Tuesday, March 3, 2009

Michael Steele vs. Rush Limbaugh

Yeah, who runs this party? So after all that, Steele has to run back and apologize to RUSH? Wildly divided and disorganized... When did the Republicans become the Democrats?

Michael Steele has apologized to Rush Limbaugh for referring to him as an 'entertainer' who can be 'ugly' and 'incendiary,' Mike Allen reports.

'My intent was not to go after Rush - I have enormous respect for Rush Limbaugh,' Steele said. 'I was maybe a little bit inarticulate. ... There was no attempt on my part to diminish his voice or his leadership.'

Read more at Huff Po.

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Wednesday, February 11, 2009

Daily Show's John Oliver at White House Press briefing

A White House with a sense of humor?
"The White House briefing room is getting a visit from the Daily Show Wednesday. Correspondent John Oliver is speaking with White House Press Secretary Robert Gibbs and several members of the press corps at the White House for an upcoming segment for the Comedy Central show."


Daily Show's John Oliver Goes To The White House.

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Tuesday, February 10, 2009

Jon Stewart rips Bill O'Reilly's Hypocrisy

Jon Stewart ripped Bill O'Reilly on Monday night's "Daily Show" over his hypocritical stance on privacy.

O'Reilly, whose producers proudly ambush anyone who disagrees with him, has taken up as one of his pet causes the privacy of celebrities stalked by paparazzi.



Via HuffPo.


Rest of post here.

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Tuesday, January 27, 2009

Obama On Al-Arabiya

Significant to the Muslim world that Obama's first media interview as President goes to an Islamic outlet...



In his first formal interview since taking office, the president spoke with the Dubai-based station Al Arabiya on topics pertinent to the Arab and Muslim worlds. Much of the interview was spent defining the new approach that the United States would implement in that region: respectfulness over divisiveness, listening over dictating, engagement over militarism. But the president drew the line when it came to terrorist organizations.

"Their ideas are bankrupt," he told host Hisham Melhem, when asked to respond to recent audio clips from al Qaida leadership calling him various epithets. "There's no actions that they've taken that say a child in the Muslim world is getting a better education because of them, or has better health care because of them."


More on HuffPo.

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Thursday, December 4, 2008

Arianna and Jon Stewart backstage at the Daily Show

Jon reinforces that yep, he's quick. Behind the scenes at the Daily Show:
"Before Wednesday night's Daily Show taping, Jon Stewart dropped by the green room to check in with Arianna and debate the relative merits of blogging versus television. Check out this exclusive behind-the-scenes video and find out why Stewart refuses to become a blogger."


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Monday, November 3, 2008

The New Media

This election has been awash in new technologies, and I can't imagine how we ever conducted an election before blogs, YouTube, Twitter, Facebook, online donations, before email, before websites, Jeez, how did anyone ever get INFORMATION? Clearly Obama has been the master of this new world. And McCain? Well, he's still getting the hang of the Selectric typewriter.

The Washington Post highlighted the role of bloggers and social networking, who get the word out through emails, online posts and socnets like Facebook to ever-widening circles. (ahem.) "With the Internet making it easier than ever for voters to fund a candidate, act as their own publishers and search for information (and misinformation), the Washington political establishment -- candidates, strategists and journalists -- has been forced to loosen its grip on setting the narrative of the campaign. For voters such as Myers and Stoynoff, this is a sign of how the electoral process has been democratized and individualized. It's neither McCain's nor Obama's campaign. It's their campaign."

Obama's campaign has an amazing number of videos up on YouTube too, 1805 of them as of 2 pm, with over 18 million views on the channel. They must have people on the thing 24/7 editing video. My favorite for today is Matthew Broderick's "Ferris Bueller" riff-- "Election Day is tomorrow...Take the day off, but do it the right way...I promise you, it will be a day off you're not going to forget..." Keep watching to the end.

Obama's texting program is another one of those areas that has really captured the younger generation."Even officials at groups such as Rock the Vote and PIRGs have been surprised by the breadth and scope of Obama's texting program. In August, Obama introduced Obama Mobile, a site where users can access the latest Obama news and download videos on their cell phones -- a first for a presidential candidate. Two months later, in another electoral first, the campaign rolled out a free iPhone application that supporters can to organize their address book by state and make it easier for them to make calls. Within the first week, the free application was the eighth most downloaded on iTunes. As of Sunday night, it ranked No. 50, ahead of AOL Instant Messaging and behind iBaseball. Supporters receive texts specific to their state. Voters living in states that allow early voting received this text on Friday at 5:41 p.m. EST: "Vote for Barack NOW. Early vote locations are open until 7 pm today. Find your location at VoteForChange.com or call 877-235-6226." Supporters in Virginia got this text at 11:04 a.m. Saturday: "Help make history. Volunteer on Election Day to help Barack win VA! We still need to fill many 2 hour shifts. REPLY with V2 your NAME ZIP (ex: V2 John 22030)." Identical, but state-specific, versions of the text were sent in Pennsylvania, New Mexico and Colorado."

But even beyond the campaign's official programs, there are viral texts making the rounds just like viral emails. One of the most popular is quoted from Jay-Z's freestyling at a concert in New York (forward to 1:53 into the video):"Rosa sat so Martin could walk. Martin walked so Barack could run. Barack is running so our children can fly."

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SPEAK UP AND BE COUNTED

THE ELECTION IS TOMORROW!!!

It's the night before the big day and you're biting your nails at home, and glued to MSNBCNNABC-SPAN. Got the computer on and your browser already set to track? Here are a few other things you can do while-U-wait.
  • Text message your friends in swing states--Make sure they vote!
  • Call your friends, especially the ones who always leave stuff to the last minute. You know who they are. GET THEM OUT OF BED and TELL THEM TO VOTE
  • Remind everyone to CHECK THE ADDRESS OF THEIR POLLING PLACE. Sometimes it changes from year to year. Maybe they didn't get their voter information booklet, or they lost it. Have them visit Vote411.org to look up their polling place BEFORE they leave the house.
  • Add the Facebook "Causes" application to donate your "status" to update automatically and remind everyone to vote.

WHAT YOU CAN DO
GET OUT THERE AND VOTE!!!!

