want to be played by the girl-strings anymore. Shaking our heads and wringing our hands in sympathy with Sarah Palin is a disservice to every woman who has ever been unfairly dismissed based on her gender, because this is an utterly fair dismissal, based on an utter lack of ability and readiness. It's a disservice to minority populations of every stripe whose place in the political spectrum has been unfairly spotlighted as mere tokenism; it is a disservice to women throughout this country who have gone from watching a woman who -- love her or hate her -- was able to show us what female leadership could look like to squirming in front of their televisions as they watch the woman sent to replace her struggle to string a complete sentence together."

============================================

Please, God, have we turned a corner on this thing? Milena also sends this bit of happier news from the LA Times. THIS is what I wanted to hear: "Though more voters still see McCain as more knowledgeable, Obama was seen as more "presidential" by 46% of debate-watchers, compared with 33% for the Arizona senator. The difference is even more pronounced among debate-watchers who were not firmly committed to a candidate: 44% said they believed Obama looked more presidential, whereas 16% gave McCain the advantage. The Republican candidate also has lost ground on several measures of voter confidence, including trust. After the debate, 43% of registered voters who saw the event said Obama had more "honesty and integrity," compared with 34% for McCain. A week ago, the same voters were evenly divided, with each candidate winning the trust of 40% of respondents."

35 days to the election! Reminder again that time is running out--for many states, you must register to vote well in advance of the elections. RockTheVote's list of voter registration deadlines. Here are some upcoming dates--forward this on to your friends in the appropriate states (swing states in bold):

  • THIS Saturday Oct 4: Alaska, Rhode Island, South Carolina, Washington
  • NEXT Monday, Oct 6: Arizona, Arkansas, Colorado, DC, Florida, Georgia, Hawaii, Indiana, Kentucky, Louisiana, Michigan, Mississippi, Montana, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Tennessee, Texas, Virginia.
  • NEXT Tuesday, Oct 7: Illinois, New Mexico
  • NEXT Wednesday, Oct 8: Missouri
If you're voting absentee, you may have to get your ballot in weeks before the Nov 4th Election date. Declare Yourself has links to each state's voter information page where you can find out how to get your absentee ballot.

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Saturday, September 27, 2008

Debatable

'It's a poor sort of memory that only works backwards.'
--The White Queen, Through The Looking Glass


setstatsPity poor Jim Lehrer. He had been promised a debate and the McCain camp kept that up in the air until this morning. He'd been promised a particular format--candidates fighting each other with him watching-- and they kept throwing their punches through Jim.

First off, in case you didn't see it or your DVR was "on the McCain"--I mean "on the fritz"-- Mississippi Presidential Debate transcript and video in that cool interactive feature on the New York Times.
Nielsen estimates 57 million viewers took in the event.

In case you're interested, Obama's campaign liveblogged factchecks throughout the debate, but more fun is Think Progress' liveblog of the debate, which includes a few fabulous "Let's go to the videotape" YouTube links. McCain's camp reportedly did send out email "factchecks" throughout the night, though I didn't receive any. Hmmm, I wonder if they know that I'm secretly a liberal...

Yeah, alright. You got me--I'm in the tank for Obama. But if you want my personal take, 36+ hours later my impression of the debate is of a nice calm, cool guy debating an angry, old grouch. If I actually worked for McCain [shudder], I'd tell him to lay off the aggressive tactics and try to look more like a kindly, wise grandpa. Throughout the debate, his stand-offish body language and stiff posture all suggest defensiveness to me. But as I don't work for him, don't tell him. Frivolous video for today: McCain's song and dance.

The upshot from Politico (with additions from Arianna Huffington and moi):

setstats

Number of times Sen. McCain referred to Sen. Obama as "Barack": zero
Number of times Sen. Obama referred to Sen. McCain as "John": 23

McCain zingers: "Sen. Obama has the most liberal voting record in the United States Senate. It's hard to reach across the aisle from that far to the left. … I'm not going to set the White House visitors schedule before I'm president of the United States. I don't even have a seal yet."
Arianna adds: "For McCain, it was his line about Putin ("I looked into his eyes and saw three letters: KGB), and his mocking line about sitting down with Ahmadinejad."

Obama zingers: "Coming from you, who, you know, in the past has threatened extinction for North Korea and, you know, sung songs about bombing Iran, I don't know, you know, how credible that is. … I've got a bracelet, too, from Sergeant — from the mother of Sergeant Ryan David Jopek, given to me in Green Bay. … John mentioned me being wildly liberal — mostly that's just me opposing George Bush's policies." "John, you like to pretend the war began in 2007."
Arianna: "For Obama, it was his run on Iraq, his "muddle through" riff ("you don't muddle through Osama... you don't muddle through the Taliban"), and his reminder of McCain's gaffe about not meeting with the prime minister of Spain."

Best Obama sound bite: "You said we knew where the weapons of mass destruction were. You were wrong. You said that we were going to be greeted as liberators. You were wrong. You said that there was no history of violence between Shiite and Sunni. And you were wrong."

Best McCain sound bite: "We've seen this stubbornness before in this administration — [for Obama] to cling to a belief that somehow the surge has not succeeded, and failing to acknowledge that he was wrong about the surge is — shows to me that we … need more flexibility in a president of the United States than that."

Arianna adds: Did John McCain really try to reclaim the high ground on torture after having caved on the issue earlier in the year? And did he really profess his love for veterans after having fought against the new GI Bill?
ME adds: Did Mr. "I Don't-Need-Any-On-The-Job-Training" McCain actually call Pakistan's president Kadari? Um, his name is Zardari. And I guess he should have practiced saying Ahmadinejad more. Even Sarah Palin managed it better. (A waggish commentator notes that McCain could just practice by saying "I may need a job.")

setstats

Declared Obama the winner (ME's editorial details in parentheses): ABC's George Stephanopoulos, pollster Frank Luntz on Fox, Slate's John Dickerson, Time magazine's Mark Halperin (Obama A-, McCain B-), pollster and Clinton adviser Dick Morris, CBS News instant poll (40% Obama - 22% McCain - 38% tie) and CNN post-debate poll (51% Obama-38% McCain). Also, Independents in the MediaCurves focus group "gave the debate to Obama 61-39. They also think he won every individual segment." More poll results.
Arianna gives style points to Obama, "who came across as relaxed and gracious (too gracious; enough with the repeated claims that "John is right"). McCain looked like he forgot to take his Metamucil."

Declared McCain the winner: Politico's Roger Simon: "The Mac is back", Fortune magazine's Nina Easton, The Weekly Standard's William Kristol and Fred Barnes, Fox News Texting Poll and Drudge online poll.

Tie: Republican strategist Mike Murphy, who said on MSNBC: "No game-changer, and we're going to have a rematch."

Huffpo rounds up some more post-debate commentary from editorial boards. And an observation from ThinkProgress: "ABC's Charlie Gibson and PBS's David Brooks and Mark Shields note that McCain never looked at Obama during the debate."

============================

Palinista Update

setstats

By the way, we saw an awful lot of Joe Biden after the debate, commenting on how Barack Obama did. Where was Governor Palin weighing in with her commentary on her running mate's performance ? Oh yeah, they can't let her out without a teleprompter. The National Review's blog "The Stump" quotes Wolf Blitzer on CNN: "We've been getting some emails from viewers out there wondering why we spent some time interviewing Joe Biden, the Democratic vice presidential nominee and not Sarah Palin, the Republican vice presidential nominee. We would have loved to interview--we'd still love to interview Sarah Palin. Unfortunately we asked, we didn't get that interview...We're hoping that Sarah Palin will join us at some point down the road."

setstatsMaybe she was working on a "do-over" of her interview with Katie Couric. Tina Fey strikes again with another pitch perfect "Sarah Palin" in an interview with Katie Couric. The wacky thing is that she's not really parodying Sarah Palin, she's just quoting her. "Like every American I'm speaking with, we're ill about this. We're saying, 'Hey, why bail out Fanny and Freddie and not me?' But ultimately what the bailout does is, help those that are concerned about the healthcare reform that is needed to help shore up our economy to help...uh...it's gotta be all about job creation, too. Also, too, shoring up our economy and putting Fannie and Freddy back on the right track and so healthcare reform and reducing taxes and reigning in spending...'cause Barack Obama, y'know...has got to accompany tax reductions and tax relief for Americans, also, having a dollar value meal at restaurants. That's gonna help. But one in five jobs being created today under the umbrella of job creation. That, you know...Also."

