Sunday, June 21, 2009

Iran protests go on--Iranian gov't divided

Meanwhile prominent figures, many who were part of the Iranian Revolution, issued conflicting statements, a sign that Iran's leadership was far from unified.

The foreign minister, Manouchehr Mottaki, said Sunday an investigation into claims of fraud in the election will be announced by week's end.

But speaking to foreign diplomats in Tehran, he called the possibility of irregularities almost nonexistent.

"The possibility of organized and comprehensive disruption and irregularities in this election is almost close to zero given the composition of the people who are holding the election," Mottaki said.

On the other hand, Iran's influential parliamentary speaker Ali Larijani implicated the same people -- the Guardian Council -- of siding with one candidate.

"Although the Guardian Council is made up of religious individuals, I wish certain members would not side with a certain presidential candidate," Larijani told the Islamic Republic of Iran Broadcasting (IRIB) on Saturday, without naming whom he meant.

Read more at CNN.com.

Labels: ,

Saturday, June 20, 2009

Roger Cohen reports from Tehran

I also know that Iran’s women stand in the vanguard. For days now, I’ve seen them urging less courageous men on. I’ve seen them get beaten and return to the fray. “Why are you sitting there?” one shouted at a couple of men perched on the sidewalk on Saturday. “Get up! Get up!”

Another green-eyed woman, Mahin, aged 52, staggered into an alley clutching her face and in tears. Then, against the urging of those around her, she limped back into the crowd moving west toward Freedom Square. Cries of “Death to the dictator!” and “We want liberty!” accompanied her."
Read more at NYTimes.com.

Labels: ,

Thursday, June 18, 2009

Ayatollah Khamenei to lead Friday prayers

Ayatollah Khamenei Grits.

According to the Iranian state-funded PressTV: "Leader of the Islamic Revolution Ayatollah Seyyed Ali Khamenei will lead this week's Friday prayers in Tehran University."

Uh-huh, is that such a good idea after you know, the raids on students dorms at Tehran U. and all?

Real question -- have they made the switch to digital?

Read more at Ayatollah Khamenei to lead Friday prayers:


Labels: ,

Shadowy Iranian Vigilantes Vow Bolder Action

Oh I'm not liking this at all...

The daytime protests across the Islamic republic have been largely peaceful. But Iranians shudder at the violence unleashed in their cities at night, with the shadowy vigilantes known as Basijis beating, looting and sometimes gunning down protesters they tracked during the day.

The vigilantes plan to take their fight into the daylight on Friday, with the public relations department of Ansar Hezbollah, the most public face of the Basij, announcing that they planned a public demonstration to expose the “seditious conspiracy” being carried out by “agitating hooligans.”

“We invite the vigilant people who are always in the arena to make their loud objections heard in response to the babbling of this tribe,” said the announcement, carried on the Web site Parsine.

The announcement could be the first indication that the government was taking its gloves off, Iranian analysts noted, because up to this point the Basijis, usually deployed as the shock troops to end any public protests, have been working in stealth.


Read more at NYTimes.com.

Labels: ,

Tuesday, June 16, 2009

Will they remove Khamenei?

Appearing on CNN last night, Iran expert Reza Aslan reported this:

There are very interesting things that are taking place right now. Some of my sources in Iran have told me that Ayatollah Rafsanjani, who is the head of the Assembly of Experts -- the eighty-six member clerical body that decides who will be the next Supreme Leader, and is, by the way, the only group that is empowered to remove the Supreme Leader from power -- that they have issued an emergency meeting in Qom.

Now, Anderson, I have to tell you, there's only one reason for the Assembly of Experts to meet at this point, and that is to actually talk about what to do about Khamenei. So, this is what I'm saying, is that we're talking about the very legitimacy, the very foundation of the Islamic Republic is up in the air right now. It's hard to say what this is going to go.

Read more at Iran Updates (VIDEO): Live-Blogging The Uprising:

Labels: ,

Keller of 'NYT' in Iran: 'The Iranians Watch Us Closely'

Executive Editor Bill Keller of The New York Times, who has been in Iran for the past week -- and done some unexpected reporting -- tells E&P in two e-mails today that he originally went there to see his reporters in action, but then "plunged in" when the post-election story grew so big.

Keller responded to a request for information on his trip.

"Too busy to do justice to the subject," he wrote to E&P.

"Briefly, I came to watch our reporters in action and to get a (first) taste of a big subject. I try to get out in the field as often as I can, because nothing else gives you as good a sense of the complexities and texture of a story.

"I usually don't write on these trips, but this story got so big, and the correspondents were so welcoming of an extra pair of hands, that I plunged in. It reminds me why I got into this business. (Also, no one here wants to talk about the future of the newspaper business.)"


Read more at Keller of 'NYT' in Iran: 'The Iranians Watch Us Closely'

Labels: ,

Monday, June 15, 2009

Social Networks Spread Iranian Defiance Online

As the embattled government of President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad appears to be trying to limit Internet access and communications in Iran, new kinds of social media are challenging those traditional levers of state media control and allowing Iranians to find novel ways around the restrictions.

Iranians are blogging, posting to Facebook and, most visibly, coordinating their protests on Twitter, the messaging service. Their activity has increased, not decreased, since the presidential election on Friday and ensuing attempts by the government to restrict or censor their online communications.

On Twitter, reports and links to photos from a peaceful mass march through Tehran on Monday, along with accounts of street fighting and casualties around the country, have become the most popular topic on the service worldwide, according to Twitter’s published statistics.



Read more at the NYTimes.com.

Labels: ,

Iranians Outwit Net Censors

The Iranian government, more than almost any other, censors what citizens can read online, using elaborate technology to block millions of Web sites offering news, commentary, videos, music and, until recently, Facebook and YouTube. Search for “women” in Persian and you’re told, “Dear Subscriber, access to this site is not possible.”

Last July, on popular sites that offer free downloads of various software, an escape hatch appeared. The computer program allowed Iranian Internet users to evade government censorship.

College students discovered the key first, then spread it through e-mail messages and file-sharing. By late autumn more than 400,000 Iranians were surfing the uncensored Web.

The software was created not by Iranians, but by Chinese computer experts volunteering for the Falun Gong, a spiritual movement that has beem suppressed by the Chinese government since 1999. They maintain a series of computers in data centers around the world to route Web users’ requests around censors’ firewalls.

Read more at the NYTimes.com


Labels: ,

Thursday, June 4, 2009

Obama's Speech to the Muslim World



As usual, the NY Times has an interactive transcript with video.

The White House is making translations of the speech available in 13 languages including Arabic, Chinese, Dari, French, Hebrew, Hindi, Indonesian, Malay, Pashto, Persian, Punjabi, Russian, Turkish and Urdu.

Israel's Benjamin Netanyahu weighs in with a statement:

"The government of Israel expresses hope that President Obama's important speech will lead to a new period of reconciliation between the Arab and Muslim world, and Israel. We share Obama's hope that the American effort will bring about an end to the conflict and to pan-Arab recognition of Israel as the Jewish state.