First of all, of course, if you haven't already, get out there and VOTE! Now everyone, I don't want to make too much of this, but my friend Becca reported that the line for early voting was two hours long yesterday-- this is at City Hall in San Francisco-- and we're not exactly experiencing swing state frenzy here.If you're joining in that great American pastime of standing in line, as the Scouts of America like to say, Be Prepared:

  • Call some friends in your neighborhood and go together.
  • Take a book or magazine with you.
  • Take a sandwich and maybe a bottle of water with you.
  • Take your cell phone and call friends to remind them to vote while you wait.
SPEAK UP AND BE COUNTED
  • Are you seeing problems or have YOU had trouble voting? Call the free hotlines: 1-866-MYVOTE1, 1-866-OUR-VOTE or 1-888-VE-Y-VOTA (en Español).
    • If you have been PURGED from the rolls
    • If you get there and they tell you you can't vote even though you know you're registered
    • If they tell you your address was wrong
    • That you have parking tickets so you can't vote
    • Don't take NO for an answer. THEY MUST ALLOW YOU TO CAST A PROVISIONAL BALLOT. Do it, then call 1-866-MYVOTE1, 1-866-OUR-VOTE or 1-888-VE-Y-VOTA (en Español).
  • CHECK YOUR VOTE. Ballot problems, voting machine errors are expected to plague the polls. "About a fourth of voters will still use electronic machines that offer no paper record to verify that their choice was accurately recorded, even though these machines are vulnerable to hacking and crashes that drop votes. The machines will be used by most voters in Indiana, Kentucky, Pennsylvania, Tennessee, Texas and Virginia. Eight other states, including Georgia, Maryland, New Jersey and South Carolina, will use touch-screen machines with paper trails." Even Oprah Winfrey had trouble when she went to vote. As my Algebra teacher used to say, CHECK your work! And if your ballot doesn't record your vote correctly, flag down a pollworker, SPEAK UP.
  • Are you on Twitter? Send your tweets on the voting process and how the lines are doing to Twitter's voting reports. If you haven't already, set up your mobile phone, (I advise turning OFF "Device Updates" immediately unless you want all those twitter updates coming to your phone!) Then text your reports to "40404." Here are some codes to use:
    • #zip code to indicate the zip code where you're voting, for example, "#20002"
    • L:address or city to drill down your exact location. Example: "L:1600 Pennsylvania Ave. D.C."
    • #machine for machine problems, Example: "#machine broken, using prov. ballot"
    • #reg for registration troubles. Ex.: "#reg I wasn't on the rolls"
    • #wait:minutes for long lines. Example: "#wait:120 and I'm coming back later"
    • #early if you're voting before Nov. 4
    • #good or #bad to give a quick sense of your overall experience

PLEASE feel free to forward this on to everyone!


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Thursday, October 30, 2008

Obamapallooza Edition

At long last! The Obama infomercial. Personally, I liked it, but then, I'm in the tank, as they say. (And can I just say that I called it yesterday-- several clips taken right from the DNC introduction video showed up in last night's piece.) But love it or not, the truth is, there is no such thing as bad publicity. Five days before the election, Obama is the candidate with all the buzz and the preliminary Nielsen numbers for last night were high. Truth be told, even as I watched it, I was worried --that's what I do, and I do it well-- I thought perhaps the infomercial would be viewed as indulgent. Silly me. In keeping with his "Closing Argument" speech, the infomercial focused less on attacking McCain than looking at the case for why Americans need change, but what it really put over is the idea that this is the candidate who understands the complexities of what it's like to live in America right now. Not a scary Muslim terrorist--just a guy with a lot of good ideas.

Over at the Nation, John Nichols had this to say: "It was, as well, a statement. And Barack Obama's determination to make it the closing message of this long campaign will go a long way toward reassuring uncertain voters about the president he intends to be. Most commercials aren't worth the thirty seconds it takes to watch them. Obama's commercial is a thirty minute slice of an American story that was crying out to be told... and that Barack Obama heard."

From Tom Shales at WaPo: "As political filmmaking, 'Barack Obama: American Stories' was an elegant combination of pictures, sounds, voices and music designed not so much to sell America on Barack Obama as to communicate a sensibility. The film conveyed feelings, not facts -- specifically, a simulation of how it would feel to live in an America with Barack Obama in the White House. The tone and texture recalled the "morning in America" campaign film made on behalf of Ronald Reagan, a work designed to give the audience a sense of security and satisfaction; things are going to be all right...Although McCain was not seen during the half-hour, one could easily summon the contrasting image of the Republican while watching Obama. McCain has come across on television as relatively worried, whiny, fusty and falsely folksy. He brought bad news; he has come to epitomize and personify it. Obama brings you medication along with the list of symptoms; he has developed a great bedside, as well as fireside, manner."

Here's the other subtle subtext I took away from the infomercial. Organization gives you smooth operation. The half hour taped segment went so seamlessly into a live rally with Obama and Biden addressing the crowd and the nation from Florida that even Joe Biden was impressed by the magic of TV. Look at who's the organized one, America. If that had been the McCain campaign's half hour, there probably would have been a satellite fizzle, about ten seconds of black screen and an awkward cut back to a confused candidate saying, "Are we back, are we live now?"

Witness today's rally in which McCain gave a shout-out to Joe the Plumber (who's been campaigning with him) and um... was met with silence... No Joe. Ooops. Not only that, but to add insult to injury, apparently, MSNBC's First Read reported, the crowd was a little thin and so the campaign had to bus in an entire school district's worth of kids. Doh!

Anyhoo, Barack had a busy day yesterday, making a very funny and engaging appearance on Jon Stewart's Daily Show looking relaxed and really, frankly, a lot less stressed than I feel.

The big story though, will no doubt be Obama's "Colbert Bump." Yes, bowing to the waves of ObamaCons surging to the Democrat, Stephen Colbert last night endorsed Barack Obama. Look for at least a point and a half rise in his numbers as a result.

Obama capped it all off with an appearance with Bill Clinton at a rally in Florida. More on that below.

Also, although Obama's infomercial didn't run on ABC, Obama did an interview with Charlie Gibson and talked about the posibility of a bi-partisan cabinet in an Obama administration. "On a whole host of these issues, I think we need Republicans, not just as show pieces. In some cases, Republicans have good ideas. And, you know, I've always been more than happy to steal good ideas from whatever the source."

Out of the Mouths of Babes

<== Obama, offering his water to a rally attendee who had passed out. I'm still marvelling at his ability to make us all feel calmer. It's a strange power. No matter what happens, whether it's the entire financial system melting down in a colossal mess, or the microphone cutting out, or an audience member fainting, he always seems to know just what to do. Maybe he's an alien. Thanks to Dina for these links, which hilariously point out the differences between the way kids react to McCain versus Obama.

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Schlemiel, Schlemazel

As I've often noted in these rants, the McCain camp just can't seem to catch a break. And Sarah Palin-- yes she's a conniving opportunist, but Max Gross also makes the case for poor Sarah as the ultimate schlemiel. In case you've forgotten your Yiddish, a schlemiel (made famous in the Laverne and Shirley song, "Schlemiel, schlemazel, Hausenfeffer Incorporated...") is that poor idiot who keeps on screwing things up because she's too dumb not to trip over her own feet. BTW, a schlemazel is the hapless victim who just never seems to have any luck, period.

In a reality check moment, CONSERVATIVE columnist George Will goes after the McCain campaign for its carelessness. Darn. I'm agreeing with George Will again. I hate when that happens. "Palin may be an inveterate simplifier; McCain has a history of reducing controversies to cartoons. A Republican financial expert recalls attending a dinner with McCain for the purpose of discussing with him domestic and international financial complexities that clearly did not fascinate the senator. As the dinner ended, McCain's question for his briefer was: 'So, who is the villain?'"

