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Setting up the Blame Game (aka: “Dick Morris continues to live up to his name”)


Sunday, November 9, 2008 - 1:42 am (EST)
By a.p.

God, Dick Morris is annoying.  I know, I know, he’s supposed to be — that’s just his way of getting attention, I get it.  But that’s like knowing a migraine hurts — sure, you’re aware it will…and it still does.

Here, you’ll see.  This will be annoying:

If ever there was an election that was not worth winning, it was the contest of 2008. While it was hard-fought on both sides, had McCain won, it might have spelled the end of the Republican Party. As it is, the party is well-situated to come back in 2010 and in 2012, if it learns the lessons of this year.

Simply put, all hell is about to break loose in the markets and the economy. The mortgage crisis will likely be followed by defaults in credit card debt, student loans and car loans. We will probably be set for two years of zero growth, according to economists with whom I talk. And the federal efforts to protect the nation from the worst of the recession will probably lead to huge budget deficits and resulting inflation. We are in for stagflation that could last for years.

Had McCain won, he would be the latter-day Hoover, blamed for the disaster that unfolded on his watch. Now it is Obama’s problem. With the Republicans suffering a wipeout in congressional elections (although not as bad as they feared), the ball is now squarely in the Democratic court. Good luck!

Want more? (author’s note: I don’t recommend it, and would rather you didn’t give the guy the satisfaction of a unique visit on his traffic statistics)

Let’s translate what snarky Dick Morris is basically insinuating (and many others will soon claim) here:

I’m glad we didn’t win because what’s been set in motion is so bad, we’re going to need someone else to take responsibility for it.  Lucky us, we just handed our disaster off to Obama and Company rather than go through taking responsibility for it ourselves (if McCain had won, we’d have been blamed for it unfolding “on (our) watch”).  So good luck — we didn’t want this job right now anyway!

Now, let’s blame Obama for everything so we can resume disaster creation in 2012.

We’d better get used to arguing against this failed logic, because it’s going to be the NeoCon Anthem for the next four years.  Obama is months away from office, and we’ve got windbags like Dick Morris breathing big sighs of faux-relief over this nonsense already.

Somehow, whether it’s the economy, the botched wars, the massive national debt, the failed education system, or any other of a number of things that went to hell or were sent off course during the Republicans’ years of total control, it’s going to be Obama’s fault.

Unless, of course, Obama’s plan for something like the conflict in Iraq goes well.  Then I’m sure good ol’ Morris will be out there parroting some talking point tripe about the groundwork laid during the Bush years.

Way to go, Dick.

TAGS: 2010, 2012, Blame Game, Dick Morris, election, GOP, NeoCons, obama

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Really, Republicans? …seriously?


Sunday, November 9, 2008 - 12:53 am (EST)
By a.p.

So, I’m all for respectful disagreements, civil clashes of ideas, and heated intellectual arguments on policy, good government, and where we should run with this Democracy.  In keeping with that spirit, I’ve been a proponent of the notion that Republicans and their supporters are respectable, intelligent people who vote for politicians like George W Bush for sound ideological reasons — whatever those may be, and however strongly I may disagree with them (I sure hope they aren’t “conservative” ideological reasons…cause that would be confusing).

I like to think that the 50,000,000 or so people that voted for the (Old-and-Rather-Tarnished) John McCain and Sidekick Palin this past week are all doing it for that same thing — reasoned principle — and that it couldn’t possibly be that nearly half the active voting body in this country is flipping bananas (and needs to a) take a civics course, and b) better understand the gravity of what it means to lead the free world).

Then I go and read something like this, and it kinda sets me back.

Yeah, it’s confusing that 69% of Republicans think Palin helped the ticket, but that’s not what slays me.  Read on, read on.  That’s right — 91% of Republicans still have an overall favorable view of Sarah Palin, and 65% call it very favorable.  Sure, maybe at the beginning, right?  Like right after that convention speech, maybe.  THEN it would make some sense.  But this statistic is from the past couple days.  So, the same woman we’ve come to know as “Couric Interview” Palin, “Didn’t know Africa was a continent” Palin, and “Spent hundreds of thousands of dollars of RNC money on her (and her family’s) wardrobes/etc ($40,000 for the First Dude!)” Palin…wow…91% of Republicans still say “thumbs up”?