"Israel is obligated to peace and will do as much as possible to help expand the circle of peace, while taking into consideration our national interests, the foremost of which is security."


Labels: , , , , , , , , ,

Tuesday, April 7, 2009

Obama Makes Unannounced Visit to Iraq

President Obama made an unannounced trip Tuesday to Baghdad, punctuating his week-long overseas trip with a stop to talk to American troops and Iraqi leaders.

Addressing hundreds of troops gathered at a military base here, Mr. Obama said that it was time for Iraqis to “take responsibility for their country,” winning enthusiastic applause. His praise for the performance of the troops was effusive.


Read more at NYTimes.com.

Labels: , , , ,

Monday, April 6, 2009

Obama: "America Is Not a Christian, Jewish or Muslim Nation"

Labels: , , ,

Wednesday, April 1, 2009

Let's all go to the G-20...

President Barack Obama left for Europe Tuesday, packing a weighty agenda as he heads for critical economic and political talks in his first journey across the Atlantic since taking office two months ago.

Obama's focus: a G-20 meeting of the world's major economic powers and a NATO summit marking the 60 years since the alliance was founded to blunt Soviet aggression in Europe.

Obama's eight-day, five-country trip begins early Tuesday, sending him to meet with European leaders who split with the United States over the war in Iraq and the treatment of suspected terrorists at Guantanamo Bay under President George W. Bush.


Read more at HuffPo.


Labels: , , ,

Friday, March 20, 2009

Obama, Peres and Colbert on the Persian New Year - The Lede Blog - NYTimes.com

The man is good. Think about how this sort of reference to Persian literature will play in a place that is so steeped in history and with such a rich literary culture.

Notable in Mr. Obama’s message is his reference to the words of Saadi, a revered Persian poet. Near the end of his remarks, Mr. Obama said:

I know that this won’t be reached easily. There are those who insist that we be defined by our differences. But let us remember the words that were written by the poet Saadi, so many years ago: “The children of Adam are limbs to each other, having been created of one essence.”


Mr. Obama was quoting from a translation Saadi’s poem “Bani A’dam.” The full text of the poem has been rendered into English in several varying translations. During the siege of Sarajevo in 1994, Anthony Lewis quoted the poem in full in a column in The Times. Marizeh Ghiasi, a blogger in Canada who was born in Tehran, published this translation, beneath an image of the original Persian script on her blog:

The children of Adam are the limbs of one body
That share an origin in their creation
When one limb passes its days in pain
The other limbs cannot remain easy
You who feel no pain at the suffering of others
It is not fitting for you to be called human

Labels: , , , , , ,

Thursday, March 19, 2009

Obama Sends Iran Message On Nowruz



Obama speaks in Farsi!

"I want you, the people and leaders of Iran, to understand the future that we seek," Obama concludes. "It is a future with renewed exchanges among our people, and greater opportunities for partnership and commerce. It is a future where the old divisions are overcome, where you, and all of your neighbors and the wider world can live in greater peace and security."

...

Obama ended the address with a Farsi saying, Eid-eh Shoma Mobarak -- which translates to 'have a celebratory new year' -- and included Persian captions in the video."


Read more at HuffPo.

Labels: , , , , ,

Thursday, March 5, 2009

Hillary’s Mystery Woman

For anyone who's wondered who the gorgeous woman is that serves as Hillary Clinton's personal aide, here's a fascinating story on Huma Abedin.
Indeed, in the insular world of New York and D.C. politics, Huma Abedin has become a sort of mythical figure.

On a day-to-day basis, Ms. Abedin is responsible for guiding the Senator from one chaotic event to the next and ensuring that the many hundreds of situations that arise at each—the photo ops, the handshakes, the speeches—go smoothly. The job of “body person”—industry-speak for the catchall role of an omnipresent traveling assistant—is a notoriously grueling one, requiring unfaltering level-headedness and a zeal for multitasking. These folks are constantly on the move, juggling 20 different chores, and they consequently often appear slightly disheveled (or even sweaty).

By most quantifiable measures, Ms. Abedin has the most challenging of those gigs. In the last 10 days, she has accompanied Mrs. Clinton to more than 20 events, involving nine plane flights and several trains. At each stop, they were mobbed.

“I think she has special powers,” said public-radio broadcaster Katia Dunn, who recently crossed paths with Ms. Abedin and Mrs. Clinton at a café on Capitol Hill.

Ms. Dunn explained that she had heard about the “cult of Huma,” but had never met her. “All of a sudden, I turn around and there was this woman I now know to be Huma. And it wasn’t just that she was gorgeous—she did just sort of have this presence. She stopped me in my tracks for a second.”

The daughter of an Islamic scholar and a Pakistani-born professor, Abedin still works for Clinton at State.

Read more at The New York Observer.

Labels: ,

Tuesday, March 3, 2009

What Bush was up to...

Oh, please, please, please, can't we prosecute?



New documents show the CIA destroyed nearly 100 tapes of terror interrogations, far more than has previously been acknowledged.

The revelation Monday comes as a criminal prosecutor is wrapping up his investigation in the matter.

The acknowledgment of dozens of destroyed tapes came in a letter filed by government lawyers in New York, where the American Civil Liberties Union has filed a lawsuit seeking more details of terror interrogation programs.

"The CIA can now identify the number of videotapes that were destroyed," said the letter by Acting U.S. Attorney Lev Dassin. "Ninety two videotapes were destroyed."

Yeah, but wait, there's more. You also get a suspension of First Amendment rights...

the memo from the Justice Department's Office of Legal Counsel—along with others made public for the first time Monday—illustrates with new details the extraordinary post-9/11 powers asserted by Bush administration lawyers. Those assertions ultimately led to such controversial policies as allowing the waterboarding of terror suspects and permitting warrantless wiretapping of U.S. citizens—steps that remain the subject of ongoing investigations by Congress and the Justice Department. The memo was co-written by John Yoo, at the time a deputy attorney general in the Office of Legal Counsel. Yoo, now a professor at the Boalt Hall School of Law at the University of California, Berkeley, has emerged as one of the central figures in those ongoing investigations.

In perhaps the most surprising assertion, the Oct. 23, 2001, memo suggested the president could even suspend press freedoms if he concluded it was necessary to wage the war on terror. "First Amendment speech and press rights may also be subordinated to the overriding need to wage war successfully," Yoo wrote in the memo entitled "Authority for Use of Military Force to Combat Terrorist Activity Within the United States."





Labels: , , ,

Tuesday, February 24, 2009

President Obama’s Address to Congress


The weight of this crisis will not determine the destiny of this nation. The answers to our problems don't lie beyond our reach. They exist in our laboratories and our universities, in our fields and our factories, in the imaginations of our entrepreneurs and the pride of the hardest-working people on Earth.