McCain camp "base member" Robert Draper--interviewed, oddly enough, in Women's Wear Daily--reveals that John McCain doesn't like blogging. Oh, really? I'm devastated. "They've come to be rather disdainful of the hyper-blogging that takes place on the press bus, and they think it has increased this mind-set of 'gotcha' journalism, where every time John McCain would say something, instead of asking a follow-up question, people would go scurry off to their laptops and post to their blogs. And the McCain campaign believes that's not what journalism ought to be....In being there, you can develop relationships with people on the campaign. You can't do that by sitting on your butt at home watching YouTube. If you're out there watching them do their thing, then go out in the evening and have a beer with them and talk to them about what's just transpired, then you set yourself up for what could be a series of interesting interviews.…[And] that sort of proximity isn't earned overnight." Yeah. Color me crazy, but what I get from this is that McCain doesn't like people writing about him whom he can't control. But then, I'm just another "blogger."

And in case you haven't seen it, check out Helen Philpot's fantastic blog. Andrew Sullivan at the Daily Dish pointed to Margaret and Helen, two 80-plus women who started a blog to keep in touch. Helen, who's new to blogging but says she gotten help from the grandkids, apparently received quite a bit of attention for calling Sarah Palin a "bitch." Her reply is fabulous. "I'm old enough to remember the Republican party of Barry Goldwater - when the party stood for fiscal responsibility, small government and personal freedoms. I remember when I could talk with friends about politics and just agree to disagree. And then religious nut cases decided that if you didn't agree with them you were immoral. So they went and elected George Bush President so he could take the Republican Party from being a party full of respectable people to a party filled with asses, jackasses and yes - bitches like Sarah Palin."

If you want a truly side-splitting moment, read her original post that started the Sarah Palin flap on her blog. "When exactly do we all get to call 'bullshit'?"


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Monday, October 27, 2008

GOP: God's Own Psychos

I didn't really give this story a lot of time last week, but I mention it now as another example of how crazy these people are. Last week, Ashley Todd, a mentally disturbed McCain volunteer who claimed to have been attacked, perhaps even sexually assaulted by Obama supporters, was exposed as a liar, who created her own injuries and then lied to the police about the "attack." Okay, who would you rather be associated with? The crazy people like Michelle Bachman, Nancy Pfotenhauer and Ashley Todd? Or the nice, calm Obama people?

And what of John Moody, the Fox News Exec who said "on his blog there that "this incident could become a watershed event in the 11 days before the election. If Ms. Todd's allegations are proven accurate, some voters may revisit their support for Senator Obama, not because they are racists (with due respect to Rep. John Murtha), but because they suddenly feel they do not know enough about the Democratic nominee. If the incident turns out to be a hoax, Senator McCain's quest for the presidency is over, forever linked to race-baiting."

Oh don't worry Ashley, you're not the only one: Crazy WFTV (Orlando) anchor Barbara West interviews Biden about Marxism:
"You may recognize this famous quote," she said during the interview, "From each according to his abilities to each according to his needs, that's from Karl Marx. How is Senator Obama not being a Marxist if he intends to spread the wealth around?"

Biden laugh out loud: "Are you joking? Is this a joke?"

"No," she says.

"Is that a real question?" Joe seems a little disbelieving that this woman isn't from "This is Your Life."

"That's a question." West said.

But is McCain any more sane? Here he is on Meet the Press on Sunday answering what I even thought were pretty softball questions from Tom Brokaw. McCain on Meet the Press. In case you're wondering about senility, so am I-- McCain forgot George Schultz's name on his list of Secs of State who endorsed him. Once again, maybe I would have done the ame thing, but a) he's the one who brought the subject up and b) that's why I'm not running for president.

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More Cognitive Dissonance

In the Wonderfully Bizarre World: "Barack Obama, the first black major-party nominee, is positioned to win the largest share of white voters of any Democrat in more than three decades, according to an exclusive Politico analysis of recent Gallup and Pew Research Center polling....No Democrat has won a majority of white voters since Lyndon Johnson in 1964. John McCain has shuffled between 48 percent and 50 percent support in recent weeks — which would be the lowest share for a Republican candidate in a two-man race since Barry Goldwater's run."

Not that I'm saying it's going to be easy. Nate Silver reports the following bizarre story on FiveThirtyEight.com:

Last week, Julie Hensley made one of her thousands of phone calls on behalf of Barack Obama. A woman answered. As Hensley ran through her short script, the husband impatiently broke in.

"Ma'am, we're voting for the n***er." And hung up.

Hensley wasn't having it. "I went and made a couple other calls but chafed over this absurdity," she told us, "so I called them back, as I still had a couple questions for the wife." This time the man answered, asked pointedly who she was, and when she replied he hung up again.

Um, yeah. Y'know, here's what I say, Alright, FINE--as long as you're voting for Obama. I don't even care right now. We'll sort it out later when he's got his hand on the Bible.

In a slightly different take, but with marked similarities, Frank Rich points out in his Sunday NY Times column: "But the other, less noticed lesson of the year has to do with the white people the McCain campaign has been pandering to. As we saw first in the Democratic primary results and see now in the widespread revulsion at the McCain-Palin tactics, white Americans are not remotely the bigots the G.O.P. would have us believe. Just because a campaign trades in racism doesn't mean that the country is racist. It's past time to come to the unfairly maligned white America's defense. That includes acknowledging that the so-called liberal media, among their other failures this year, have helped ratchet up this election cycle's prevailing antiwhite bias. Ever since Obama declared his candidacy, the press's default setting has been to ominously intone that "in the privacy of the voting booth" ignorant, backward whites will never vote for a black man."

Endorsements

Okay, I've gotta just get past all that for now, because we got a wide variety of more positive things ahead.

Oh, SNAP! Sarah Palin's hometown paper, the Anchorage Daily News has endorsed Obama.

The Financial Times also endorsed Obama (jeez, who's next? The Wall Street Journal???): "A campaign is a test of leadership. Mr Obama ran his superbly; Mr McCain's has often looked a shambles. After eight years of George W. Bush, the steady competence of the Obama operation commands respect. Nor should one disdain Mr Obama's way with a crowd. Good presidents engage the country's attention; great ones inspire. Mr McCain, on form, is an adequate speaker but no more. Mr Obama, on form, is as fine a political orator as the country has heard in decades. Put to the right purposes, this is no mere decoration but a priceless asset...Mr Obama's purposes do seem mostly right, though in saying this we give him the benefit of the doubt. Above all, he prizes consensus and genuinely seeks to unite the country, something it wants. His call for change struck a mighty chord in a tired and demoralised nation – and who could promise real change more credibly than Mr Obama, a black man, whose very nomination was a historic advance in US politics?"

Even Hitler is against Sarah Palin. (From the Hitler "Downfall" meme flooding YouTube, basically you take this scene from the movie Downfall and you apply subtitles railing against the topic of your choice. Eric likes this one railing against jazz music.)