Even the National Review's Kathleen Parker, once "in the tank" (What the heck does that mean anyhow??) for Sarah Palin, now says, "As we've seen and heard more from John McCain's running mate, it is increasingly clear that Palin is a problem. Quick study or not, she doesn't know enough about economics and foreign policy to make Americans comfortable with a President Palin should conditions warrant her promotion."

Oh, and in case you're not outraged enough about Palin's utter insensitivity as a human being, note that while Palin was mayor in Wasilla, the town began charging rape victims for the costs of their own rape kits. Classy, real classy.

1-800-CASH4JUNK

Well, looks like we're buying it, folks. Details are in the NY TImes article, but I somehow keep missing this piece of info: which companies exactly are we buying junk from? Just anybody who applies?

To the right, a humorous juxtaposition of articles that I noticed this morning on
Politico.

The New York Times has an interesting assessment of the real reasons why AIG (too big to fail) got a government bailout deal when Lehman (Let the market decide) got the "Go Fish!": "As the group, led by Treasury Secretary Henry M. Paulson Jr., pondered the collapse of one of America's oldest investment banks, Lehman Brothers, a more dangerous threat emerged: American International Group, the world's largest insurer, was teetering. A.I.G. needed billions of dollars to right itself and had suddenly begged for help.The only Wall Street chief executive participating in the meeting was Lloyd C. Blankfein of Goldman Sachs, Mr. Paulson's former firm. Mr. Blankfein had particular reason for concern. Although it was not widely known, Goldman, a Wall Street stalwart that had seemed immune to its rivals' woes, was A.I.G.'s largest trading partner, according to six people close to the insurer who requested anonymity because of confidentiality agreements. A collapse of the insurer threatened to leave a hole of as much as $20 billion in Goldman's side, several of these people said."

He Came, He Saw, He Screwed it Up

setstats"The Republican source, with direct knowledge of the negotiations, said that GOPers and McCain were 'scared about the press perception' that they were at fault for 'blowing the thing up.' The takeover of Washington Mutual on Thursday combined with the continued downturn in the futures and credit markets "also scared them," to the point that a bailout deal seemed within the realm of possibility 'over the weekend.'"

setstatsAnd although you might expect that (with the "right" bailout plan being so all-fire important and all) that after the debate was done, John McCain would race to Nancy Pelosi's office to be there in person, all night, at the negotiating table in Washington. After the debate, he was on the Hill Saturday for about 90 minutes according to the Washington Post (who also deliciously describes "chaos" in the McCain camp during pre-debate preparations): "McCain did not go to Capitol Hill, preferring to make calls from his headquarters. 'He can effectively do what he needs to do by phone,' [McCain adviser Mark] Salter said. 'He's calling members on both sides, talking to people in the administration, helping out as he can.'" Oh. He can do it "by phone," can he? You don't say.

Maybe after dinner? Politico reports that Saturday night, McCain was at the very chic DC restaurant CityZen. Check out their $110 tasting menu. I guess, since his "services are no longer required after he um, achieved bipartisanship last Thursday, he can settle into a nice "Sweet Onion Chiboust with a Sarawak Pepper Sable and English Thyme Broth...." (Maybe I should check it out if I can ever afford fine-dining again...) Hey, John, "arugula-eating" is cheaper.

So what do people think about McNuts' Mc-neuvering last week? Even conservatives are saying: Whuh-HUH? "It just proves his campaign is governed by tactics and not ideology," said Republican consultant Craig Shirley, who advised McCain earlier in this cycle.

Hmmm...Instant poll: is it better to govern with:
a) Tactics
b) ideology
c) NONE OF THE ABOVE
US News and World Report's John Farrell assesses Obama's handling of the "Political Circus comes to town" as Presidential, whereas..."Given the Republican nominee's untethered (there's that word again) performance in the last three weeks, during which he has swung wildly from Oblivious to Panicky by way of Blurt and Bluster, McCain's performance comes as no surprise."

The Post is no more sympathetic: "John McCain's sudden intervention in Washington's deliberations over the Wall Street bailout could not have been more out of sync with what was actually happening...McCain's boisterous intervention -- and particularly his grandstanding on the debate -- was less a presidential act than the tactical ploy of a man worried that his chances of becoming president might be slipping away."

Of course, there's always the nutcase. Steve Huntley says in the Chicago Sun-Times: "What we are talking about here is leadership in a time of crisis...Be it campaign finance regulation, immigration reform or climate change, he has never hesitated to take a leadership position on an issue he sees as critical to the country..." Hmmm, who is Huntley? I seem to remember that name... Oh yeah, he was Robert Novak's editor, the one who let Novak publish the column that leaked Valerie Plame's identity. Oh. Him.

And what is with McCain's constant lies? Is it self-delusion? Jonathan Chait at the New Republic has some interesting perspectives: "McCain has contempt for anybody who stands between him and the presidency. McCain views himself as the ultimate patriot. He loves his country so much that he cannot let it fall into the hands of an unworthy rival. (They all turn out to be unworthy.) Viewed in this way, doing whatever it takes to win is not an act of selfishness but an act of patriotism."

setstatsFrom the NY Times this morning, hints of NEW! FRESH! headaches for the McCain campaign: "Mr. McCain portrays himself as a Washington maverick unswayed by special interests, referring recently to lobbyists as "birds of prey." Yet in his current campaign, more than 40 fund-raisers and top advisers have lobbied or worked for an array of gambling interests — including tribal and Las Vegas casinos, lottery companies and online poker purveyors." The Times also has a graphic with a dizzying array of McCain connections to the gambling lobby.

===================

Stupid Human Tricks

setstatsAnd in a good old classic run on the bank, WaMu customers went in this morning to demand their $10 back. Following the largest US bank failure in history. JP Morgan Chase acquired WaMu after the bank was seized Thursday night, and all operations continued as normal on Friday morning, even though depositors pulled $17 billion from the bank. (I don't know why those instant stock quotes embedded in text of the above article bother me so much. Makes me a little panicky frankly.)

Thanks to Betty for tracking the Dealbook blog's moment-to-moment coverage: Do you have money in Wachovia-- which may be "Citi-chovia Traveling Group" by the time I get done typing this sentence? A scorecard in case you've lost track of who lost what and who bought what in the last, oh, week and a half.

By the way, David Lazarus in the LA Times notes that : "As our friends in the financial sector were passing the hat among taxpayers last week for $700 billion in bailouts to cover their crappy mortgage investments, they were simultaneously condemning the House of Representatives' passage of a "Credit Cardholders' Bill of Rights," which aims to crack down on some of the industry's more troublesome practices."

A look at the Argentinian Financial Crisis in the early 2000's. Hmmm. Hints of what's ahead?

German police arrested suspected terrorists on a KLM flight: "German police raided a plane in Cologne just before it was taking off Friday and arrested two ethnic Somalis, saying they found a suicide note that claimed the men wanted to fight a holy war and die in a terror attack." Have a good flight.

setstatsCBS execs were reportedly upset that Dave Letterman patched into internal video feeds to show John McCain getting a makeup job while chatting with Katie Couric when he was supposed to be on Dave's show. Who cares? It was great TV.
Day 2: Dave still on McCain about ditching him. "McCain spokeswoman Nicole Wallace said Thursday that the campaign 'felt this wasn't a night for comedy...We deeply regret offending Mr. Letterman, but our candidate's priority at this moment is to focus on this crisis,' Wallace said on NBC's 'Today' show."

And in case you didn't see it, watch a pretty savvy Chris Rock on Larry King. (Part 1, Part 2, Part 3) "The choice isn't Republican or Democrat. The choice is you got a guy that's worth $150 million with 12 houses against a guy who's worth a million dollars with one house.The guy with one house really cares about losing a house, because he is homeless. The other guy can lose five houses and still got a bunch of houses. Does this make any sense? Am I the only one that sees this?" I must ask again, why is it that the comedians are the ones with the clear-eyed view of what's really going on in the political process?

On the Road again

setstatsThe campaign marches on. Obama and Biden stood in the pouring rain to talk with 26,000 Virginians.