Those qualities that have made America the greatest force of progress and prosperity in human history we still possess in ample measure. What is required now is for this country to pull together, confront boldly the challenges we face, and take responsibility for our future once more."

Dang, Poor Nancy Pelosi must have been exhausted after jumping up and sitting down all night.

Other precious moments:
"We can no longer afford to put health care reform on hold." Cut to Hillary Clinton in hot pink in the front row.

"...with the name of Orrin Hatch...." Cut to Orrin, looking down reading his program... Hullo....

Joe Lieberman, slow-clapping at "eliminate the no-bid contracts that have wasted billions in Iraq..."

"I will soon announce a way forward in Iraq that leaves Iraq to its people and responsibly ends this war." Even John McCain gets up for applause.

"I can stand here tonight and say without exception or equivocation that the United States of America does not torture." John McCain is up again. (And yes, he should have led on that issue.)
More stuff:

Labels: , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Friday, February 20, 2009

U.S. officials: Hamas slipped note to Obama via Kerry

It said, "Meet me behind the gym after recess...."
Islamic fundamentalist group Hamas passed Sen. John Kerry a letter for President Obama while Kerry visited Gaza on Thursday, senior State Department officials said.

The letter for the president is in the hands of the U.S. Consulate in Jerusalem, the officials said Friday.

Kerry, the Democratic chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, toured the devastation in Gaza and met with officials from the U.N. Works Relief Agency, the main provider of humanitarian aid in Gaza.

Frederick Jones, the committee's communications director, told CNN at the end of Kerry's meeting with UNRWA chief Karen Abu Zayed that 'she handed [Kerry] a letter addressed to the president of the United States along with other materials.'
Read more at CNN.com.

Labels: , , , ,

Tuesday, December 9, 2008

Bush early report card

ProPublica has an early report card on Bush, by the Numbers:
"The final report card for George W. Bush won’t be in the mail for another few years. (Nixon’s is still being revised -- and, for that matter, Lincoln’s.) But with just a few weeks to go before the 43rd president moves back to Texas, it’s not too early to measure the impact of his policies across American life.

Bush campaigned on a promise of smaller government, a pledge he kept only in part. He stripped staff members and resources from areas like environmental, health and corporate regulatory enforcement. But the extended wars in Iraq and Afghanistan and the worst financial crisis in decades swelled the national debt to its highest level in absolute terms, and its highest since the 1950s relative to GDP."

National Debt on Election Day

2000: $7.1 trillion
2008: $10.6 trillion
Adjusted to 2008 dollars. Source: Treasury Department.

Percentage of Americans without health insurance

2001: 14%
2007: 15%

Labels: , ,

Tuesday, December 2, 2008

Karl Rove makes me angry

Nope, I'm still not able to stomach him.

Rove: We Wouldn't Have Invaded Iraq If We Knew The Truth About WMDs: "In what was a remarkable admission that contradicted - to a large extent - the past statements from his onetime boss, former Bush strategist Karl Rove said on Tuesday evening that had the President known Iraq did not possess weapons of mass destruction, the United States would not have gone to war.

'In the aftermath of 9/11 the concern was about a tyrant accused of enormous human rights abuses,' but who also possessed weapons of mass destruction, said Rove. 'Absent that, I suspect that the administration's course of action would have been to work to find more creative ways to constrain him like in the 90s.'"

Type your summary here

Type rest of the post here

Labels: , ,

Sunday, November 30, 2008

Bush's final defeat: A timetable for withdrawal

Looks like a timetable, smells like a timetable. Yep, after saying he'd never agree to a timetable for withdrawal from Iraq, Bush has quietly agreed to a timetable. At this point though, he's so irrelevant that hardly anyone even noticed.
Peter Galbraith, a top Iraq expert and former ambassador to Croatia, issued a statement today on the status of forces agreement recently signed by the United States and Iraq...."The agreement represents a stunning and humiliating reversal of course by the Bush administration, which had vehemently opposed any timetable for withdrawal from Iraq," said Galbraith.
Iraqi and American negotiators have been working on the security agreement for over a year. The Iraqi parliament is expected to vote on the pact on Wednesday. To pass, the agreement needs to get 138 votes out of 275 Iraqi lawmakers and also must be ratified by the Iraqi presidential council.
"For the last two years, President Bush has pretended that Prime Minister Nouri Al Maliki is a democrat and an American ally. In fact, Maliki is a sectarian Shiite politician who heads a government dominated by pro-Iranian religious parties," remarked Galbraith. "The U.S. presence now no longer serves the interests of Iraq's ruling Shiite religious parties or their Iranian allies, so we are now being asked to leave."
The agreement mandates that "all U.S. combat forces" withdraw from urban areas in Iraq by June 30, 2009, and that "all U.S. forces" withdraw from the country by December 31, 2011. The agreement upholds Iraq's "sovereign right" to demand the departure of U.S. forces anytime and recognizes the United States' "sovereign right" to remove its forces earlier than the end of 2011.
....The agreement also bars permanent American bases in Iraq, prohibits the United States from using Iraqi territory to launch attacks against other nations, and bars any residual U.S. forces in Iraq beyond the end of 2011.
Galbraith concluded: "While U.S. withdrawal is made easier by the fact that both the Iraqi government and the new U.S. administration want American troops out, the confluence of events leading to the agreement underscores the folly of President Bush's lost Iraq war."




Labels: , , ,

Tuesday, November 18, 2008

Hillary as SOS

The NY Times weighs the idea of Hillary Clinton as Secretary of State. Let the frenzy of speculation begin...
I have to say, I'm not against the idea, especially after it was pointed out that Kennedy shot down Hillary's bid to head a sub-committee on health care... Perhaps it would be better to use her skills in the vast frightening arena of world politics...:

"In reality, Mrs. Clinton and Mr. Obama are much closer to each other on the global issues that will confront the Obama administration. While Mrs. Clinton voted to authorize the Iraq war in 2002, so did a majority of her Democratic colleagues in the Senate. Since then, she and Mr. Obama, who opposed the Iraq war, have found their way to similar positions on a timetable for withdrawing American troops. They both support sending additional troops to Afghanistan, and agree on climate change and Israeli-Palestinian peace efforts.

And while they publicly sparred during the primary over whether Mr. Obama, as president, should meet with Iranian leaders without preconditions, Mr. Obama has since said that such an outreach would first involve lower-level preparatory work, a position that is closer to Mrs. Clinton’s."