By the way, on the subject of newspaper endoprsements, Editor & Publisher, continues to list all the papers around the country that have endorsed either candidate and Obama leads by an astonishing 194 to 82. 38 papers have switched from Bush to Obama this year and in major swing states and red states, Obama has endorsements from (among many others) the Miami Herald, The Sarasota Herald-Tribune, St. Petersburg Times, Anchorage Daily News,The Denver Post, The Toledo Blade, Akron Beacon-Journal, Cleveland Plain Dealer, Des Moines Register, The Minneapolis Star-Tribune, The Philly Inquirer, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, the NC News & Observer, Charleston (WV) Gazette, The Asheville Citizen, Houston Chronicle, Fort Worth Star-Telegram, The Atlanta Journal-Constitution and the Times-Picayune of New Orleans.

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Wednesday, October 22, 2008

Sarah Palin's Absolutely Fabulous Bailout Plan

And now, the untold story of Sarah Palin's heroic efforts to put the US economy back on track single-handedly. With the US economy sliding inexorably downward and a gridlocked Congress waffling over whether or not to pass a bailout package, Palin swiftly sprang into action by injecting $150,000 directly into the economy, by making massive purchases of toxic designer clothing and makeup. Well, okay, actually it's not true. She bought all those clothes BEFORE the meltdown. But she just KNEW it would help the economy later. Politico first broke this....amazing... story--which promises to have the kicking power of Imelda Marcos' shoes--after going through the finance statements of the RNC. Yes, ladies and gentlemen, Ms. "Charge Alaska $17,000 for staying in her OWN HOUSE in Wasilla" has struck again, spending $75,000 at Neiman Marcus and almost $50,000 at Saks 5th Avenue, plus $4,716.49 on hair and makeup. Kimberly, help me out here, I know that first jacket is Valentino, but do you know what any of these others are?

And according to the Washington Post Sleuth, Palin's travelling makeup artist, Amy Strozzi (of So You Think You Can Dance?) received $13,200 in September alone. Ah. We now know who was responsible for Palin's week of disastrously heavy blusher. By the way, on the RNC finance docs, Strozzi is listed as a "communications consultant."

And on the topic of hair, Daily Beast has put together a video of Palin's various hairstyles, which may yet convince you that this woman does need thousands of dollars worth of help.

Seriously though, you couldn't ask Cindy McCain to take you shopping? Hello? Cindy can teach you something about REAL spending. Everything you spent on all those clothes? Would only have bought one of Cindy's earrings.

So do you think her next "Donate to the RNC" email will mention that she also needs "a new pair of black pumps-- like the red ones, in snakeskin, but dark, for evening?"

Vice President of the Whole Darned Universe

Palin was also back in the interview hotseat, and still unclear about that VP job thing. Thanks to Dina for sending this one along. Grit your teeth everyone..."Yesterday, Gov. Sarah Palin (R-AK) sat for an interview with KUSA, an NBC affiliate in Colorado. In response to a question sent to the network by a third grader at a local elementary school about what the Vice President does, Palin erroneously argued that the Vice President is "in charge of the United States Senate":

Q: Brandon Garcia wants to know, "What does the Vice President do?"

PALIN: That's something that Piper would ask me! … [T]hey're in charge of the U.S. Senate so if they want to they can really get in there with the senators and make a lot of good policy changes that will make life better for Brandon and his family and his classroom.

Northern XXXposure

Hustler's resident maverick Larry Flynt is back, this time with an adult-themed video presentation starring a lookalike of America's Hottest Governor helping out two Russian soldiers when their tank breaks down outside of her house. RawStory reports that the script includes Palin flinging "herself on a tanning-bed repairman, pronouncing, 'You're in luck. I fully support off-shore and on-shore drilling. ... God almighty! You are hung like a moose. Now I have to eat ya! ... Pound me until my head is so empty that I can't even remember the name of the one Supreme Court case I actually know!'" You can see some scenes (safe scenes, this is on YouTube after all) of his epic "Who' Nailin' Paylin?" here, although you WILL have to confirm you're old enough to view the content. Hah. RawStory also reports that Fox News has concluded that such um... political parody is, indeed, legal. Of course... 'cause Larry's a pro at this.

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Tuesday, October 21, 2008

What the Pf**k?

Jon Stewart had a fabulous bit on McCain spokeswoman Nancy Pfotenhauer's hunt for Real America, and Sarah Palin's framing of pro-America parts of this country, of Michele Bachmann's call to find out who's pro-America. Jon has a helpful formula: "Right now you may be asking yourself, 'Am I one of these un-Americans I've been hearing so much about?'"

Daily Show also had a hilarious segment on what it's like to be the Mayor of Wasilla.

Oh and Resident Congressional Nutjob Michele Bachmann said today on Politico that she never called all liberals anti-American, and that she often "reaches across the aisle"... to brand some with a Scarlet "A-A" for Anti-American no doubt.

Once again, I have to marvel -- what did we ever do before YouTube? I feel like there's twice as much energy around this election as any other I've seen in my life, and I believe it's due in great part, to the advances in Net technology. Now you can watch speeches, gaffes, examine photos in ways we never could before, and more people are participating because of it.
Arianna Huffington points out the enormous role that the new media has played in this election. "The Internet has enabled the public to get to know candidates in a much fuller and more intimate way than in the old days (i.e. four years ago), when voters got to know them largely through 30-second campaign ads and quick sound bites chosen by TV news producers. Compare that to the way over 6 million viewers (on YouTube alone) were able to watch the entirety of Obama's 37-minute speech on race -- or the thousands of other videos posted by the campaign and its supporters. Back in the Dark Ages of 2004, when YouTube (and HuffPost, for that matter) didn't exist, a campaign could tell a brazen lie, and the media might call them on it. But if they kept repeating the lie again and again and again, the media would eventually let it go (see the Swiftboating of John Kerry). Traditional media like moving on to the next shiny thing. But bloggers love revisiting a story. So when Palin kept repeating her bridge to nowhere lie, bloggers kept calling her on it. Andrew Sullivan, for one, has made a cottage industry of calling Palin on her lies. And eventually, the truth filtered up and cost McCain credibility with his true base: journalists.

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What Up, Johnny Mac?

And in another incrutable maverick maneuver, the McCain campaign pulled an aide from a CNN interview that would have made them actually look GOOD. HuffPo sums it up here: "CNN host Rick Sanchez said he was 'mystified' by a last minute decision by the McCain campaign to pull a Muslim grassroots organizer from appearing on his show. The aide, Daniel Zubairi, had been scheduled to appear on Sanchez's mid-day program after he was caught on video talking down an anti-Muslim protester outside a McCain rally in Woodbridge, Virginia. But, even after telling the network that an interview was 'good to go,' the McCain shop pulled Zubairi at the last minute, leaving Sanchez in limbo on live TV. 'Wouldn't you think they would have wanted him to come on?' the CNN host would later tell the Huffington Post. 'What the guy did was courageous. I called him heroic. I'm mystified why they wouldn't embrace him for his actions. Maybe they didn't like the story, but I'll tell you. I thought it was presented it in a very transparent way, if anything I kind of gushed philosophically about how impressive and real his reaction was to the protester's hateful message. It seemed to show some of the best of McCain supporters, didn't it?'"