Gallup Daily had Obama up three points Saturday. and by this morning, he was up by EIGHT points. I know it's meaningless, but it make me feel better. The Electoral Vote shift has been more pronounced though. Enjoy the trending...

37 days to the election! Reminder again that time is running out--for many states, you must register to vote well in advance of the elections. RockTheVote's list of voter registration deadlines. And if you're voting absentee, you may have to get your ballot in weeks before the Nov 4th Election date. Declare Yourself has links to each state's voter information page where you can find out how to get your absentee ballot. Get those friends of yours in Colorado, New Mexico, Pennsylvania, Ohio, Virginia, New Hampshire (WTF?), Wisconsin, Michigan, Indiana, Minnesota, Missouri, North Carolina and Florida (YES! FLORIDA!) to get out there and vote!

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Friday, September 26, 2008

Suspended Animation

"A population weakened and exhausted by battling against so many obstacles -- whose needs are never satisfied and desires never fulfilled -- is vulnerable to manipulation and regimentation. The struggle for survival is, above all, an exercise that is hugely time-consuming, absorbing and debilitating. If you create these ''anti-conditions,'' your rule is guaranteed for a hundred years."

"Do not be misled by the fact that you are at liberty and relatively free; that for the moment you are not under lock and key: you have simply been granted a reprieve."
--Ryszard Kapuscinski

Hi, my bank was seized last night. Wow! I'm like, part of history--part of the biggest saving and loan failure of all time! Good thing I had like, what $10 in savings? D'ya think that's covered by the FDIC? Or do I have to call Mr. JP Morgan Chase? Aw, crud, am I going to have to set up a whole new Online Banking ID and password? Maybe we shouldn't care. I can make my own bread and my own butter. Eric can make his own beer. We know a guy with chickens and sheep. Maybe we can just go off the grid and trade in wampum and feathers for our needs. Note to self: Look for bead necklace and earrings....

More of Katie interviewing Sarah Palin. I know six-year olds who could string together more coherent explanations. This is painful, people, PAINFUL, I tell you...hurts...eyes...to...watch...

COURIC: You've cited Alaska's proximity to Russia as part of your foreign policy experience. What did you mean by that?

PALIN: That Alaska has a very narrow maritime border between a foreign country, Russia, and on our other side, the land-- boundary that we have with-- Canada. It-- it's funny that a comment like that was-- kind of made to-- cari-- I don't know, you know? Reporters--

COURIC: Mock?

PALIN: Yeah, mocked, I guess that's the word, yeah.

COURIC: Explain to me why that enhances your foreign policy credentials.

PALIN: Well, it certainly does because our-- our next door neighbors are foreign countries. They're in the state that I am the executive of. And there in Russia--

COURIC: Have you ever been involved with any negotiations, for example, with the Russians?

PALIN: We have trade missions back and forth. We-- we do-- it's very important when you consider even national security issues with Russia as Putin rears his head and comes into the air space of the United States of America, where-- where do they go? It's Alaska. It's just right over the border. It is-- from Alaska that we send those out to make sure that an eye is being kept on this very powerful nation, Russia, because they are right there. They are right next to-- to our state.

Umm, Governor Palin? Pardon me? I'm...I'm not a rich woman, Lord knows. And I'm not you're biggest fan, shall we say. But in the name of mercy and sweetness and light, I would like to BUY you a CLUE. Seriously. Because watching you presenting yourself in this thoroughly moronic and cringe-inducing manner is giving me high blood pressure.

Here's the special irony of this situation. Apparently-- and I just learned all this today-- Alaska's governors DO often enjoy more contact with Russian officials because Anchorage is the base for the Northern Forum, an organization representing leaders and sub-leadership from countries around the Arctic Circle including Russia, Finland, Iceland and Canada, Japan, China and South Korea.

The Seattle Times reports: "Yet under Palin, the state government — without consultation — reduced its annual financial support to the Northern Forum to $15,000 from $75,000, according to Priscilla Wohl, the group's executive director. That forced the forum's Anchorage office to go without pay for two months. Palin — unlike the previous administrations of Gov. Frank Murkowski and Gov. Tony Knowles — also stopped sending representatives to Northern Forum's annual meetings, including one last year for regional governors held in the heart of Russia's oil territory." Great. Twenty years of glasnost down the drain. Plus, she doesn't even have the brains to mention that this organization exists when the Russia question comes up.

Baby steps. Baby steps. Today Palin worked her way up to answering FOUR whole questions from the press.


Meanwhile, her cohort, old Johnny-Come-Lately raced back to Washington so he could ruin BOTH Democrats' and fellow Republicans' work. "Sen. Chris Dodd, after leaving the White House, suggested on CNN that the tenuous process could be derailed by what he viewed as McCain's political motives. "What happened here, basically, if you want an honest appraisal of the thing, we have been spending a lot of time and I am tired. I have spent almost seven straight days at this in trying to come out with a workout plan for our economy a rescue plan," said Dodd. "What this looked like to me was a rescue plan for John McCain for two hours and took us away from the work we are trying to do today. Serious people trying to do serious work to come up with an answer."



After the meeting at the White House, Barack Obama had this to say: "what we shouldn't do is to try to get everything done in this package. What we should be doing is following the clear principles, that taxpayers are protected, that we have oversight, that taxpayers are going to get their money back, and that the housing crisis is going to be dealt with as well." Wow. He doesn't sound like he's...insane.

Republicans are running wild: "One GOP lawmaker, referring to his defiant colleagues, asked rhetorically: 'For the sake of the altar of the free market system, do you accept a Great Depression?' But if the party was looking for leadership, it did not find it in its presidential nominee. 'Bush is no diplomat,' said a Democratic staffer, 'but he's Cardinal freaking Richelieu compared to McCain. McCain couldn't negotiate an agreement on dinner among a family of four without making a big drama with himself at the heroic center of it. And then they'd all just leave to make themselves a sandwich.' Feel the love? Remind me again why ANYONE is listening to Mr. Keating Five? Anyway, what I'm taking away from this is: McCain RE-E-EALLY doesn't want to do this debate, does he?

By the way, a correction from yesterday. I noticed that I referred to Chris Dodd as a Republican. He is of course, the Democrat from Connecticut and Chair of the Senate Banking Committee.

Oh, and note to John "I'm such a Big Deal" McCain? Letterman is not done with you yet. On Thursday night, Dave said he felt like a "patriot" to let McCain off his commitment to deal with the economy and "now I'm feeling like an ugly date...That's what I feel like, I feel like an ugly date," he said. "I feel used. I feel cheap. I feel sullied."

Over on Leno, Wanda Sykes goes OFF on Sarah Palin. "They say, 'Oh, she's meeting with the world leaders.' But there's no reporters. I'm like, is she meeting with the world leaders, or did you take her to the Epcot Center? Let her drink around the world? You know, because I've done that. Maybe I should be Secretary of State..."

Campbell Brown, I Love You: In an open rant, she says to Paulson, "Seriously, what were you thinking?"

More Multimedia Alerts: This season's Fahrenheit 9/11? Oliver Stone's W., Based on a True Story will open on October 17. Here's the official site with a trailer. Frankly, I think I'm still too close to all of this, because while intellectually I recognize that it's funny, I'm still crying. No, no, it's okay, I'll be alright. I'll be better when Obama wins in November. It won't hurt so much next January when I see Obama's right hand in the air taking the oath of office. And when he finally sits down in that Oval Office (after it's fumigated, of course), I might be able to watch the trailer without tears of impotent rage streaming down my nose.

Betty pointed me at this excellent analysis of the overarching "story board" for this election from Michael Cohen: "After back-to-back election cycles in which Democratic nominees seemed unable to maintain a compelling narrative for their campaign, Mr. Obama has shown a level of message discipline that is striking."

As I said to Betty, it's struck me that the Republicans, who are usually so GOOD at this narrative stuff, just couldn't hit pay dirt this time. Whereas the narrative Obama chose to frame McCain ("Sure, Gramps is a nice guy and all, but...you know...a little [twirls finger in air] whoo-hoo....") has fit perfectly at every turn and with every looney-bin maneuver McCain has thrown out there.