Labels: , , , ,

Tuesday, October 21, 2008

Senate Race Roundup

With positive numbers for Obama all over the country, Democrats are hoping the love will help candidates for other offices down the ticket, particularly in Senate races. The Dems have a simple majority in the Senate with 51 senators in their column IF Joe Lieberman votes (as he often does) with them. Should the Dems pick up ten or even nine seats, they would have enough votes to be able to block any potential filibustering. Below are 15 key Senate races with polling numbers from the RealClearPolitics agreggator. (States in blue are potential Dem pickups. States in light blue are possible, but unlikely pickups.)
  • Virginia: Highly regarded Republican Senator John Warner decided to retire last year leaving the opening for Democrats, who won the other Senate seat with Jim Webb's populist message. The extremely popular former governor, Democrat Mark Warner, leads here by 27 points over the other former governor, Jim Gilmore.
  • New Mexico: Tom Udall, the Democratic running for the open U.S Senate seat in New Mexico, leads here by nearly 18 points, and will probably continue to show strongly especially given the release of a powerful new ad featuring Army Sergeant Erik Schei, who was gravely injured by in Iraq and is now forced to communicate through a speaking aid.
  • Alaska: We're all wondering if Ted Stevens, the incumbent Republican Senator, can seriously pull it off while under indictment on 7 felony charges. His opponent Mark Begich leads by 1.6 points.
  • Colorado: If you're Republican, things are kinda bleak here. Democrat Mark Udall, a contender for a vacant Republican seat, leads his Republican opponent by 9.3 points. The National Republican Senatorial Committee just pulled their money out of the race for the Senate here.
  • New Hampshire: Republican incumbent and former GHW Bush chief of staff John Sununu is fighting hard in the Granite State against Democratic former Governor Jeanne Shaheen, the first woman elected to that office in NH, who leads by almost 6 points. The conservative and anti-abortion Sununu made a mark co-sponsoring energy and environment legislation and hoped to coast on McCain's coattails, but at the moment Obama leads by 9 points here.
  • North Carolina: In 2002, Republican incumbent Senator Elizabeth Dole (the 72-year old wife of Bob Dole) won handily. But in this year's election against Dem Kay Hagan, Dole has had to fight to gain any ground. Hagan, the niece of Florida Senator Lawton Chiles, is well funded by the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee and may be benefitting from Obama's recent rise in the polling here. Or maybe vice versa. Hagan leads in every poll by an average of 3 points.
  • Oregon: Two-term Republican incumbent Gordon Smith is fighting a serious challenge from Oregon House Speaker Jeff Merkley which has only intensified following Smith's finessing of positions on the $700 billion bailout. Merkley leads here by nearly 4 points, despite Smith's attempts to link himself to Ted Kennedy and Barack Obama.
  • Minnesota: Incumbent first-term Republican senator Norm Coleman is the formerly Democratic mayor of St. Paul, who left the Dem. Party in 1996 to join the GOP. He's up against Air America radio host Al Franken in one of this year's more high-profile races, and in a three-way race with the addition of Independent Dean Barkley. Franken leads Coleman by a narrow 2 points, which may increase after Sen. Hillary Clinton comes to Minnesota to campaign today.
  • Kentucky: Despite some concenrs about blowback from the ousting of a scandal-ridden Republican governor, Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell seems to be capably defending his seat against the Democratic candidate Bruce Lunsford with a lead of 4 points.
  • Georgia: The fabulously named Saxby Chambliss, the Republican incumbent who hopes to gain a second term has battled Obama's Democratic registration drive in what the Dems hoped might be a possible pickup state this year. Chambliss leads here by nearly 3 points, against a nearly unknown opponent although that's slim in a race that Chambliss was expected to dominate.
  • Mississippi: Roger Wicker was the Republican choice to finish out the remaining four years of Trent Lott's Senate term, a seat he's been keeping warm since MS Governor Haley Barbour appointed him to fill it until the November election. In order to do so, though, Wicker had to vacate his House district seat which subsequently went Democratic in a surprise twist in the May special elections. Still, Wicker leads here by 2.7 points, and the Republican National Committee has said that it will continue to put money into supporting his campaign.
  • Louisiana: Democratic incumbent Mary Landrieu was a top target for the GOP this year, but with limited resources and time running out, Landrieu's 13 point lead caused the NRSC to pull its advertising dollars from the Louisiana Senate race.
  • Maine: Moderate Republican incumbent Susan Collins will likely win her bid for a third term in her Senate seat, though it breaks her promise to only serve two terms. She leads here by 13 points.
  • New Jersey: Democratic incumbent Frank Lautenberg's seat looks safe here, as his lead is well into the double digits with 12 points. The Republicans had hoped to take this seat with a popular moderate Anne Estabrook, but she suffered a minor stroke in March and was replaced by former Rep. Dick Zimmer.
  • Nebraska: Republican former Governor Mike Johanns leads by a comfortable 14 points in this race to replace retiring Senator Chuck Hagel.
By the way, here are a few other non-critical races that the Democrats lead in, just for kicks:
  • Joe Biden (Delaware) leads by 37 points
  • John Kerry (Massachussetts) by 28 points
  • Dick Durbin (Illinois) by 29 points
  • Tom Harkin (Iowa) by 18 points
  • Carl Levin (Michigan) by 25 points
  • Max Baucus (Montana) by 33 points
  • Jack Reed (Rhode Island) by 52 points
  • Tim Johnson (South Dakota) by 25 points
  • Jay Rockefeller (West Virginia) by 28 points.
Republicans are feeling a crunch -- this isn't their year, and frankly if were in charge of this party (STOP LAUGHING, everyone) I'd tell them that they need to forget this year, save some money and start working NOW on a serious reassessment of their own labels and priorities. In case you missed it, a couple of weeks ago, Republican Rep. Tom Davis (who's quitting this year after seven terms serving the Virginia 11th District) was profiled in a fascinating NY Times Magazine piece, which detailed his frustrations with the governance system and with his own party. "The way Davis sees it, the system has become dysfunctional. Bush has so destroyed the party's public standing and Congress has become so infected with a win-at-all-costs mentality that there is no point in staying. 'You know, the Cubs fans used to put the bags over their heads,' he told me when we met for eggs at Mickey's Dining Car in St. Paul the first morning of the Republican National Convention. 'That's what I feel when you say you're from Congress, because there are just so many things we're not doing.'"

Sen. Barack Obama holds leads in four key counties that will go a long way toward determining the eventual winner in four important swing states — Missouri, Ohio, Pennsylvania and Virginia — according to a new Politico/Insider Advantage survey. InsiderAdvantage pollster Matt Towery explained Obama's success in these areas is a result of his strength among independents and voters between the ages of 30 and 44. "That is the most angry group of voters that we have this year, with regard to the Republicans," Towery said. "I see that in almost every poll I look at." Angry? You don't say.

And congratulations COLORADO! McCain is now looking for ways to win the election without winning your state! (Unfortunately, you'll still have to sit though hundreds of his national attack ads and robo-calls, just like the rest of us...)

Labels: , , , , , , ,

Monday, October 20, 2008

Ground Control to Major Tom Edition

I took a weekend off before we get into the final two week frenzy, but of course, the campaign cycle is inexorable--YIKES there was STILL lots of news, so let's get down to it!