The World on Its Ear

In the upside down world in which Iceland is being bailed out by the IMF, Cuba has discovered that they are actually rich --oil rich that is. Apparently the island is sitting on a field that could yield 20 billion barrels of oil. Hello world... introducing the Kuwait of the Carribbean...Can I hear a pro-Cuba shout-out from the candidates...? No? Maybe later.

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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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Obama Strategy

For perennial worriers like me, this Sunday's NY Times magazine will have a big article on Obama, which they've already posted online. It offers lots of interesting and encouraging insights into how he views this campaign and how it's been organized.

"Obama, though, has talked from the beginning about running a "50-state" campaign, and he has spent considerable time and money in more culturally conservative parts of the country where Democrats rarely, if ever, venture, from Elko and Appalachia to Billings, Mont., and Las Cruces, N.M.... He told me, when we talked, that Washington's us-versus-them divisions had made it impossible for any president to find solutions to a series of generational challenges, from Iraq to global climate change. 'If voters are similarly polarized and if they're seeing two different realities, a Sean Hannity reality and a Keith Olbermann reality, then we're not going to be able to get done the work we need to get done,' Obama said."

Perhaps Obama has discovered more fertile ground than we might imagine. NY Times columnist Roger Cohen discovers he can find common ground with folks in Branson, Missouri: I came to Branson and its mayor with my liberal prejudices and was disarmed. Presley reminded me of my ex-mother-in-law, another brisk, pragmatic, funny, no-nonsense Republican Midwesterner with little tolerance for debt, delinquency, dumbness or dereliction of duty. She also reminded me of a great American virtue: getting on with it. And it dawned on me that Palin, with her vile near-accusations of treason against Barack Obama, her cloying doggone hymns to small-town U.S.A., her with-us-or-against-us refrain, is really an impostor.

The Washington Post endorses Barack Obama for President: "Mr. Obama is a man of supple intelligence, with a nuanced grasp of complex issues and evident skill at conciliation and consensus-building. At home, we believe, he would respond to the economic crisis with a healthy respect for markets tempered by justified dismay over rising inequality and an understanding of the need for focused regulation. Abroad, the best evidence suggests that he would seek to maintain U.S. leadership and engagement, continue the fight against terrorists, and wage vigorous diplomacy on behalf of U.S. values and interests. Mr. Obama has the potential to become a great president. Given the enormous problems he would confront from his first day in office, and the damage wrought over the past eight years, we would settle for very good.

"Mr. Obama's temperament is unlike anything we've seen on the national stage in many years. He is deliberate but not indecisive; eloquent but a master of substance and detail; preternaturally confident but eager to hear opposing points of view. He has inspired millions of voters of diverse ages and races, no small thing in our often divided and cynical country. We think he is the right man for a perilous moment."

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Thursday, October 16, 2008

Anger Management Edition

Jesus God Almighty in heaven, please somebody, Help me! My head just exploded.

It's a good thing this was the last damn debate because I am ready to tear my last hair out and stamp myself into two pieces every time I watch one of these things. One more of those and I'll have an aneurysm.

Okay, okay, "Serenity NOW!" snarls Eric.

First things first. Debate transcript from the Times. Read it at your peril. The Times' Caucus blog also provides a liveblogged factcheck, as does the Washington Post.
Plus Politico's bite-sized debate videos.


Debate

So I ask you, who do you want next to the Big Red Button? The frantic, fidgety angry, old guy with a grudge, or the unflappable young guy who doesn't break a sweat even when the rest of us are about ready to pop both eyeballs out with apoplectic rage. If I had to watch McCain every day for four years, I'm fairly certain that I'd stick a freaking ice pick through my brain.

[Breathe... breathe... in with the good, out with the bad... in with the good...]

See, this is why I'm not running for president.

Why does John McCain always have to start things out by mentioning someone who's in the hospital? Talking about folks who are sick is like the ultimate Old Guy thing. "Your knee? My hip!!" First it was Ted Kennedy, now it's Nancy Reagan, who BY THE WAY, hates your guts because you dumped her friend Carol in order to marry a prettier, not-crippled beer heiress. Don't think she's forgotten.

Now, Joe the Plumber (plumBer, livebloggers, it's spelled with a "B", it's not "Joe the Plummer") needs to be put mercifully out of business. If I were drowning in broken pipes I wouldn't call Joe, so you, my friend, now have a dead business because we're bloody well sick of hearing about you. Sorry, you are now "Joe the Collateral Damage."

I loathe listening to McCain. He sounds to me not older and wiser, but actually more childish and petulant. He reminds me of a young friend of mine who, when I tell her she should do something, says "I KNOW. I know how to do it..." Now I can understand when she gets a little kvetchy-- she's six. He's 72 and he's rolling his eyes like a child. The whole ticket is like Winkin', Blinkin' and Nod.

It's like someone told both McCain and Palin that facial tics could win them votes. Watch McCain blink about 45 times when Obama tells him that Joe the Plumber will pay ZERO dollars in healthcare fines. Already, before the debate was even over, someone had started mashing up a YouTube video with the best moments of McCain, set to Gnarls Barkley's "Crazy."

Funny thing is, I had a whole subsection already earmarked for tomorrow called "Eye-rolling." I must be psychic. McCain's worst moment by far was his eye-rolling while Obama talked about free trade. Ah, the splitscreen...

The low point of the debate had to be when Bob Schieffer, (whom I dearly wish could have been replaced by Campbell Brown) goaded each of them to talk trash about each other, to their faces. Great. Thanks Bob, for elevating the discourse. But I have to say I thought McCain walked into a trap by going after the Lewis comment about violent rhetoric. Obama had the perfect opening to go right into a pithy line that works really well: "I think the American people are less interested in our hurt feelings than they are in the issues... I don't mind being attacked for the next three weeks, what the American people can't afford is four more years of failed economic policies." What's even worse, is that as Obama is recounting that Palin never stopped her supporters when people shouted "terrorist" and "kill him," McCain is DOODLING on his yellow Pad.

Obama tries to take the high road and says that they can disagree without being disagreeable, McCain drags it right back into the mud.

And WHAT was with the "air quotes" when he talked about concern for a mother's health. McCain says: "He's [airquotes] health {air quotes] for the mother. You know, that's been stretched by the pro-abortion movement in America to mean almost anything. That's the extreme pro-abortion position, quote, 'health.'" Really? Seriously? You put airquotes around the idea of being concerned for a woman's HEALTH?? Just to be clear, you mean to indicate that you feel that a woman's health is obviously a completely bogus issue compared to a fetus' health.

I take comfort in the fact that as he did the "air quote" gesture, you could hear dozens of cameras clicking away madly. Yes, my paparazzi friends, capture that moment of supreme condescension and absolute filthy insensitivity. At the UK Guardian, Melissa McEwan says tartly, "Ah, yes. Hello there, Straw-Woman Who Gets Abortions Willy-Nilly in Her Third Trimester Because She's a Silly Flibbertigibbet With a Hangnail. Nice to see you again. If McCain hasn't reached the nadir of his appalling campaign with that moment, I don't want to see it when he does."