$700 Billion-ish
This lovely little jaw-dropper comes from Forbes: "In fact, some of the most basic details, including the $700 billion figure Treasury would use to buy up bad debt, are fuzzy. 'It's not based on any particular data point,' a Treasury spokeswoman told Forbes.com Tuesday. 'We just wanted to choose a really large number.'" Really? REALLY? For the Love of God, IS THERE NO ONE COMPETENT LEFT AROUND HERE?

Krugman weighs in on the Paulson plan and the alternative that McCain basically blew up: "So the grown-up thing is to do something to rescue the financial system. The big question is, are there any grown-ups around — and will they be able to take charge?"

I'm trying to hold onto my Temple of Positivity and ignore the Gallup Daily Tracking poll that puts McNuts and Obama at a tie. I get it. It's a four-day average and some of Obama's best days have "rolled" off the average. It still irks me.

The Lobster Quadrille
Debate prep continues for Friday at 6pm PDT, 8pm Miss. time, 9pm EDT. Last word was that Obama says he'll be there on Friday, and if McCain is a no-show, he'll do a one-on-one with Lehrer or make it into a town-hall.
See how eagerly the lobsters and the turtles all advance!
They are waiting on the shingle—will you come and join the dance?
Will you, won't you, will you, won't you, will you join the dance?
Will you, won't you, will you, won't you, won't you join the dance?

"Of course," the Mock Turtle said: "advance twice, set to partners—"

"—change lobsters, and retire in same order," continued the Gryphon.

"Then, you know," the Mock Turtle went on, "you throw the—"

"The lobsters!" shouted the Gryphon, with a bound into the air.

"—as far out to sea as you can—"

"Swim after them!" screamed the Gryphon.

"Turn a somersault in the sea!" cried the Mock Turtle, capering wildly about.

"Change lobsters again!" yelled the Gryphon at the top of its voice.

Will you join the dance?

(UPDATE: LobsterFace is in.) Like you thought he wouldn't show up for free TV time.

39 days to the election. Reminder again that, for many states, if you would like to join the dance, you must register well in advance of the elections. RockTheVote's list of voter registration deadlines. And if you're voting absentee, Declare Yourself has links to each state's voter information page where you can find out how to get your absentee ballot. Feel free to harass your friends in the swing states, and do let me know if you know someone who'd like to be appended to, not suspended from, my ranting list!

Okay. Gotta go get my $10.

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Thursday, September 25, 2008

What the F**K Edition

Main portion of the post



Rest of post here.


Flabbergasted. Really. FLABBER. GASTED. I am. I had to spend some time drinking wine and reading some calming poll numbers to keep my brain from spinning in all directions.

Helene came into class today and said, "Hey, did you know John McCain wants to cancel the debate on Friday?" Whuh-HUH??

setstatsBut wait! There's more! He also wants to suspend his campaign so he can work on the $700 billion bailout plan.

But wait! There's more! He hasn't even read the plan yet-- and it's only three pages long. (Fer the love of Mike! I've read it -- didn't understand it, but I've READ it.)

But wait! There's more! Senate members are confused because THEY'VE ALREADY WORKED OUT THE PLAN. (Barney Frank says that McCain, a U.S. senator from Arizona who has spent much of the year away from the Capitol campaigning, could end up slowing down work on the bill. The Massachusetts Democrat noted that a meeting on Capitol Hill on Thursday will be interrupted for a "photo op" at the White House with congressional Democrats and Republicans as well as Bush.")

But wait! There's more! He also want to suspends the VP Debate too. Ohhhhhhh... I get it now...

CLEARLY, he is doing his level best to LOSE THIS ELECTION, and the 46% of you people who insist on supporting him through thick and thin--you're MESSING UP his plan!!! (Okay, maybe it's only 43% of you.)

setstatsAnd when you've gotten up off the floor, there are people trying to make the argument that this was somehow "brilliant strategy" on the part of McCain. Seriously. Only if McCain's brilliant strategy was to start another Twitter Meme (Yep, here's my contribution...)

So. Cancel the debate Friday? Whaddya think? Obama says, Uh... Let me think...No. "There are times for politics and there are times to rise above politics and do what's right." But he said he saw no need to cancel the debate, scheduled for Friday night at the University of Mississippi. "This is exactly the time when people need to hear from the candidates," Mr. Obama said, adding: "Part of the president's job is to deal with more than one thing at once. In my mind it's more important than ever."

Oh, and in the process of "suspending" his campaign and "rushing" back to DC, McCain dissed David Letterman, on whose show he was supposed to guest this evening. Watch Letterman's hilarious and RATHER affronted spiel. Yeah, nice way to treat Dave. You might recall that it was on Letterman that McCain ANNOUNCED that he was running for president back in February 2007. I guess that was also back when he used to talk to the national press too. (By the way, since McCain cancelled, Dave got Keith Olbermann to sit in instead.) After saying "something doesn't smell right..." Dave points out that if the economy is in such a tailspin, and you personally must be in Washington to fix it (which you don't), why don'tcha leave your second-in-command VP nominee in charge of campaigning and get on your flight? Oh, Dave, Dave, Dave...you forget that he can't leave her unattended even for 30 seconds.

This WAS my favorite video of the day...until the McCain campaign imploded: Campbell Brown goes OFF on the McCain camp's sexism in shielding Sarah Palin from the Big Bad Media: "Tonight I call on the McCain campaign to stop treating Sarah Palin like she is a delicate flower that will wilt at any moment...you claim she is ready to be one heart beat away form the presidency. If that is the case, then end this chauvinistic treatment of her now."

Even Fox News reporters are starting to get testy about the Palin Media Shutout. And Maureen Dowd refers to Palin's recent rush through Top World Leaders plus a bonus Henry Kissinger Round as "speed dating diplomacy."

Perhaps the reason they keep her under wraps is that--uh, pardon me, Governor Palin? Your ignorance is showing.

Here is my SECOND favorite video of the day
: the BIG interview, with Katie Couric of CBS playing "Stump the Candidate." I love that right at the top of the interview, Couric asks Palin about McCain adviser Rick Davis's Freddie Mac involvement. Palin answers that her understanding is that he recused himself from any dealings with the company and that she would hope that that's the case. To which Couric says, "But he still has a stake in the company, so isn't that a conflict of interest?" At which Palin says that her understanding is that he recused himself from any dealings with the company and that she would hope that that's the case-- Whoa, deja vu! I guess that's the only talking point they gave you, honey? Particularly delicious is the moment when Couric asks Palin to cite "specific examples in [McCain's] 26 years [in the Senate] of pushing for more regulation."

Couric, incidentally also does a series called Presidential questions, in which she asks the same question of Obama and McCain. One of the questions was "When is it appropriate to lie to the American people?" Both of them give the same answer, but McCain's interests me, given the questions and statements made about his running mate. Next week we ask: "When is it appropriate to manipulate the political process?"

Oh, and not that anyone is paying attention to the Sarah Palin Troopergate story NOW, but The Plank pointed out that even the AP newswire is getting snarky, putting out this lead in a story covering the investigation: "Less than a week after balking at the Alaska Legislature's investigation into her alleged abuse of power, Gov. Sarah Palin on Monday indicated she will cooperate with a separate probe run by people she can fire."

By the way, about the "Is Sarah Palin qualified?" poll on PBS NOW's website. I sent it out, and many of you have sent it to me. Well, the poll, which only ran a week in early September on PBS' homepage, became the single most viewed page on their entire site, even though nothing links to it now that the homepage link is gone. But it's remained so popular via email that PBS was moved to post this notice. As many people noticed, voting "da Chicago way" seemed to be entirely possible, and apparently was (thank god, I didn't really waste that half hour clicking and refreshing....!) until yesterday, when they embedded cookies so you can only vote once per computer. (Naturally, I have voted from every computer in the house...)
Econ 101

Yeah, I wrote all this this morning-- before all the fun began.... Best not to waste it though. Who knows what we still have brewing ahead in the overnight hours!