Colin Powell
In case you missed this over the weekend, General Colin Powell gave his endorsement to Obama on Meet the Press on Sunday. Along the way, Powell makes some excellent and very pointed comments about the way the discourse has devolved during this election cycle.
I'm also troubled by, not what Senator McCain says, but what members of the party say. And it is permitted to be said such things as, "Well, you know that Mr. Obama is a Muslim." Well, the correct answer is, he is not a Muslim, he's a Christian. He's always been a Christian. But the really right answer is, what if he is? Is there something wrong with being a Muslim in this country? The answer's no, that's not America. Is there something wrong with some seven-year-old Muslim-American kid believing that he or she could be president? Yet, I have heard senior members of my own party drop the suggestion, "He's a Muslim and he might be associated terrorists." This is not the way we should be doing it in America.

I feel strongly about this particular point because of a picture I saw in a magazine. It was a photo essay about troops who are serving in Iraq and Afghanistan. And one picture at the tail end of this photo essay was of a mother in Arlington Cemetery, and she had her head on the headstone of her son's grave. And as the picture focused in, you could see the writing on the headstone. And it gave his awards--Purple Heart, Bronze Star--showed that he died in Iraq, gave his date of birth, date of death. He was 20 years old. And then, at the very top of the headstone, it didn't have a Christian cross, it didn't have the Star of David, it had crescent and a star of the Islamic faith. And his name was Kareem Rashad Sultan Khan, and he was an American. He was born in New Jersey. He was 14 years old at the time of 9/11, and he waited until he can go serve his country, and he gave his life. Now, we have got to stop polarizing ourselves in this way. And John McCain is as nondiscriminatory as anyone I know. But I'm troubled about the fact that, within the party, we have these kinds of expressions.

Let's hope cooler heads can prevail. There was an bizarre incident at a McCain rally in Virginia where a McCain supporter tried to push the idea that Obama is a Muslim again and ran into trouble with McCain staff who are actually Muslim. There are Islamic McCain supporters??

After Meet the Press, Powell had more to say. And of course, there was a lot of buzz for the rest of the weekend. Huff Po gathers reaction from across the political spectrum, with Newt Gingrich on This Week making the point that it eliminates the "experience" argument. And more reaction to this endorsement from all over, on Politico.com.

Oh, and Colin Powell also said we might think about talking with our enemies..."I think the president has to reach out to the world and show that there is a new president, a new administration that is looking forward to working with our friends and allies. And in my judgment, also willing to talk to people who we have not been willing to talk to before. Because this is a time for outreach."

More Endorsements:

As of this morning, Obama has picked up 112 newspaper endorsements, compared to McCain's 39. The list for Obama--which includes papers in key swing states like Detroit Free Press, Buffalo News, Cleveland's Plain Dealer, Palm Beach (FL) Post, New York's Daily News, Miami Herald, Philadelphia Inquirer, The Oregonian, Denver Post, Atlanta Journal-Constitution, The Salt Lake Tribune, Kansas City Star, and Chicago Sun-Times.

In a real shocker, two solid Bush papers in 2004, the Houston Chronicle and Austin American-Statesman, also came out for Obama on Sunday.


LA Times: "Our nation has never before had a candidate like Obama, a man born in the 1960s, of black African and white heritage, raised and educated abroad as well as in the United States, and bringing with him a personal narrative that encompasses much of the American story but that, until now, has been reflected in little of its elected leadership. The excitement of Obama's early campaign was amplified by that newness. But as the presidential race draws to its conclusion, it is Obama's character and temperament that come to the fore. It is his steadiness. His maturity. These are qualities American leadership has sorely lacked for close to a decade...We may one day look back on this presidential campaign in wonder. We may marvel that Obama's critics called him an elitist, as if an Ivy League education were a source of embarrassment, and belittled his eloquence, as if a gift with words were suddenly a defect. In fact, Obama is educated and eloquent, sober and exciting, steady and mature. He represents the nation as it is, and as it aspires to be."

Chicago Tribune, in the paper's first ever endorsement of a Demoncratic Party nominee for president: "On Dec. 6, 2006, this page encouraged Obama to join the presidential campaign. We wrote that he would celebrate our common values instead of exaggerate our differences. We said he would raise the tone of the campaign. We said his intellectual depth would sharpen the policy debate. In the ensuing 22 months he has done just that. Many Americans say they're uneasy about Obama. He's pretty new to them. We can provide some assurance. We have known Obama since he entered politics a dozen years ago. We have watched him, worked with him, argued with him as he rose from an effective state senator to an inspiring U.S. senator to the Democratic Party's nominee for president. We have tremendous confidence in his intellectual rigor, his moral compass and his ability to make sound, thoughtful, careful decisions. He is ready."

Labels: , , , , , ,

Friday, October 17, 2008

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."

Labels: , , , , ,

Thursday, October 16, 2008

These Pumps Are Made for Walkin'

Last week, Cindy said that she wants Obama to walk a mile in her $475 Taryn Rose pumps. "I would suggest that Sen. Obama change shoes with me for just one day, and see what it means, and see what it means to have a loved one serving in the armed forces, and more importantly, serving in harms way," she said at a rally last Wednesday in Bethlehem PA. (If you want, you could skip your health insurance payment for a month and buy the Cali's for $380 now on Zappos.) Does that come with the houses and extra cars too?


ANYway, Diane Tucker at HuffPo reports that it didn't go down well with military wives, who wonder if Cindy would swap those pumps for their workaday wear. "When millionaires such as Cindy McCain act as if they understand our lives, and the lives of everyday military families and veterans, we get upset," said Stephanie Himel-Nelson, deputy director of outreach for Blue Star Families for Obama.

Tucker adds for good measure: "For the record Mrs. McCain: The non-partisan group Disabled American Veterans gives John McCain a 20 percent rating for his voting record on veterans' issues. (It gives Barack Obama an 80 percent rating.) The non-partisan group Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans of America gives McCain a "D" grade for his voting record on issues such as additional funding for combat body armor, and additional funding for post-traumatic stress disorder and other medical treatment. (Obama earned a B +.)"

Labels: , , , ,

Friday, October 10, 2008

The Ugly Kicks Back at You

Talking Points Memo has conveniently gathered together John McCain's World of Sleaze for your enjoyment: "As of October 3rd, the McCain Campaign shifted virtually 100 percent of their advertising money to negative ads. And a few days later began the push to connect Obama to Bill Ayers. And I think we can expect it to get a lot worse."

CNN also reports on how voters feel about the Ugly: "A moving graph at the bottom of the CNN screen during Tuesday night's presidential debate measured the reactions of uncommitted voters in the swing state of Ohio, and it seemed to bear out the theory that negative campaigning draws negative voter reactions. Nearly every time one candidate threw a jab at the other, the voter reaction dipped measurably. The only voters who like to hear the jabs, [Merle Black, professor of politics and government at Emory University] said, are 'the strong partisans. They like to see the other candidate, the other side, criticized.' But those voters, he noted, have already made up their minds, and in criticizing their opponent, candidates are 'not persuading anybody that's persuadable.'"An interesting point...