Okay, must concentrate...finding my Temple of Positivity. I can only beg everyone to please, please, for the love of Mike, please put him out of our misery.

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Debate Number 4 Reaction

First, will it do your blood pressure good to know that Obama was declared the winner by a mile of this last (THANK GOD) debate?

Instapolling:
  • CBS: 53% said Obama won it, 22% thought McCain won it.
  • CNN: 58% for Obama to McCain's 31%.
  • Stan Greenberg with favorable and unfavorable numbers before and after the debate:
      • McCain: 54 favorable / 34 unfavorable
      • Obama: 42 favorable / 42 unfavorable
    • After the debate:
      • McCain: 50 favorable / 48 unfavorable
      • Obama: 72 favorable / 22 unfavorable
NY Times Editorial: "But Mr. McCain stuck to his script, and the nasty tone of his campaign, including a rather bizarre claim that Barack Obama had told a plumber in Ohio that Mr. Obama wanted to take away his wealth...In the debate, Mr. McCain again raised Mr. Obama's old and meaningless association with William Ayers, a violent, 1960s radical who served with Mr. Obama on the board of a charitable foundation. The overall effect was to make Mr. McCain seem angry and desperate, which didn't surprise us much given how badly his campaign has been doing."

Politico: "Debates should not be confused with trips to Lourdes: Few miracles are dispensed. John McCain needed a miracle in his final debate with Barack Obama on Wednesday night, a miracle that would wipe away McCain's deficit in the polls and re-energize his flagging campaign. He did not get one. The clouds did not part. Heavenly choirs were not heard. Instead, the American public heard angry attacks from McCain. Sometimes McCain attacked directly, and sometimes he attacked sarcastically, but he never stopped attacking. And he never rattled Obama. Obama answered every attack and kept his cool. How cool? Obama was so cool that after 90 minutes under blazing TV lights, an ice cube wouldn't have melted on his forehead."

CNN: Gloria Berger predicts that McCain's grimaces would become an enduring media narrative. Already in progress, Gloria. The YouTube of him making faces has been viewed 46,829 times as of 11:45 pm PDT.

David Gergen (on CNN): McCain "looked angry. It was an exercise in anger management up there."

Bob Shrum: "McCain also sounded like an aggrieved coot who thinks this campaign is all about him...When it isn't sad, it's sinister. McCain isn't a candidate anymore, but a negative research dump-- a heedless purveyors of distortion and untruth, a man who started off running on his experience, but ends up now as a right-wing caricature stumbling toward defeat with dishonor."

Brian Beutler: "John McCain says Sarah Palin knows a lot about having children with autism. Presumably he thinks she knows more about this than anybody in the country. Presumably he also thinks autism is approximately equal to Down Syndrome."

A fabulous photo from Emmanuel Dunand/AFP/Getty.

Nora Ephron: "As he smirked and blinked and raised his eyebrows, I couldn't help wondering what tonight's McCain seemed like to all those conservative pundits who'd been hoping a different McCain would show up. Is this what they meant? Is this the John McCain of Bill Kristol's dreams? Whichever McCain shows up, some things stay the same. He's a towel-snapper. He can't land a joke. He seems old. (As Martin Short said on Letterman just after the debate, "The only time he doesn't have to pee is when he's peeing.")

Arianna Huffington: "This debate wasn't decided on the arguments being made. It was won on the reaction shots. Every time Obama spoke, McCain grimaced, sneered, rapidly blinked, or rolled his eyes. 'He looked like Captain Ahab, again and again going after Moby Dick,' John Cusack told me. 'Or an animal caught in a bear trap. He even seemed pissed at Joe the Plumber.'..By contrast, every time McCain was on the attack, Obama was smiling. And the nastier McCain got, the brighter Obama's smile became. It was the non-verbal equivalent of Reagan's disarming "There you go again' -- and it served to underline McCain's need for anger management. The angrier McCain got, the more unruffled Obama appeared.'

Ari Melber: "The entire offensive was muddled, however, by McCain's umbrage. Asked about his running mate's false charge that Obama "palled around with terrorists,' McCain offered an indignant non-sequitur. He demanded that Obama condemn Rep. John Lewis's criticism of incendiary rhetoric at GOP rallies, which McCain said was unfair because it likened his campaign to America's segregation era. 'That, to me, was so hurtful,' he intoned. Yet within minutes, McCain busied himself with the guilt-by-association attacks."

Ron Dreher: "McCain came off as sour, agitated and petulant. Obama -- man, nothing rattles that guy. McCain was two tics away from a vein-popping "You can't handle the truth!" Jack Nicholson moment, I felt. At one point, I thought: Which one of these men would I want in the White House when the 3 a.m. phone call comes in?"

"Grimacing," "petulant," "desperate," "angry" versus "calm," "unruffled"... Amazing, isn't it, the national Gestalt moment we're sharing?

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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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Tuesday, October 14, 2008

Culture Check

Not-Alaska's Favorite Governor

Yesterday's Anchorage Daily News published a searing editorial about Palin and the Troopergate report. Um... I don't think she's America's Favorite Governor anymore... "Sarah Palin's reaction to the Legislature's Troopergate report is an embarrassment to Alaskans and the nation. She claims the report 'vindicates' her. She said that the investigation found 'no unlawful or unethical activity on my part.' Her response is either astoundingly ignorant or downright Orwellian....In plain English, she did something 'unlawful.' She broke the state ethics law. Perhaps Gov. Palin has been too busy to actually read the Troopergate report. Perhaps she is relying on briefings from McCain campaign spinmeisters. That's the charitable interpretation. Because if she had actually read it, she couldn't claim 'vindication' with a straight face."

The Culture Check

Campbell Brown continues to be our national gadfly. On Monday, Brown "issued a sharp indictment of the underlying prejudices of Arabs and Muslims that give rise to such toxic rhetoric in the first place: "So what if he was? So what if Obama was Arab or Muslim? So what if John McCain was Arab or Muslim? Would it matter? When did that become a disqualifier for higher office in our country? When did Arab and Muslim being dirty words, the equivalent of dishonorable or radical?... Of course he's not an Arab. Of course he's not a Muslim, but, honestly, it shouldn't matter."

Good thing Campbell's not a conservative. Those pundits who lean in the conservative direction, but who have come into the light and endorsed Obama find that there's been ...blowback. William F. Buckley's son Christopher writes that "within hours of my endorsement appearing in The Daily Beast it became clear that National Review had a serious problem on its hands. So the next morning, I thought the only decent thing to do would be to offer to resign my column there...While I regret this development, I am not in mourning, for I no longer have any clear idea what, exactly, the modern conservative movement stands for. Eight years of "conservative" government has brought us a doubled national debt, ruinous expansion of entitlement programs, bridges to nowhere, poster boy Jack Abramoff and an ill-premised, ill-waged war conducted by politicians of breathtaking arrogance. As a sideshow, it brought us a truly obscene attempt at federal intervention in the Terry Schiavo case. So, to paraphrase a real conservative, Ronald Reagan: I haven't left the Republican Party. It left me."