So over the last couple of days, I've spent about a half an hour looking at Paul Solman's very informative and yet amusing videos for PBS's Lehrer Report. Solman used to be a kindergarten teacher which maybe accounts for his simple, yet not condescending explanations.
  • Back in 2007 after Amaranth Financial lost $6 billion betting on natural gas futures and collapsed, Solman explained what a Hedge Fund is (EXTREMELY enlightening for non-econ types like me). It has the bonus explanation of what a "Black Swan" event is -- actually no surprise to those of us who have seen Swan Lake.
  • In March 2008, Paul explained how the subprime mortgage caused the Bear Stearns collapse (hilariously using green Monopoly houses and Monopoly money). Paul and his team of expert explainers have a clairvoyant moment and "see" the domino effect of cascading failures causing a crisis of confidence for financial institutions.
  • And yesterday, he explained what triggered the "Credit crunch." Why is credit so important that we had to bail out giant financial organizations?
Betty also forwarded to me the very funny "Urgent help needed" spam that's making the rounds: "I am Ministry of the Treasury of the Republic of America . My country has had crisis that has caused the need for large transfer of funds of 800 billion dollars US. If you would assist me in this transfer, it would be most profitable to you. I am working with Mr. Phil Gram, lobbyist for UBS, who will be my replacement as Ministry of the Treasury in January. As a Senator, you may know him as the leader of the American banking deregulation movement in the 1990s. This transactin is 100% safe...."

Apparently, McCain is not the only one having a crappy day. It's all falling apart for BushCheneyCo too: "House Republicans who walked into a closed-door meeting with Cheney steaming over the plan walked out just as angry, and they described what happened in between as both 'a bloodbath' and 'an unmitigated disaster.' 'It's a sad fact, but Americans can no longer trust the economic information they are getting from this administration,' South Carolina Sen. Jim DeMint said in a comment posted on Politico's Arena forum."

Last word on those thousand dollar bills: Jeez, it's like being a candidate. Every time I open my mouth--or laptop as it were--I generate a new misstatement. Hah! So I noticed that I said the US stopped printing $1000 bills in 1969 but in fact they stopped printing them in 1945. The bills were pulled from circulation in 1969.

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Debate Prep
The League of Women Voters has a handy worksheet that you can print out and use to take notes while watching the debate this Friday, September 26 at 9pm EDT (8 pm local Mississippi time, 6 pm PDT). Well, you know... if we get to it....Jesus, Mary, Joseph.

Some more Foreign Policy statements from the candidates' own websites:

Obama's Record: As a member of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, Barack Obama has fought to focus America's attention on the challenges facing Africa – stopping the genocide in Darfur, passing legislation to promote stability in the Congo and to bring a war criminal to justice in Liberia, mobilizing international pressure for a just government in Zimbabwe, fighting corruption in Kenya, demanding honesty on HIV/AIDS in South Africa, developing a coherent strategy for stabilizing Somalia, and travelling across the continent raising awareness for these critical issues. He has also increased America's focus on the long term challenges of education, poverty reduction, disease, strengthening democratic institutions and spurring sustainable economic development in Africa.

Barack Obama would like to:
  • expand prosperity by establishing an Add Value to Agriculture Initiative, creating a fund that will extend seed capital and technical assistance to small and medium enterprises, and reforming the World Bank and International Monetary Fund. He would launch the Global Energy and Environment Initiative to ensure African countries have access to low carbon energy technology and can profitably participate in the new global carbon market so as to ensure solid economic development even while the world dramatically reduces its greenhouse gas emissions. They will also strengthen the African Growth and Opportunity Act to ensure that African producers can access the U.S. market and will encourage more American companies to invest on the continent.
  • take immediate steps to end the genocide in Darfur by increasing pressure on the Sudanese and pressure the government to halt the killing and stop impeding the deployment of a robust international force. He and Joe Biden will hold the government in Khartoum accountable for abiding by its commitments under the Comprehensive Peace Accord that ended the 30 year conflict between the north and south. Obama worked with Senator Sam Brownback (R-KS) to pass the Darfur Peace and Accountability Act in 2006.
  • double our annual investment in foreign assistance from $25 billion in 2008 to $50 billion by the end of his first term and make the Millennium Development Goals, which aim to cut extreme poverty in half by 2015, America's goals. He would fully fund debt cancellation for Heavily Indebted Poor Countries in order to provide sustainable debt relief and invest at least $50 billion by 2013 for the global fight against HIV/AIDS, including our fair share of the Global Fund.
  • in Cuba, empower our best ambassadors of freedom by allowing unlimited Cuban-American family travel and remittances to the island. If a post-Fidel government takes significant steps toward democracy, beginning with freeing all political prisoners, the U.S. is prepared to take steps to normalize relations and ease the embargo that has governed relations between our countries for the last five decades.
  • bring together the countries of the region in a new Energy Partnership for the Americas to forge a path toward sustainable growth and clean energy. He will call on the American people to join this effort through an Energy Corps of engineers and scientists who will go to the region and beyond to help develop clean energy solutions.
  • target all sources of insecurity through a new hemispheric security initiative. This initiative will foster cooperation within the region to combat gangs, trafficking and violent criminal activity. It will strive to find the best practices that work across the hemisphere, and to tailor approaches to fit each country.
John McCain's National Security policy: "Strong Military in a Dangerous World"

The global war on terrorism, wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, threats from rogue states like Iran and North Korea, and the rise of potential strategic competitors like China and Russia mean that America requires a larger and more capable military to protect our country's vital interests and deter challenges to our security. America confronts a range of serious security challenges: Protecting our homeland in an age of global terrorism and Islamist extremism; working with friends and partners overseas, from Africa to Southeast Asia, to help them combat terrorism and violent insurgencies in their own countries; defending against missile and nuclear attack; maintaining the credibility of our defense commitments to our allies; and waging difficult counterinsurgency campaigns in Afghanistan and Iraq.

John McCain:
  • to protect our homeland, our interests, and our values - and to keep the peace - America must have the best-manned, best-equipped, and best-supported military in the world.
  • has been a tireless advocate of our military and ensuring that our forces are properly postured, funded, and ready to meet the nation's obligations both at home and abroad. He has fought to modernize our forces, to ensure that America maintains and expands its technological edge against any potential adversary, and to see that our forces are capable and ready to undertake the variety of missions necessary to meet national security objectives.
  • wants to strengthen the military, shore up our alliances, and ensure that the nation is capable of protecting the homeland, deterring potential military challenges, responding to any crisis that endangers American security, and prevailing in any conflict we are forced to fight.
  • want to ensure that America has the quality intelligence necessary to uncover plots before they take root, the resources to protect critical infrastructure and our borders against attack, and the capability to respond and recover from a terrorist incident swiftly. McCain fought for the creation of an independent 9/11 Commission to identify how to best address the terrorist threat and decrease our domestic vulnerability. He fought for the establishment of the Department of Homeland Security and the creation of the U.S. Northern Command with the specific responsibility of protecting the U.S. homeland.
  • strongly supports the development and deployment of theater and national missile defenses to protect America from rogue regimes like North Korea that possess the capability to target America with intercontinental ballistic missiles, from outlaw states like Iran that threaten American forces and American allies with ballistic missiles, and to hedge against potential threats from possible strategic competitors like Russia and China
  • believes we must enlarge the size of our armed forces to meet new challenges to our security. For too long, we have asked too much of too few - with the result that many service personnel are on their second, third and even fourth tours of duty in Afghanistan and Iraq. There can be no higher defense priority than the proper compensation, training, and equipping of our troops.
  • reform the defense budgeting process to ensure that America enjoys the best military at the best cost. This includes reforming defense procurement to ensure the faithful and efficient expenditure of taxpayer dollars that are made available for defense acquisition.
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41 days to the election, God help us, we must survive the circus to VOTE! Reminder again that, for many states, would-be voters must register well in advance of the elections. RockTheVote's list of voter registration deadlines. And if you're voting absentee, Declare Yourself has links to each state's voter information page where you can find out how to get your absentee ballot. Feel free to harangue your friends in the swing states.

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Through the Looking Glass

A Special Message: We are issuing a shorter edition this morning because, My Fellow Americans, today we are in the midst of an historic crisis of logic. I am therefore directing my campaign to suspend my disbelief-- also, to salt it liberally and dry it out a little with a spice rub-- and tomorrow we will HICKORY SMOKE THAT SUCKER.

Oh God, why are Stephen Colbert and Jon Stewart so freaking funny? The best cover of the week-- Colbert and Stewart recreate the Michelle & Barack Obama cover from the New Yorker. "Stewart stops briefly to pose a taste question. As he stands by the catering table in ''secret Muslim'' garb, he ponders, ''Would it be weird to be dressed like this and have a bagel, salmon, and a schmear?'"