In an interview with Charlie Gibson, Obama also discusses that certain topic we didn't hear McCain address during the debate. "Well, I am surprised that, you know, we've been seeing some pretty over-the-top attacks coming out of the McCain campaign over the last several days that he wasn't willing to say it to my face."

It's the kind of response that I've come to appreciate these past few weeks when every new attack makes me furious. Thank Goodness someone has a cooler head! "Mr. Obama's response has been to keep firm control of his public image: That of a very cool customer, someone who is deliberative and not easily distracted, who is willing to risk appearing a bit remote if it means that at the same time he appears unruffled by pressure and crisis.

Which reminds me...how long before we get an eruption of the famous McCain temper? Why is it not an issue to talk about that? Take a trip down memory lane with this video. Do you want this man answering the 3 a.m. phone call? He'd likely start a war just because you woke him up. Even military leaders interviewed for Salon earlier this year were a little more than dubious about his penchant for flying off the handle. "'I studied leadership for a long time during 32 years in the military,' said retired Air Force Maj. Gen. Scott Gration, a one-time Republican who is supporting Obama. 'It is all about character. Who can motivate willing followers? Who has the vision? Who can inspire people?' Gration asked. 'I have tremendous respect for John McCain, but I would not follow him.'"

It must be irksome too, to have people constantly reminding you that you're wrong. "In a case of comically awful timing, Petraeus yesterday gave a talk at the Heritage Foundation in which he more or less echoed Barack Obama's views on negotiating with hostile foreign leaders -- views that McCain has repeatedly subjected to criticism and ridicule. Asked by a questioner specifically about the disagreement on this topic that McCain and Obama had at Tuesday night's debate, Petraeus demurred a bit, but said: 'I do think you have to talk to enemies.' 'I'm not trying to get into the middle of domestic politics,' Petraeus also said, 'but I mean what we did do in Iraq ultimately was sit down with some of those that were shooting at us. What we tried to do was identify those who might be reconcilable.'"



Labels: , , , ,

Monday, October 6, 2008

Presidential Character

"If you will think about what you ought to do for other people, your character will take care of itself. Character is a by-product, and any man who devotes himself to its cultivation in his own case will become a selfish prig."

--Woodrow Wilson

The qualities of a great man are "vision, integrity, courage, understanding, the power of articulation, and profundity of character."

--Dwight D. Eisenhower

The Kindness of Strangers

I thought it interesting that, for a man who really had seen and done so much, in Eisenhower's quote above, he doesn't mention "experience" or even "wisdom." And the Woodrow Wilson quote makes the perfect lead-in to this NICE story, which I include because these days, I find myself a little beaten down by the negative turn in the campaigns.



Several bloggers are carrying this little item, which first appeared in the Norwegian daily newspaper Verdens Gang or VG. (You can get a rough idea from the Google Translator here.) It sounds a bit like the all those all-too-heartwarming email forwards, but VG is a well-known newspaper with a circulation of 1 -1.5 million throughout Norway.

Anyway, here's the story: It seems that back in 1988, then newlywed 31-year old Mary Andersen was in the Miami airport, on her way to joining her husband in Norway. She had all of her prized possessions in two suitcases, but because they were overweight, the airline representative told her she would have to pay $103 in luggage surcharges. Mary unfortunately had no money, and her husband had travelled on ahead of her, so she had no one to call. I was completely desperate and tried to think through which of the things I could do without. But the bags were filled with my most prized possessions, "says Mary.

"As tears streamed down her face, she heard a 'kind and friendly voice' behind her saying, 'That's okay, I'll pay for her.' Mary turned around to see a tall man whom she had never seen before.

"She was thrilled to be able to bring both her suitcases to Norway and assured the stranger that he would get his money back. The man wrote his name and address on a piece of paper which he gave to Mary. She thanked him repeatedly. When she finally walked off towards the security checkpoint, he waved goodbye to her.

The name on the piece of paper was "Barack Obama."

A grateful Andersen paid him back the day she got to Norway. Years later, Andersen heard Obama was thinking about running for president and Mary's parents decided to write to Obama supporting him and to thank him for helping their daughter 18 years earlier.

setstatsObama replied in a letter to Mary's parents dated May 4th, 2006 and stamped 'United States Senate, Washington DC':

'I want to thank you for the lovely things you wrote about me and for reminding me of what happened at Miami airport. I'm happy I could help back then, and I'm delighted to hear that your daughter is happy in Norway. Please send her my best wishes. Sincerely,

Barack Obama,
United States senator'.


Mary says that when her friends and associates talk about the election, especially when race relations is the heated subject, she relates the story of the kind man who helped out a stranger-in-need over twenty years ago, years before he had even thought about running for higher office.

In the PBS website for their 1996 TV special on what constitutes Presidential Character, they cite a quote from Dear Abby, "The best index to a person's character is (a) how he treats people who can't do him any good, and (b) how he treats people who can't fight back."

==================================
And now, the news
Dear me, the Dow is down AGAIN today. 800 points. Perhaps we're still gripped by an Olympic fever, because we're just all about setting new records these days. The DJIA dipped below 10,000, which apparently hasn't happened since October 22, 2004. Hmmmm, just before the LAST presidential election. My Fellow Americans, does suffering through a presidential campaign depress you?

setstatsBut I guess we're not the only ones. World markets are coming along for the ride too. You know, this whole "failed bailout" thing kinda puts a fresh perspective on the Germanically snarky article, "The End of Arrogance," which Betty sent me from Der Spiegel, "The Americans are now paying the price for their pride. Gone are the days when the US could go into debt with abandon, without considering who would end up footing the bill. And gone are the days when it could impose its economic rules of engagement on the rest of the world, rules that emphasized profit above all else -- without ever considering that such returns cannot be achieved by doing business in a respectable way." Oh, wait, what's this in the Wall Street Journal? "In tandem with its surprise move to protect deposits, the government of Germany, Europe's largest economy, arranged a bailout for Hypo Real Estate Holding AG, a giant property lender that came close to collapsing after private lenders pulled out of an earlier €35 billion ($48.2 billion) aid plan last week."

$48.2 billion? Pshaw. Hey, Angela Merkel, take that-- we still LEAD, even in Global Thermonuclear Economic Flameouts after ridiculously high-priced bailout plans! Yeah.

If you've got time, play around with the Google chart for the Dow. Via the links on the top of the chart, you can "Zoom" and show how much the Dow has grown since 1970, or just examine how much it's fallen in the last month.

Folks, take some cash--not all of it, just some-- and break it into small bills. Place those bills under your mattress. (Okay, maybe not literally under your mattress.) But you get my point. I have a lot of faith in the resiliency of the world economy, but I also know that there are places in this world with nice people who have woken up one morning to discover that they have no access to cash, and no way of getting access, and therefore no way of eating. I'm just sayin'. Also.