And there’s more.  Rasmussen:

When asked to choose among some of the GOP’s top names for their choice for the party’s 2012 presidential nominee, 64% say Palin.

Gag.

TAGS: 2012, election, GOP, Palin, Poll, Rasmussen, Republicans, Sarah Palin

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Joe The Tax Cheat (And He’s Not A Licensed Plumber)


Thursday, October 16, 2008 - 11:24 pm (EST)
By Hassan Chop

McCain made “Joe the plumber” famous in last night’s debate (according to MSNBC, he repeated it 21 times). In an exchange with Obama, Joe wanted to know why he should have to pay higher taxes now that he was planning to buy his own business and would make more than $250,000 a year. Here’s the exchange.

McCain used the example to claim that Obama was a socialist who wanted to “spread the wealth around.” He also used Joe to try to demonstrate that Obama would raise taxes on the average working man. Well, it turns out that just like Sarah Palin, Joe was never vetted by the McCain campaign. It turns out that Joe the plumber isn’t actually a licensed plumber. From Politico:

Wurzelbacher acknowledged to reporters that he doesn’t have a plumber’s license, but said he didn’t need one because he works for someone else at a company that does residential work. State and local records show Wurzelbacher has no license, although his employer does.David Golis, manager and residential building official for the Toledo Division of Building Inspection, said Wurzelbacher still would need to be a licensed apprentice or journeyman to work in Toledo.

That could be a problem for Joe and his employer.

The Toledo Plumbing Board of Control may consider sanctions against Wurzelbacher or Newell, officials told NBC affiliate WNWO of Toledo.

On top of that, he owes back taxes. Again, from Politico:

Wurzelbacher also owes the state of Ohio $1,182.98 in personal income tax, according to Lucas County Court of Common Pleas records. The Ohio Department of Taxation filed a claim on his property until he pays the debt, according to the records. The lien remains active.

Oh, and Joe makes far less than $250,000 per year, and the plumbing company his boss owns is estimated to have made $100,00. Joe made $40,000 in 2006, meaning he’d actually get a tax cut under Obama’s plan, as would his boss’s business!

The media initially held up Joe as an example of the white working class undecided male that Obama has to win in this election. It turns out that Joe isn’t exactly undecided.

Wurzelbacher, a registered Republican, refused to say whom he would vote for, insisting that “I want the American people to vote for who they want to vote for. I just want them to be informed when they make that vote.”

But he hinted that his choice would be McCain, the Republican standard-bearer, whom he said it would be “an honor” to meet. Asked about other issues by a covey of curious reporters, Wurzelbacher voiced strongly Republican opinions.

“Social Security’s a joke,” he said. “I have parents. I don’t need another set of parents called the government. Let me take my money and invest it how I please.”

On immigration: “I wish our borders were closed.”

And on the war in Iraq, which McCain has strongly supported: “I’m not sorry we’re in Iraq. … It’s made us safer. I absolutely believe that.”

You’d think that the McCain campaign would want to distance itself from a guy who’s now been thoroughly vetted and found to be a fraud, but that’s not really McCain’s style. Instead, they’re trying to get him to appear with McCain at a campaign rally and have started to air a web ad featuring Joe the plumber. Keep at it guys.

Photo: Jim Young/Reuters

TAGS: GOP, John McCain, plumber, Politics, taxpayers

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McCain Campaign Incites Crowds


Wednesday, October 8, 2008 - 10:18 pm (EST)
By Hassan Chop

The McCain campaign has decided to go all out with a negative campaign down the home stretch. Palin was quoted as saying that Obama was “palling around with terrorists.” Cindy McCain wrongly accused Obama of cutting off funding for the troops. A GOP leader, William Platt, twice referred to Obama as “Barrack Hussein Obama,” an obvious attempt to paint Obama as a Muslim terrorist, while introducing McCain and Palin at a rally. That’s something that McCain himself has condemned in the past. Other McCain surrogates have also leveled disgusting attacks at Obama, and it’s clearly the campaign’s strategy at this point.