Get yours before they sell out of them.

Can I just ask -- when did the Republicans become the Grand Old Party of Cancellation? A hurricane hits four states away, and they cancel the first day of their convention in St. Paul and McCain runs to the Gulf Coast so he can---what? Wrap bandages? Staple-gun cardboard on the windows? What do you think you can do to help exactly? So, now the economy is tanking, and he cancels the debate and suspends his campaign to run back to Washington so he can, what? Wrap bandages? Staple-gun cardboard to the windows? WHAT DO YOU THINK YOU CAN DO?? Nobody in Washington LIKES you anymore.

Okay, [pulls up pants and straightens glasses] here we go.

So, yesterday, I left the house at 2:30 pm, after reluctantly detaching myself from the computer. "Ehn," I thought, "Gotta get to work and anyway, nothing's going to happen today..." At 2:46 pm, McCain's campaign sent out the word that he was suspending his campaign and wanted to cancel the debate. I was gone fifteen minutes, people. I stop watching for fifteen minutes and the campaign world goes to hell in a handbasket.

Anyhow, I'm still chuckling over Letterman's jibes last night. In case you didn't see it, Dave spent just about two thirds of the show going ON about McCain not only suspending his campaign, but worse, canceling his appearance on Letterman --telling Dave that he had to get on a plane and RUSH back to Washington to fix this bailout thing. But then (insult on injury!), there was Johnny Mac, appearing on Katie Couric's show with an exclusive interview--at the same exact moment he was supposed to be on Dave's couch! Yes, through the magic of TeeVee, Dave patched in a live feed to the CBS News studio so we could all watch So You Think You Can Dance and American Idol makeup artist Tifanie White was applying her $5000 magic to the candidate while he made small talk with Katie Couric. Oops.

Dave's Top Ten Questions People are Asking The John McCain Campaign

  • #10 "I just contributed to your campaign – how do I get a refund?"
  • #9 "It's Sarah Palin –- does this mean I'm pars'dent?"
  • #8 "Can't you solve this by selling some of your houses?"
  • #7 "This is Clay Aiken. Is McCain single?"
  • #6 "Do you still think the fundamentals of our economy are strong, Genius?"
  • #5 "Are you doing all of this just to get out of going on Letterman?"
  • #4 "What would Matlock do?"
  • #3 "Hillary here –- my schedule is free Friday night."
  • It'll be interesting here to see if Barack Obama feels the need to suspend his campaign to go down there and work on the economy. He's also a senator. And his running mate, Joe Biden, he's also a senator. So there, those two guys have to get back to work. So, of course, they'll suspend their campaign. Don't you think? The Democrats are now at a real disadvantage because Barack Obama has got to race back and fix the economy. So does Joe Biden. He has to race back and fix the economy. But the Republicans have Sarah Palin, the governor of Alaska. The Alaska economy is fine. It don't need fixing. It's fine. So she'll continue the campaign. So the Democrats are really in a hole now.
  • #2 "Is this just an excuse to catch up on napping?"
  • #1 "This is President Bush –- what's all this trouble with the economy?"

Hey, Dave! Turns out McCain's STILL in New York this morning-- speaking at Bill Clinton's Global Initiative! Damn, baby--dissed and disMISSED.

Yeah, everyone's got insights into why McCain "suspended" his campaign (Such a hard time typing that with a straight face.)
The NY Times yesterday with snapshots from McCain's suspended-in-the-air Crazy Horse maneuver: "Senator Harry Reid of Nevada, the Democratic majority leader, said Mr. McCain and Mr. Obama should not return to Washington and inject presidential politics into the bailout negotiations....'What, does McCain think the Senate will still be working at 9 p.m. Friday?' Gov. Edward G. Rendell of Pennsylvania said in an interview, referring to the scheduled start time of the debate. 'I think this is all political...' Mr. Obama did say with a glint of humor that both he and Mr. McCain were capable of engaging in the debate and negotiations in Congress at the same time. 'If it turns out that we need to be in Washington, we've both got big planes — we've painted our slogans on the sides of them,' Mr. Obama said. 'They can get us from Washington, D.C., to Mississippi fairly quickly.'"

Huffpo adds to the suspension: "We're trying to rescue the economy, not the McCain campaign," said Rep. Barney Frank. And they add this delicately worded barb from Republican Chris Dodd (who seems annoyed, because "Dag-nab-it, HE'S ACTUALLY BEEN WORKING ON THIS PLAN!"): "I'm delighted that John is expressing himself on this issue," said Chris Dodd, chairman of the Senate Banking Committee. "I have heard from Obama numerous occasions these last couple days. I have never heard from John McCain on the issue... I'm just worried a little bit that sort of politicizing this problem, sort of flying in here, I'm beginning to think this is more of a rescue plan for John McCain and not a rescue plan for the economy."

John Dickerson at Slate makes several obvious, but well-suspended observations about the ploy: "Even more than his selection of Sarah Palin as running mate, this gambit feels like a wild improvisation someone in the McCain team mapped out on his chest: OK, you run to the fire hydrant, cut left, and then when he gets to the Buick, John, you heave it."

McCain's big gamble remind me of the article "Craps and Poker" from Time, about the suspense created by gaming temperament differences between McCain and Obama: "In practice, the political battle is both a crapshoot and a poker game, a study in managing risk and in manipulating people. And there is no bigger gamble than a presidential run, which both candidates have conducted very differently this cycle. McCain's campaign, like his life, has been marked by its embrace of living dangerously and by clear runs of fortune and disappointment. Obama, meanwhile, has succeeded, no less remarkably, by diligently executing a premeditated strategy."

The Wall Street Journal refuses to suspend disbelief. Today's editorial says: "Last we checked, the President of the United States was still George W. Bush, the Secretary of the Treasury was still Henry Paulson, the Chairman of the Federal Reserve was still Ben Bernanke, and Congress still had 533 members not running for President who are at least nominally competent to debate and pass legislation. So count us as mystified by Senator John McCain's decision yesterday to suspend his campaign and call for a postponement in Friday's first Presidential debate so that he and Barack Obama can work out a consensus bill to stabilize the financial system. This is supposed to be evidence of leadership?"

Oh, and incidentally, let we forget...Rick Davis, the one who McCain says suspended all activity with his lobbying firm? You know, the McCain campaign adviser whose lobbying firm was paid $30,000 a month by Freddie Mac til 2005, then got $15,000 a month from Freddie as part of a different firm until LAST MONTH, but whom McCain claimed was no longer "with" the firm? That guy? Yeah, he's still the treasurer and corporate director of the firm. It's listed. In the public record.

==========================

Financial WIZARDS

Betty notes that someone has at last used the "F" word in describing this bailout, and it ain't "finance":"Our government and its owners appear to be testing how much the American public will tolerate. A few years ago, no one could have imagined that the silent majority would quietly accept thefts of this magnitude from a government that stopped tiny payments to single mothers with poor children in the name of welfare reform because the program's $10 billion cost was breaking the federal budget.This isn't socialism, it's fascism."

At TPM, mswogger has come to the same conclusion: "Frankly, that word is fascism. It's no secret that corporations are fascist entities themselves, where decisions are made by a select few that can affect millions of people who have no say in the matter. But this government-corporate 'partnership' (for lack of a better term) is the epitome of fascism. As Mussolini and his partner Giovanni Gentile wrote in 1932, 'We are, in other words, a state which controls all forces acting in nature. We control political forces, we control moral forces we control economic forces, therefore we are a full-blown Corporative state.'"

The Swedes watch as the US basically copies a page from Swedish history. Couldn't we learn something from their financial crisis in the 90s?

The Wall Street Journal notes too that "a massive nonpartisan campaign to mobilize Hispanics to register to vote could create a surge of Latino voters, especially in several swing states, which would likely benefit Democratic presidential candidate Barack Obama." The National Association on Latino Elected and Appointed Officials and Impremedia hope to register 1 million Hispanic voters in the campaign launching this weekend -- you know, if they don't suspend it. "Ya es Hora! Ve y Vota!"