And not only that, it's going to be a cold winter. I get nasty chills just thinking about this report from the AP that thousands of Americans have had their power shut off because they couldn't afford to pay their utility bills. "Shut-offs have been running 17 percent higher than last year among customers of New York state's major utilities, and 22 percent higher in economically hard-hit Michigan. They are up in all or part of dozens of other states, including Pennsylvania, Florida and California, according to an Associated Press check of regulators and energy companies." And here comes winter. My God, this is turning into a Dickens novel

Sidebar: Did we just strike inside Pakistan? Just like John McCain said we should never do??? From WaPo "The attack is apparently the latest in an escalating U.S. campaign of strikes originating across the border in Afghanistan and aimed at al-Qaeda and Taliban targets in the rugged tribal lands of Pakistan. The attacks have generated a substantial backlash in Pakistan, where insurgents have used the strikes as a tool for rallying public opposition to U.S. anti-terrorism efforts."

Pre-Debate Mood

Refresh my memory, folks, was it like this in the last election in 2004? I don't remember having quite this much energy about the candidates before...Even Roger Ebert is voicing political opinions: "I do not like you, John McCain. My feeling has nothing to do with issues. It has to do with common courtesy. During the debate, you refused to look Barack Obama in the eye. Indeed, you refused to look at him at all. Even when the two of you shook hands at the start, you used your eyes only to locate his hand, and then gazed past him as you shook it." (Thanks Mary Ann for the link!)

Rolling Stone comes out with a devastating portrayal of "the real John McCain."

"In its broad strokes, McCain's life story is oddly similar to that of the current occupant of the White House. John Sidney McCain III and George Walker Bush both represent the third generation of American dynasties. Both were born into positions of privilege against which they rebelled into mediocrity. Both developed an uncanny social intelligence that allowed them to skate by with a minimum of mental exertion. Both struggled with booze and loutish behavior. At each step, with the aid of their fathers' powerful friends, both failed upward. And both shed their skins as Episcopalian members of the Washington elite to build political careers as self-styled, ranch-inhabiting Westerners who pray to Jesus in their wives' evangelical churches. In one vital respect, however, the comparison is deeply unfair to the current president: George W. Bush was a much better pilot."

setstatsPolitico reports that the Obama campaign is ready to roll on the attack (Did I not bring up McCain's history as a member of the notorious Keating Five and his "Bahama Mama" vacations weeks ago? Just checking.) : "Pushing back against what it calls McCain's "guilt-by-association" tactics, the Obama campaign is e-mailing millions of supporters a link to a website, KeatingEconomics.com, which will have a 13-minute documentary on the scandal beginning at noon Eastern time on Monday. The overnight e-mails urge recipients to pass the link on to friends." Here's the movie on YouTube.com, but visit the site too, for some interesting archives of articles about McCain's unethical involvement with Charles Keating and Lincoln Savings and Loan.

Hey, at least when Obama attacks, it's about something completely relevant to the ECONOMIC CRISIS AT HAND! It's not about radicals from the 1960s who have nothing to do with how the world is falling to small bits these days. By the way, do take a moment to check out John Wilson's comprehensive "Thirty Lies Refuted about Obama and Ayers."

And more in the negativity report: in an interview with Bill Kristol for his column in the NY Times, Palin unveils her latest attack --on Obama's connection to Reverend Jeremiah Wright. Kristol asks her "if Ayers is a legitimate issue, what about Reverend Wright? She didn't hesitate:
"To tell you the truth, Bill, I don't know why that association isn't discussed more, because those were appalling things that that pastor had said about our great country, and to have sat in the pews for 20 years and listened to that — with, I don't know, a sense of condoning it, I guess, because he didn't get up and leave — to me, that does say something about character. But, you know, I guess that would be a John McCain call on whether he wants to bring that up."

Which I think is *just RICH* coming from the woman who was once a member of the Pentecostal Wasilla Assembly of God, led by a pastor, Ed Kalnins, who "has also preached that critics of President Bush will be banished to hell; questioned whether people who voted for Sen. John Kerry in 2004 would be accepted to heaven; charged that the 9/11 terrorist attacks and war in Iraq were part of a war 'contending for your faith;' and said that Jesus 'operated from that position of war mode.'" Palin is on YouTube, addressing the WAG (I love using the acronym), and talking about how thrilled she is to have gotten a "laying on of hands" from the Pastor Thomas Muthee, an African evangelist and WITCH-HUNTER (???), who in his own words, wages "spiritual warfare." She's also immortalized on YouTube (I love YouTube) asking members of the Pentecostal church to pray for an oil pipeline, "I think God's will has to be done in unifying people and companies to get that gas line built, so pray for that," she said. Palin's CURRENT church is the Wasilla Bible Church, which recently promoted attendance at a conference to "Pray Away the Gay."

(Do you think Jesus is up there someplace saying, "Stop asking me for stupid things like oil pipelines and 'pray away the gay'-- what about asking for BROTHERLY LOVE AND WORLD PEACE??")

setstatsAnd aw, geez, Palin was actually just here in San Francisco. (What? WHAT did she think she could accomplish in San Francisco? Oh, right.. praying away the gay... I got it.) Whilst here, she bestowed an extra- special Palin Gaffe-awe upon our fair city. '"They are also building schools for the Afghan children so that there is hope and opportunity in our neighboring country of Afghanistan,' she told several hundred supporters at a fundraising event in San Francisco."

Um...question in the back? Can you see Afghanistan from Alaska too? Well,doggone it, they keep on moving those little country-thingies on the map-ey-whatsits.

Oh, wait! It's all coming clear to me! OBVIOUSLY, when the Soviets invaded Afghanistan in the 1970s, they had to go through Alaska! Look where it is!
PLUS, Afghanistan...is just south of Alaska...where they want to put the TransAfghanistan pipeline... that everyone prayed for in church! It all makes sense now!

Wow. Gosh. Gee-whillickers. THIS is why Sarah Palin is such an expert in Russia/Oil relations also!

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

But seriously, folks. Today's topic is:

The Fog of Deregulation

I'm struck these days by all the talk from McCain on more regulating (but less government? He and Palin should really try to align their world-views on this...). Maybe John McCain doesn't remember, maybe it's the Alzheimers? But he's actually been a FAN of deregulation--like, um, all of his life? Oh, until last month.