Not surprisingly, these wrongful and vile accusations have riled up McCain’s crowds, with some in the audience yelling things like “traitor,” and “kill him!” Others have turned on the press, thanks to Palin constantly putting down the “mainstream media” (I guess she wasn’t too happy with her performance on Gibson’s or Couric’s show), and one guy yelled “Sit down, boy!” at a black sound man working for a network. Lovely.

Obviously, McCain’s camp will say that they don’t condone these sorts of things, but they’re the ones inciting these people. They’re giving them the cover they need to yell these things out at their rallies, and they certainly aren’t doing anything to stop them. Why didn’t Palin or McCain pause and point out that the sort of comments these people made were unacceptable? Because they’re thriving in this kind of environment, and they see it as a way to stoke up their base.

Unfortunately, the way that McCain is running his campaign now reminds me of the horrible murders in July,  when Jim Adkisson killed two people and wounded six others in a Tennessee church. He said he targeted the church

because of its liberal teachings and his belief that all liberals should be killed because they were ruining the country, and that he felt that the Democrats had tied his country’s hands in the war on terror and they had ruined every institution in America with the aid of media outlets. Inside the house, officers found “Liberalism is a Mental Health Disorder” by radio talk show host Michael Savage, “Let Freedom Ring” by talk show host Sean Hannity, and “The O’Reilly Factor,” by television talk show host Bill O’Reilly.

As I said back in July, Hannity, O’Reilly, and Savage did not kill those people. Adkisson was responsible for killing those people. But, at what point does their hatred for liberals, comparing them to terrorists and nazis who are destroying America, and their ability to espouse those views on air go from free speech to hate speech? While Hannity and Co. weren’t directly responsible, their extreme views incited even more hatred in a man who was willing to kill for those views. McCain and Palin are inciting their crowds now, and what we’re seeing in terms of the reactions of some in the crowd are directly related to the hate they’re preaching.

TAGS: attack, bill, Bill O'Reilly, Campaign, ep, free, GOP, mccain, Muslim, obama, sean hannity, war

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House GOP Defeats Bailout Bill


Monday, September 29, 2008 - 11:19 pm (EST)
By Hassan Chop

In a 228-205 vote, the House defeated Paulson’s bailout bill. Let’s be clear about why this bill failed: House Republicans, already facing difficult election prospects, decided that they couldn’t afford another noose around their necks in November. 140 Democrats voted to pass the bill, and 133 Republicans voted against it.

The House GOP held up the initial bill a few days ago because they wanted some sort of insurance program in the language, as well as greater oversight. Well, they negotiated with the Democrats and got the insurance language in the bill, but apparently that still wasn’t enough to sway them.

The Democrats delivered 60% of their caucus for the votes, while the House GOP managed a paltry 33%. And that’s why the bill was defeated, because of House Republicans. Their canard about how Pelosi’s “partisan” speech before the vote was the reason why more Republicans didn’t vote for the bill is a pathetic attempt to steer the blame. Are they really arguing that they were insulted by Pelosi’s speech and decided to put their pride above the needs of the country? That’s not “country first,” my friends. That’s “Republicans first.” It’s as simple as that.

Oh, and good work John McCain. I’m glad you “suspended” your campaign to head back to DC to bring the House GOP along. As McCain’s chief campaign strategist, Steve Schmidt, said on Meet The Press:

What Senator McCain was able to do was to help bring all of the
parties to the table, including the House Republicans, whose votes were
needed to pass this.

I think you spoke too soon, Steve. Your guy “phoned it in.”

TAGS: bailout, Campaign, election, GOP, John McCain, mccain, NATO, obama, Republicans, spin

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Conservative “Values”


Saturday, September 13, 2008 - 11:24 pm (EST)
By Hassan Chop

At the Values Voters Summit, sponsored by the conservative Family Research Council and American Values groups, a vendor decided that racism sells well with the GOP. So, he sold this box of “Obama Waffles.”