======================

Debate prep continues for Friday at 6pm PDT, 8pm Miss. time, 9pm EDT. Latest word is that Obama says he'll be there on Friday, and if McCain is a no-show, he'll do a one-on-one with Lehrer or make it into a town-hall. Oh, I would love that, but raise your hand if you think McCain is going to let Obama have that much free TV time to air his policies alone. Anyone? Anyone?

40 days to the election, if we don't um... suspend it. Reminder again that, for many states, would-be voters must not suspend their willingness to register well in advance of the elections. RockTheVote's list of voter registration deadlines. And if you're voting absentee, Declare Yourself has links to each state's voter information page where you can find out how to get your absentee ballot. Feel free to unsuspend your friends in the swing states, and do let me know if you know someone who'd like to be appended to, not suspended from, my ranting list!

And, I do try to keep updating my political page. If I don't suspend it.

Where are my suspenders anyway? I'm going to sell them and donate the $5 to Obama.

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Thursday, September 18, 2008

Cash Only Edition

Okay, I'm almost through three days' worth of Wall Street Journals, and I am only blindly inching my way toward understanding what "credit default swaps" are and why they're ravaging the market. You'll have to pardon me here as I have been obsessing for the last few days with trying to figure out what the HECK is going on here. I find myself actually admiring the poetical moments in the Wall Street Journal like this one: "More than 200 years after it was born at the base of a buttonwood tree, Wall Street as we have known it is ceasing to exist."

Subprime mortgages? Derivatives trade? Credit default swaps? Seems important. Everyone keeps mentioning them. Especially when I come across this line in the WSJ about this shadowy market: "The market for credit default swaps is immense, trading against $62 trillion of debt." Trillion. TRRRILLLLL-ion. Excuse me? And no one's regulating this trade?

Even worse, no one seems to knows what the heck these CDSs really are, not even the folks who cooked them up. "
The massive credit-default-swap market became so complex that in some cases firms lost track of their stakes. AIG, for example, pleaded for capital from several private equity firms over the Sept. 13-14 weekend. After scouring the insurer's financials, the firms balked at a deal, concluding that even AIG management didn't know where all the skeletons were buried, according to a person familiar with the situation."

Peter Newcomb of Vanity Fair comes closest to explaining it in an almost understandable way.

"Let's say you own and operate and a small lending company called Good Loans. In January, Good Loans extends a $1,000 line of credit to Greasy Eats, a popular neighborhood diner. By the end of March, you notice that the parking lot at Greasy Eats has been a lot less crowded than it used to be. You also realize the diner has maxed out its credit line.

As the owner of Good Loans, you're not feeling so great anymore about your loan to Greasy Eats. In May, you persuade a local investment boutique, Got Yer Back Brothers, to buy the Greasy Eats loan for $900. So while you lose $100 in the transaction, you free yourself of a potential headache. Meanwhile, Got Yer Back has taken on $1,000 in shaky credit for a $100 fee, and the dubious prospect of getting paid back in full with interest.

Now repeat that process again and again, but this time on a much grander scale—to the tune of $45 trillion. That's how much some analysts are estimating is parked (off the balance sheet, of course) in the credit swaps market. Even if only 10% of these swaps default, trillions of dollars will have to be written down.

As this article in the New York Times describes it, "Used judiciously, derivatives can limit the damage from financial miscues and uncertainty, greasing the wheels of commerce. Used unwisely—when greed and the urge to gamble with borrowed money overtake sensible risk-taking—derivatives can become Wall Street's version of nitroglycerin."

I'll leave you all to unpack the idea, relate it to subprime mortgages and decide how screwed we are. And if you're feeling as lost as I am, don't worry, the subprime in-and-outs are so ridiculously byzantine that even Alan Greenspan had trouble figuring it all out. Back in 2005, he was asked by Sen. Jim Bunning, R-Ky., why he only raised concerns over Fannie/Freddie's home mortgage securitization packages relatively recently even though those portfolios grew throughout much of the 1990s. Greenspan conceded it had taken him some time to understand the company's complicated structures, and the risks to the companies and the nation's financial systems posed by the concentration of mortgages in their holdings. "It's taken me quite a good bit of time to disentangle the complex structure," he said. "I didn't fully understand when I first looked at them.It's only fairly recently that it finally became clear to me," he added. "It was a revelation in certain respects."

Anyway, the question of the day now is, who are YOU going to Prom with? Morgan Stanley got The Call from Wachovia. Meanwhile, Washington Mutual (whose shares have cliff-dived 94% this year!) remains a wallflower. (I wonder if we should find a new bank?) And what of Goldman Sachs? Apparently everyone is nervously wringing their handkerchiefs.

The New York Times' Dave Leonhardt puts this bailout in the perspective using the lens of the Chrysler auto industry bailout of 1979-- how did that play and how has Chrysler fared since? "
The Chrysler bailout may have saved the company, but it did nothing, after all, to stop Detroit's long, sad decline."

Obama's official release on Monday said what I'm certainly suspecting, that the current crisis is related to deregulation. "Eight years of policies that have shredded consumer protections, loosened oversight and regulation, and encouraged outsized bonuses to CEOs while ignoring middle-class Americans have brought us to the most serious financial crisis since the Great Depression."

Call it "talky" and "unsexy" if you like, but I LOVE Obama's new ad.It has, as Wonkette notes, actual words and thoughts! (By the way, I was curious as to what languages Obama speaks, and uncovered this one I missed, a Spanish language ad he recorded in May. BTW, he doesn't speak Spanish-- other than English he speaks Indonesian.)

Meanwhile, an editorial from the Liberal Bias rag, (aka the New York Times), has a few none-too-kind words about McCain's perspective on the current financial crisis." As for Wall Street, Mr. McCain blamed the meltdown on 'unbridled corruption and greed.' He called for a commission to find out what happened and propose solutions. His diagnosis and his cure are misguided. The crisis on Wall Street is fundamentally a failure to do the things that temper, detect and punish corruption and greed. It was a failure to police the markets, to enforce rules, to heed and sound warnings and expose questionable products and practices."

McCain is still jostling with the fallout from his "from the gut" assessments earlier this week. Remember my comment about his pat statements opposing an AIG bailout with taxpayer dollars? Now the Caucus reports that "Senator John McCain acknowledging that a failure to intervene on the insurance titan's behalf would have jeopardized retirement incomes, savings and perhaps would have led to further turmoil." And apparently I wasn't the only one steamed by his glib superficial approach.Says Huff Po's Rachel Sklar, "McCain's answer yesterday on AIG was not an accident. Put bluntly, I can't see any evidence that he knew what he was talking about; nor any evidence that he wanted to try. This is a blatant moment, on tape, under urgent questioning from the media at a moment of crisis, and not only was his lack of preparation apparent but his attitude spoke volumes."

So congratulations. If you've made it this far in my Rant, you've probably spent more time learning about the world of derivative trading than John McCain has.

For Pete's sake, in yesterday's editorial page, even the Wall Street Journal took McCain to task with a cringe-inducing (even for me) jab at his ignorance (sadly not available online): "It sounds like this week's version of a McCain presidency would be more about restructuring private financial markets he doesn't understand, than fixing the Washington he knows." Ouch.

In the "Read-this-One Dept.": More conservatives are landing on the side of "McCain has lost his marbles." I know that the world has run mad when I'm agreeing with the likes of Pat Buchanan, George Will and Conservative NYTimes columnist David Brooks who observes, quite rightly, "Conservatives stood against radical egalitarianism and the destruction of rigorous standards. They stood up for classical education, hard-earned knowledge, experience and prudence. Wisdom was acquired through immersion in the best that has been thought and said....Surely the response to the current crisis of authority is not to throw away standards of experience and prudence, but to select leaders who have those qualities but not the smug condescension that has so marked the reaction to the Palin nomination in the first place."

Gosh I always thought I was Liberal, but perhaps I'm actually Conservative.

Even Elizabeth Drew, who wrote the pro-Johnny Mac book Citizen McCain in 2002, is now weighing in with her piece on Politico "How John McCain Lost Me." "McCain's recent conduct of his campaign – his willingness to lie repeatedly (including in his acceptance speech) and to play Russian roulette with the vice-presidency, in order to fulfill his long-held ambition – has reinforced my earlier, and growing, sense that John McCain is not a principled man. In fact, it's not clear who he is."