On the other side of things, Obama picks up an endorsement from the AFL-CIO. I guess the union's statement on 2nd Amendment rights is where we have to be on this...? Just keep saying to yourself, "Coalition-building, coalition-building...": "I want to protect two things: my job and my gun. That's why I'm supporting Barack Obama."

And on his new Chocolate News show on Comedy Central, comedian David Allen Grier points out to anyone who doesn't want to vote for a black President, that Obama is only half-black--so "for the white folks who still can't bring themselves to pull that lever, just vote for the white half."

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Monday, October 13, 2008

Troopergate

"What's right and good doesn't come naturally. You have to stand up and fight for it
-- as if the cause depends on you, because it does."
-- Bill Moyers

Palin: No Ethics, No Compassion, No Brains.

And now the news you've been waiting for: ABUSE OF POWER...a roundup of choice morsels. I guess this answers the question of Who is Sarah Palin? Remember back in September when we kept asking McCain, "Hey, did you VET this woman??"
W H A T ?
  • Um...Gov. Palin, can I remind you...the Anchorage Daily said: "Governor Palin knowingly permitted a situation to continue where impermissible pressure was placed on several subordinates in order to advance a personal agenda ... to get Trooper Michael Wooten fired," Branchflower's report says."Compliance with the code of ethics is not optional. It is an individual responsibility imposed by law, and any effort to benefit a personal interest through official action is a violation of that trust. ... The term 'benefit' is very broadly defined, and includes anything that is to the person's advantage or personal self-interest."
  • AP: "The investigation revealed that Palin's husband, Todd, has extraordinary access to the governor's office and her closest advisers. He used that access to try to get trooper Mike Wooten fired, the report found. The nearly 300-page report does not recommend sanctions or a criminal investigation."
  • Politico: "Retired state prosecutor named Stephen Branchflower noted that, though he interviewed 19 people for the report, Todd Palin and nine aides to the governor were subpoenaed but'"failed to appear.' He wrote that Gov. Palin was not subpoenaed 'out of deference to her position. … However, she was requested to cooperate with the investigation by providing a sworn statement. She has not done so. Governor Palin's sister Molly McCann was requested by me to give a deposition; she declined through her attorney.' Branchflower asserted that an interview with Palin 'would have assisted everyone to better understand her motives and perhaps help explain why she was so apparently intent upon getting Trooper Wooten fired in spite of the fact she knew he had been disciplined following the Administrative Investigation.'"
  • Prior to the official report from the independent panel, McCain and Palin's campaign released the findings from their OWN panel. You know, the one made up of people Palin could fire. (This is my favorite so far...): On the eve of a report on a legislative panel's abuse-of-power investigation into Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin, campaign officials released their own report clearing her of any wrongdoing. Palin, running mate to Republican presidential nominee John McCain, is the subject of two inquiries into whether she abused her power by firing her public safety commissioner. The commissioner says he was dismissed for resisting pressure to fire Palin's former brother-in-law, a state trooper. Lawmakers are expected to release their findings Friday. The report the McCain-Palin campaign released Thursday night says the firing was based on a budget dispute. Since then, the report says, the matter has been muddled with innuendo, rumor and politics." Oh re-e-ally now?
  • Palin has always been a control freak, not that we're surprised. Here's a bit of footage from her Wasilla Mayoral days.
  • The full report from the independent panel.
  • BUT WAIT, there's more: You also get a free set of Ginsu knives, sharpened for Sarah Palin's reputation. Newsweek observes that: "There could be more land mines ahead. Some weeks ago, the McCain team devised a plan to have Palin file an ethics complaint against herself with the State Personnel Board, arguing that it alone was capable of conducting a fair, nonpartisan inquiry into whether she fired Monegan because he refused to fire Wooten, who had been involved in a messy custody battle with her sister. Some Democrats ridiculed the move, noting that the personnel board answered to Palin. But the board ended up hiring an aggressive Anchorage trial lawyer, Timothy Petumenos, as an independent counsel. McCain aides were chagrined to discover that Petumenos was a Democrat who had contributed to Palin's 2006 opponent for governor, Tony Knowles. Palin is now scheduled to be questioned next week, and the counsel's report could be released soon after. 'We took a gamble when we went to the personnel board,' said a McCain aide who asked not to be identified discussing strategy. While the McCain camp still insists Palin 'has nothing to hide,' it acknowledges a critical finding by Petumenos would be even harder to dismiss." Darn that vetting thing again.

Eric points me to this item about French film star and icon of the 1960s Brigitte Bardot, who also heads an animal rights foundation. Bardot writes in an open letter to Vice-Prez candidate Sarah Palin and reported by Agence France-Presse:"I hope you lose these elections because that would be a victory for the world...By denying the responsibility of man in global warming, by advocating gun rights and making statements that are disconcertingly stupid, you are a disgrace to women and you alone represent a terrible threat, a true environmental catastrophe." But Brigitte, tell us how you REALLY feel. Don't hold back.

As for Ms. I-Know-All-About-Energy, there are some questions about her expertise. HuffPo reports that "at a townhall event in Wisconsin on Thursday, Palin was asked by a concerned questioner whether it was true that the United States was shipping 75 percent of its Alaskan oil overseas. She responded by proclaiming it impossible, since Congress had put strict bans on the amount of oil and gas that America could export."

But the Associated Press reported:"No Alaska oil has been exported since 2004, and little if any since 2000, according to the Energy Information Administration and the Congressional Research Service. And Congress has never imposed outright bans on oil exports. Congress prohibited exports of Alaska oil in 1973 when the Alaska oil pipeline was built. But that ban was lifted in 1996 when there were large volumes of Alaska oil coming down from the North Slope and U.S. demand was soft. The Alaska ban has never been reinstated."

In addition, HuffPo goes on, "the Alaska Governor was fond of declaring that her job - as head of state - "has been to oversee nearly 20 percent of the U.S. domestic supply of oil and gas." However, WaPo counters: "According to authoritative Energy Information Administration data, Alaska accounted for just 7.4 percent of total U.S. oil and gas production in 2005."

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Desperate Times

Remember how a few weeks ago we said that desperate parties will reach for desperate measures? It's getting desperate out there for McCain.

Even former McCain strategist John Weaver is a little appalled at the frenzy of hate that has been whipped up at McCain and Palin rallies, saying, " top Republicans have a responsibility to temper this behavior. "People need to understand, for moral reasons and the protection of our civil society, the differences with Sen. Obama are ideological, based on clear differences on policy and a lack of experience compared to Sen. McCain, and from a purely practical political vantage point, please find me a swing voter, an undecided independent, or a torn female voter that finds an angry mob mentality attractive. Sen. Obama is a classic liberal with an outdated economic agenda. We should take that agenda on in a robust manner. As a party we should not and must not stand by as the small amount of haters in our society question whether he is as American as the rest of us. Shame on them and shame on us if we allow this to take hold."