What the picture doesn’t show well is the top of the box, which pictures Obama in an Arab headdress. The back of the box has this lovely image and wording:

On the back of the box, Obama is depicted in stereotypical Mexican dress, including a sombrero, above a recipe for ”Open Border Fiesta Waffles” that says it can serve ”4 or more illegal aliens.”

The vendor’s stall was shut down on Saturday, but while the Summit’s sponsors claimed that they were told that the box was a parody of Obama and didn’t know that it had “offensive material,” the booth had been open since Thursday. So, it took two full days for them to close down the vendor.

If this doesn’t make it clear that the right wing’s “values” consist in part of racism, I don’t know what does. Maybe next year, they can sell something that pictures Obama hanging from a tree.

TAGS: GOP, obama, Racism, The Box

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Poll: Biden More Qualified Than Palin


Thursday, September 11, 2008 - 9:19 pm (EST)
By Hassan Chop

A new Ipsos/McClatchy poll has the latest on what voters think about Palin’s experience:

A majority of voters, 60 percent, think that Biden is qualified to be president, while 31 percent think he is not.

By comparison, 48 percent of voters think Palin is qualified, while 44 percent think she is not.

So, just under half of voters surveyed think that she has the experience necessary to be President. That can’t be great news for the GOP, but to be honest, that figure is still higher than what I thought it’d be given that so far the McCain campaign has touted her “executive” experience as a PTA member, mayor of a small town, and governor of Alaska for 20 months. Oh yeah, and Alaska is next to Russia, so that gives her foreign policy experience.

TAGS: Campaign, GOP, mccain, paris, Poll, russia

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Au Revoir and RNC


Tuesday, September 9, 2008 - 3:09 pm (EST)
By Ray LeMoine

Hey all. This is my last post here at Medicine. I had a great time writing about dumb shit for the past 8 or so months. Thanks to John for giving me such a great experience in cyberspace.

I started a new site with Inigo, Jeff N, and a few others called Shiite Happens. (Below is the first post.) For now, it will be a political, arts, and culture blog with a young-ish voice, much like Medicine, but with more original video content. We’ll have a redesign and hopefully our own url soon. Please ignore the generic design for now. There won’t be any ads or commercial aspect and it will operate as a cooperative. We’re looking for writers, so give me a shout at wormetheperm {at} hotmail(.)com if you’d like to contribute.

Anyway, I’ve been out in Denver and Minneapolis for the Conventions with Inigo Gilmore, a filmmaker friend. And tomorrow we’re going moose hunting in Alaska. Despite our being robbed twice over the past two weeks, a video diary of the RNC was still able to be cut for Britain’s Channel 4. Note the shot of Inigo getting shot at by police (with rubber bullets of course) during a riot in St Paul.

 

Sarah Palin and the Re-Rise of the Republicans: An RNC Diary

1
I’m in Minneapolis, having arrived from Denver on Sunday night. With me: Inigo Gilmore, a British journalist and filmmaker who recently relocated to New York after a year’s stint in Bangkok for Channel 4 UK. That morning, we’d awoken to find our rented SUV had been broken in to, and someone had stolen the tapes from Obama’s stadium coronation. The video and still cameras were safe, but everything else—chargers, bags, tripod, batteries—gone.

So our arrival at the Republican Convention came without glory. Luckily we were staying at a nice loft in downtown St. Paul, just blocks from the Xcel Center. To forget about our Denver loss, we trekked across St. Paul’s quaint downtown looking for a bar. It’s 10m. The bars, which normally close at 2am, are supposedly open until 4am all week, but few people are out.

“The thing about St Paul is that it’s only a few hundred thousand people,” says the local who’s guiding us. “It may be the smallest city to ever hold a national Convention.”