Next week, Katie Couric of CBS is slated to interview Sarah Palin (airing Monday Sept 29 on the evening news). Could there be any hope that she'll actually ask all the questions that would be considered "too sexist" for a male journalist to ask?

BTW, seems like the Governor's daughter has had her shot-gun wedding, quietly, and if her Facebook entry is to be believed, she is now Bristol Palin-Johnston. (What? No copters from Us magazine hovering overhead to deliver us aerial snaps of the ceremony?)

We haven't seen a lot of reporting on what Joe's been up to, but Andrew Sullivan points out that he's been serving up some barn-burners. Joe goes off on what the Republicans don't talk about. "The silence on jobs, on healthcare, on the environment was deafening...Do any of you recall either candidate of the Republican ticket utter the phrase 'middle class'?... What do you talk about when you have nothing to say? What do you talk about when you cannot explain the last eight years of failure? You talk about the other guy."

So that' it for today. I'll head back to policy comparisons tomorrow --I just couldn't make my brain do any more after the credit default swap---zzzzzzttt...pffft. [Lights out]

A reminder that although they raised $66 million last month (!!), Obama's campaign says their goal is to have 50,000 new donors by Friday at midnight.

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Friday, September 5, 2008

Are You Done Yet? Edition

"All animals are equal, but some animals are more equal than others."
-- George Orwell, Animal Farm

"All propaganda has to be popular and has to adapt its spiritual level to the perception of the least intelligent of those towards whom it intends to direct itself."
-Adolf Hitler, Mein Kampf ("My Struggle"), Vol. I

Where oh where to start...? Alcohol, if you please, my good man. And lots of it. No, just bring me the bottles, honey. No, all of them. Line them up. Right. Here.

Sorry for the late start last night, folks. Had to teach and um, missed the McCain acceptance. In real time that is.

Catching up from last night, Joe Biden calls Palin' speech "amazing." Um, question in the back, Mr. Biden...do you mean "amazing" haha? And Barack addresses Palin's attack on Obama's work as a community organizer: "Maybe that's the problem, that's why they're out of touch and they don't get it--cause they haven't spent much time working on behalf of those folks." Oh, and by the way, he's in York, PA. Where he now holds a 3 to 5 point lead. Shhh, don't tell the Republicans.

In another natural disaster/coincidence, of the sort that have dogged the Republican Convention, the GOP 's final convention day has somehow inadvertently fallen on the same night as the NFL season opener. OOOOOooooh. Tough choice! Kickoff or kicked in the groin?

Wonder what was going on behind the scenes at the Convention? Comedian Sara Benincasa's hilarious Palin vlog on Youtube.

Okay, on with the show. They show a video introducing Cindy McCain. There's a bit about how he romanced Cindy Lou and how they both lied about their ages when they met. Uh-huh, this is the guy Cindy will describe not twenty minutes later in her speech as the man "who always speaks the truth, no matter what the cost."

As always at moments like these, I wonder to myself how must John McCain's first wife Carol must feel. McCain and Carol were still married at the time of John's cocktail party romance with Cindy. John and Carol were still married for the six months that he pursued Cindy. He actually got the marriage license to marry Cindy a month before his divorce from Carol was granted. It was such a downright scummy thing to do that even the Reagans cooled their friendship with McCain over it.

Cindy McCain gives The World's Longest Introduction to a Candidate, Who's Already Been Introduced About Six Times in Three Days. Says Cindy, "From its very birth, our party has been grounded in the notion of service, community, self-reliance..." OH, is that like, um...um, "COMMUNITY SERVICE"? Oh right, community service sucks if it's Barack Obama doing it. It only counts if you're a dilettante.

Aww, we should cut her some slack. Given the way Republicans feel about putting underqualified women on the ticket, maybe Cindy should be running. She doesn't have brains, and doesn't know anything about policy (Cindy McCain being interviewed by Katie Couric. No, no, don't skip this one. It's too delicious, if only for the moment when you realize that Cindy has no frakking clue what the phrase "overturn Roe v. Wade" actually means). But she does have the one thing you need: money. Remember that Yellow Slicker with jewels outfit on Tuesday? Vanity Fair says it's worth $300,000. Maybe Cindy should be at the top of the ticket -- this campaign is being run off of her fortune after all. Ever wonder why this boy from Virginia and Annapolis is the Senator from Arizona? Because that's where Cindy's money and family connections are.

But where is our headliner? "Wake up, wake up!!" cries Dennis Kucinich. You're on! I don't have anything pithy to say about this speech to be honest, it's just a recap of the homespun Republican cliches that they've been using since Reagan. If I'm being perfectly frank, I haven't seen the whole speech. I nearly fell asleep watching it, except when the protesters were dragged off. He should thank them. They awakened half his snoozing audience.

Tom Ridge says: "John Bush is very much his own man..." I'll let you just watch this one. I love Freudian slips.

So how much is Mrs. Palin helping John McCain? ABC's new poll tells the story in the ideological center: "Among moderates, Biden registers as a net 15-point positive for Obama. In the same group, Palin shows no effect on support for McCain."

That's pretty much how the press is feeling after Palin's snipes at the "reporters and commentators." But Jack Shafer of Slate points out, "Palin's mixed message says: Please respect the privacy of my family—as I exploit them. Respect my family's privacy, but let me wrap myself in baby Trig to prove my anti-abortion stand. Question for the Commission on Presidential Debates: If you let Palin nurse Trig as she debates Joe Biden on Oct. 2 at Washington University, will you level the field by letting Biden bottle-feed one of his grandchildren?"

Paul Krugman, in the Times, warns about the politics of resentment: "One of the key insights in "Nixonland," the new book by the historian Rick Perlstein, is that Nixon's political strategy throughout his career was inspired by his college experience, in which he got himself elected student body president by exploiting his classmates' resentment against the Franklins, the school's elite social club."

Meantime, Fox News' O'Reilly Factor has started airing the Obama interview--in pieces of course--sound bytes if you will.

And what of Hillary? The QUALIFIED woman. "Senator Barack Obama will increasingly lean on prominent Democratic women to undercut Gov. Sarah Palin and Senator John McCain, dispatching Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton to Florida on Monday and bolstering his plan to deploy female surrogates to battleground states, Obama advisers said Thursday." (NYTimes) Speaking of Florida, word is that McCain wants to roll out Palin too in Flroida. Did anybody else notice the hurricane headed that way? I think folks in Florida might have other stuff to worry about....

I love Helene's solution. Every time she gets upset by all this, she donates $5 to Obama's campaign. It's a form of retail therapy. You're not the only one, Obama has raised $8 million since the Palin speech. And you get a t-shirt.

So that's it, folks. GOPers have invoked "God" 43 times, and the Dems only said "God" 22 times, so Republicans win...for now....We ARE DONE with this GOP convention. Really, I'm done with it.

Look Now into the Future
Three presidential debates:
  • Friday, September 26, 2008 at the University of Mississippi's Gertrude C. Ford Center in Oxford, Mississippi, moderated by Jim Lehrer, executive editor and anchor of The NewsHour on PBS. This debate will focus on foreign policy and national Security.
  • Tuesday, October 7, 2008 at Belmont University's Curb Event Center in Nashville, Tennessee, moderated by Tom Brokaw, special correspondent for NBC News. This debate will have a town-hall meeting format.
  • Wednesday, October 15, 2008 at Hofstra University's Hofstra Arena in Hempstead, New York, moderated by Bob Schieffer, CBS News chief Washington correspondent and host of Face the Nation. This debate will focus on domestic and economic policy.
And mark your calendars for the Veep debate:
  • Thursday, October 2, 2008 at Washington University in St. Louis' Field House Gymnasium in St. Louis, Missouri, moderated by Gwen Ifill, senior correspondent on The NewsHour and moderator and managing editor of Washington Week on PBS.
I leave you with this quote:

"...there was no point in seeking to convert the intellectuals. For intellectuals would never be converted and would anyway always yield to the stronger, 'and this will always be the man in the street.' Arguments must therefore be crude, clear and forcible, and appeal to emotions and instincts, not the intellect. Truth was unimportant and entirely subordinate to tactics and psychology... Hatred and contempt must be directed at particular individuals."
-The Goebbels Diaries, H. Trevor-Roper (ed).

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