Here are a few key highlights from Johnny Mac's Wonderful World of Deregulation:
  • 1980's- as noted above and on the new website KeatingEconomics.com, McCain was a key figure in deregulating the savings and loan industry. McCain parlayed it into highly profitable graft for himself. In the Keating Five scandal which followed the collapse of the savings and loan industry, McCain was reprimanded for his role in asking Federal regulators to back off closing down Charles Keating's Lincoln Savings and Loan.
  • In early 1995, after Republicans had taken control of Congress, Mr. McCain promoted a moratorium on federal regulations of all kinds. He was quoted as saying that excessive regulations were "destroying the American family, the American dream" and voters "want these regulations stopped." The moratorium measure was unsuccessful.
  • In 1996, one of McCain's chief responsibilities on the Commerce Committee was overseeing the Telecommunications Act of 1996. "The act removed or set conditions for the removal of the walls that had separated different parts of telecommunications. Its sponsors claimed that the act would encourage competition in the telephone, cable, and broadcast industries and lead to lower prices for consumers.... It has encouraged a spate of gigantic mergers. SBC Communications and Bell Atlantic, having gobbled up their competitors, now control two-thirds of local telephone lines. AT&T and TCI own 60 percent of cable lines. Cable rates, which were deregulated, have gone up 23 percent since 1996, three times faster than inflation. Hourly rates for phone users have declined, but access charges and other fees have skyrocketed. While large businesses are paying less for phone service, most consumers are paying more—about $2 billion more annually than three years ago." Ultimately, McCain was one of only five senators to oppose a comprehensive telecommunications act, but only, he says, because it did not go far enough in deregulating the industry.
  • In 1999, McCain voted for the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act, which essentially repealed the 1933 Glass-Steagall Act's prohibition on bank holding companies from owning other financial firms. The deregulation bill loosened restrictions on the activities of banks, brokerage houses, and insurance companies. McCain had joined with other Republicans to push through landmark legislation sponsored by then-Sen. Phil Gramm (Tex.), who is now an economic adviser to his campaign. "The Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act aimed to make the country's financial institutions competitive by removing the Depression-era walls between banking, investment and insurance companies. That bill allowed AIG to participate in the gold rush of a rapidly expanding global banking and investment market. But the legislation also helped pave the way for companies such as AIG and Lehman Brothers to become behemoths laden with bad loans and investments. McCain now condemns the executives at those companies for pursuing the ambitions that the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act made possible, saying that 'in an endless quest for easy money, they dreamed up investment schemes that they themselves don't even understand.'"
  • setstatsMcCain's economic guru, Phil Gramm, slipped the "Enron Loophole"--which exempts most over-the-counter energy trades and trading on electronic energy commodity markets from government regulation-- into legislation in the year 2000. This deregulatory loophole was used by that infamous company to game the electricity markets so egregiously that it led to Enron's own collapse. Since then, McCain has blocked every effort to close the loophole which is now being used by energy traders to game gasoline prices.
  • In 2002 he did vote for some regulatory reforms in the Sarbanes-Oxley Act, which was introduced after the accounting scandals involving Enron and other major firms and which passed the Senate without opposition. In 2007, he told a group of bloggers on a conference call that he regretted his vote in favor of Sarbanes-Oxley, which strengthened financial reporting requirements for publicly held companies but which has been the subject of complaints from businesses.
  • In Sept, 2002, McCain introduced Senate Bill 2863. Consumer Broadband Deregulation Act of 2002, intended to deregulate the broadband Internet market. Most residential broadband Internet users currently connect over cable systems, but the local phone companies dominate the business market. The bill was intended to increase the power of the Baby Bells to offer their services to American homes. Federal regulations then prevented this from happening until the Baby Bells opened their own historical local calling areas to competitors. "The potential for government interference with market forces is not limited to federal regulation. State and local governments are also capable of obstructing the deployment of broadband," said McCain during the introduction of his measure, The McCain measure also called for a study within two years to determine whether state regulation is necessary to protect consumers, as well as a study on the government's role in facilitating wireless broadband. It did not pass.
  • In 2008, McCain expressed approval of the results of financial deregulation by pointing to it as a model for health care policy, writing: "Opening up the health insurance market to more vigorous nationwide competition, as we have done over the last decade in banking, would provide more choices of innovative products less burdened by the worst excesses of state-based regulation."
It makes no difference whether a good man has defrauded a bad man, or a bad man defrauded a good man, or whether a good or bad man has committed adultery: the law can look only to the amount of damage done.

--Aristotle

******************************************

setstatsNews from SurveyUSA, which reports that in new polls, Obama is not only leading handily in Virginia (13 electoral votes) 53%-43%, he's stomping McCain. "McCain no longer leads in any region of the state. In Northeastern VA, which includes the DC suburbs, Obama leads by 24 points. In Central Virginia, home of the Confederate White House, the Museum of the Confederacy and Appomattox, Obama today leads by 8. In Southeastern Virginia, Obama leads by 11. In the Shenandoah, where John McCain led by 24 points one month ago, Obama and McCain today tie." Dude, you just blew my mind. I guess Jim Webb was right. Scots-Irish Populism works all the way, even in Appalachia.
The Ballot Ballet
setstatsClock is ticking...Only 29 days to the election, people!







For new registrations, time has already run out in many states (Today was the deadline for Arizona, Arkansas, Colorado, DC, Florida, Georgia, Hawaii, Indiana, Kentucky, Louisiana, Michigan, Mississippi, Montana, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Tennessee, Texas, Virginia). 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).
  • 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

Shenanigan Watch

I've already passed this on to many of you, but here it is again: news today that hundreds of thousands of people in the United States who filed registration applications but were not put on the voter rolls because of actual or alleged defects in their applications.
Electoral-vote.com notes that "Unbeknownst to them, thousands of people have been purged from the voter rolls. Project Vote lists the names and addresses of purged voters in Colorado, Florida, Indiana, Missouri, Nevada, New Mexico, North Carolina, Ohio, Pennsylvania and Texas (so far). If you live in one of these states, check the list TODAY to see if you have been purged and also check for friends, relatives, and neighbors." If you find yourself or someone you know on one of these lists, they may be able to protest being removed from the rolls.


Some of you may be wondering, is there really any reason to worry? I've got my ID, so no one can turn me away, can they? But thanks to Leslie (sending word via Lisa) who compiles this sobering list of reminders:

setstatsI'd also like to remind people that there's more than one way to rig an election. No one paid much attention to this item that appeared in Wired a year ago, but we might want to notice, when those Ohio results start coming in: Researchers commissioned by the Ohio Secretary of State's Office "found that a voter or poll worker with a Palm Pilot and no more than a minute's access to a voting machine could surreptitiously re-calibrate the touch-screen so that it would prevent voters from voting for specific candidates or cause the machine to secretly record a voter's vote for a different candidate than the one the voter chose. Access to the screen calibration function requires no password, and the attacker's actions, the researchers say, would be indistinguishable from the normal behavior of a voter in front of a machine or of a pollworker starting up a machine in the morning." (Full report here in PDF format)

Yep, this is me, the absolute paranoic who sees conspiracy theories around every corner. But just because I'm paranoid doesn't mean they're not out to get us.

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

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.

Also, in many states, you may vote EARLY, before Nov 4, to avoid the long lines. Reed College has compiled lists of which states offer early voting/absentee balloting options.

And remember, tomorrow TUESDAY
October 7, 2008 at 9pm EDT, 6pm (PDT), is the next Presidential Debate, from 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.





Labels: , , , , , , , , , , , ,