Already , I think McCain may be finding that he can't control the beast that he has unleashed. At a rally on Friday, a McCain supporter went a little far, even for McCain's taste and he tried to dial things back. "I don't trust Obama," a woman said. "I have read about him. He's an Arab." "No, ma'am," McCain said several times, shaking his head in disagreement. "He's a decent, family man, [a] citizen that I just happen to have disagreements with on fundamental issues and that's what this campaign is all about." The crown groaned its disapproval apparently, and booed him. Isn't it wonderful to know that as a full-grown adult you can still behave like you're a three-year old with a loaded weapon?

Obama praised McCain for tempering the tone, "'I want to acknowledge that Senator McCain tried to tone down the rhetoric in his town hall meeting yesterday,' Mr. Obama said, speaking at an early-morning rally in North Philadelphia. 'I appreciated his reminder that we can disagree while still being respectful of each other. I've said it before, and I'll say it again – Senator McCain has served this country with honor, and he deserves our thanks for that.'" My God, can ANYTHING ruffle this guy? Andrew Sullivan pits it this way: Americans "need a Valium. They can now vote for one for president."

Later in the weekend, Palin dropped the puck at a Philly Flyers hockey game, and was roundly booed. I could say she reaps what she has sown, but to be honest, I have to say I'm not deriving any pleasure at all out of this. I think it's just nasty ugly and so completely not what the country needs right now, or frankly at any time.

On the Road in Scranton

Hillary and Bill Clinton campaigned in the key area of Scranton with native son Joe Biden and his wife Jill. Just making sure Pennsylvania stays blue... Hillary reminded us: "Make no mistake about it. We've done it before and we will do it again. America will once again rise from the ashes of the Bushes."

Climate Change

Georgia Congressman and civil rights leader John Lewis, whom McCain has named as a figure he respects, said in a statement to Politico: "What I am seeing reminds me too much of another destructive period in American history," Lewis said in a statement issued today for Politico's Arena forum. "Sen. McCain and Gov. Palin are sowing the seeds of hatred and division, and there is no need for this hostility in our political discourse."

Lewis didn't accuse McCain of imitating Wallace, but suggested there were similarities.

"George Wallace never threw a bomb," Lewis noted. "He never fired a gun, but he created the climate and the conditions that encouraged vicious attacks against innocent Americans who were simply trying to exercise their constitutional rights. Because of this atmosphere of hate, four little girls were killed on Sunday morning when a church was bombed in Birmingham, Alabama."

McCain responded to this ouch moment:
"I am saddened that John Lewis, a man I've always admired, would make such a brazen and baseless attack on my character and the character of the thousands of hardworking Americans who come to our events to cheer for the kind of reform that will put America on the right track," the GOP nominee said in a statement this afternoon.

He added: "I call on Senator Obama to immediately and personally repudiate these outrageous and divisive comments that are so clearly designed to shut down debate 24 days before the election. Our country must return to the important debate about the path forward for America."

And Obama's reply to that suggestion
:
"Senator Obama does not believe that John McCain or his policy criticism is in any way comparable to George Wallace or his segregationist policies," said Obama spokesman Bill Burton. "But John Lewis was right to condemn some of the hateful rhetoric that John McCain himself personally rebuked just last night, as well as the baseless and profoundly irresponsible charges from his own running mate that the Democratic nominee for President of the United States 'pals around with terrorists.'

"As Barack Obama has said himself, the last thing we need from either party is the kind of angry, divisive rhetoric that tears us apart at a time of crisis when we desperately need to come together. That is the kind of campaign Senator Obama will continue to run in the weeks ahead."

Jeez people, can we just get ON with it?

I'm reminded, a little sadly, of what Obama said at the DNC way back before any of this really took off, "But what I will not do is suggest that the Senator takes his positions for political purposes. Because one of the things that we have to change in our politics is the idea that people cannot disagree without challenging each other's character and patriotism. The times are too serious, the stakes are too high for this same partisan playbook. So let us agree that patriotism has no party. I love this country, and so do you, and so does John McCain."

It's been another bad week for McCain, whose reputation as a military hero took a hit with the Tim Dickinson Rolling Stone story, which recounted McCain's less-than-heroic actions on the day when the fuel tank on his jet caught fire on the deck of the USS Forrestal, setting off a missile and ultimately causing one of the worst disasters in modern U.S. naval history. McCain was not to be found at the forefront of fire-fighters, but rather in the ready room, where he retreated after jumping out of his damaged jet.

Jeff Stein at the Congressional Quarterly takes that story a step further, questioning whether McCain actually played a more pivotal role in the missile accident on the USS Forrestal. "According to these accounts, McCain, whose A4-E Skyhawk was queued up in a line of jets waiting to take off, "wet started" his engine, a prank designed to startle a trailing pilot with a flame of exploding kerosene."

Normally, it's a harmless, common stunt by "cowboy pilots." But on this occasion the exploding kerosene caused a six-foot long Zuni rocket under the trailing pilot's wing to launch across the flight deck.

"[It] ripped through the fuel tank of McCain's aircraft," Dickinson writes. "Hundreds of gallons of fuel splashed onto the deck and came ablaze. Then: Clank. Clank. Two 1,000-pound bombs dropped from under the belly of McCain's stubby A-4 . . . into the fire."

McCain rolled out of his cockpit onto the deck and ran for his life, Dickinson writes.

"Just then, one of his bombs 'cooked off,' blowing a crater in the deck and incinerating the sailors who had rushed past McCain with hoses and fire extinguishers."

But according to historian Mary Hershberger, writing on the liberal Truthdig.com site, McCain panicked.

"Some of those who were on the Forrestal and other persons familiar with the ordnance told me that because the rocket did not hit McCain's craft, only actions by the pilot could have caused any bomb to fall from McCain's Skyhawk," wrote Hershberger, who in 2005 published a biography, "Jane Fonda's War," advertised as "an antidote to the 'Hanoi Jane' myth."

"These sources . . . who spoke under the condition that they not be publicly identified," Hershberger wrote, "agree with each other that, if any bomb fell from the McCain airplane, it was because of actions that he took either in error or panic upon seeing the fire on the deck or in his hasty exit from the plane. Two switches in the cockpit of a Skyhawk need to be thrown to drop such a bomb, according to the sources."

It might set the In-the-tank-for-Obama-ites teeth on edge, will anyone pay attention? Probably not.

Anyway, one could argue that it' not necessary to dig into the past to help the McCain campaign implode. They seem to be doing fine all on their own thanks very much. This morning, Bill Kristol called McCain' campaign "pathetic" on Fox News Sunday. Andrew Sullivan hilariously characterizes McCain's effort as coyote-esque.

Over the weekend, CBS announced that McCain and Dave Letterman have tentatively made up-- or at least, McCain will appear on Dave's show. That could be good, or really bad...

And SNL ran a repeat this week, but through the magic of the internet, you can see them spoof the last McCain-Obama debate here. No Tina Fey, but still funny.

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