We stop at a dive-y bar on 7th Ave, St Paul’s pedestrian mall. Neon beer signs dangle on the windows. Dart boards and pool tables are visible inside. Sitting outside, we realize 20 or so Texas delegates surround us. Clustered around two pitcher strewn tables, the Texans meet every cliche: loud, foul mouthed, cross bearing, light beer loving, and cigar chomping. They wear orthopedic shoes, unrevealing dresses, snakeskin, denim…

Our next stop was another bar filled with boozing Texas delegates. Third stop: booze, Texans. Later, we even stumble on a hotel with a sign reading, “WELCOME TEXAS DELEGATION! Crowne Plaza Hotel…”

Aside from cowboy hats and generic clothing, what else did these Texans have in common? A shockingly passionate love for Ron Paul and his post-libetarianism. Few of the Texans we meet even like John McCain.

“We support McCain because we are Republicans,” one says. “But Ron Paul is beyond partisian politics.” Then comes a detailed Paul “Revolution”-ary spiel, which I block out. Yet as Convention eve came to a close, the Paul insurgency made clear that this year’s GOP was indeed a fractured party.

2
Monday. The Twin Cities got hit by twin bombshells. First, due to Hurricane Gustav, day one of the Convention was canceled, meaning no President Bush. Second, Sarah Palin, the dark horse Alaskan Governor McCain chose for VP, has a 17-year-old pregnant daughter. Some Convention so far, eh GOP? No opening night and so much for the whole family values and no sex before marriage thing.

Around noon we hear about a anti-war protest. Venturing from the loft, on 4th Street, up a block or two, we quickly realize this is no mere protest. On a street corner stood fifty plus cops in full riot gear—helmets, bulging pads, gas masks, sticks and tazers at the ready. The police surround about twenty black-clad, masked anarchists. The anarchos are backed against a building and all have their hands up, but they yell to the few onlookers and journalists on hand.

“We did nothing!” one kid in googles yells.

“These are our streets!” they chant.

A few blocks away we spot a beat-up blue Volvo blocking a major intersection connecting St Paul to the highway that leads to Minneapolis. About two dozen cops cordon the area. Inside the car I see a black clad youth chained to the steering wheel. A big yellow forklift arrives. I hear a buzzsaw. The cops are cutting the anarchist out of the car. Once he’s been removed and arrested, the forklift removes the car and dumps it on a grass lot.

Pushing further downtown we cross paths with about two hundred “direct action” folks. They even have a trance/techno soundtrack (c/o a red wagon with a stereo and “Funk the War” signs). But the mostly black wearing bandana crew seem confused as to where they’re headed.

“C’mon, this way,” yells one.

“No, this way,” shouts another, who eventually wins out.

But the confusion ends when it comes to the marchers’ intent. These folks want nothing short of destruction of the capatilist state. I’ve witnessed a few dozen riots in my day—mostly sports related—but I’ve never seen such a long, uncontested orgy of smashed windows, popped tires, trash can flipping, road blocking, and wreckage. Inigo captures a long shot of people running up the road by a big Macy’s, where a black woman sits on a bench smiling, Macy bags at her feet. Just then, two anarchists charge from behind with a metal grate. It takes a few tries, but they smash the windows.
(more…)

TAGS: 2000, 2004, Amy Goodman, beer, BOOKS, Bush, Campaign, Congress, contest, Denver, dog, Fox News, free, GOP, Gustav, Hillary, iPod, Iraq, John McCain, kids, mccain, Music, New York, New York Times, NPR, nypd, obama, political, Politics, Pregnant, Race, Rap, Republicans, RNC, Ron Paul, Sarah Palin, Shiite, Soundtrack, spin, Sports, Texas, the Replacements, Trade, Video, war, williamsburg, youtube

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Sarah Palin For President


Monday, September 1, 2008 - 2:17 am (EST)
By Hassan Chop

During an interview with Newschannel 5 of St. Louis, McCain was asked if Palin has enough experience to lead. He rattled off her credentials (I use that term loosely) before stating:

So I think Senator Obama, if they want to go down that route in all candor, she has far, far more experience than Senator Obama does.

You’ve been hearing this theme echoed by various members of the GOP, including Rudy Giuliani, as well as McCain’s campaign manager, Steve Schmidt:

By any objective measure, Governor Palin is more qualified for the presidency than Barack Obama.

The experience that they’ve been highlighting is her “executive” experience as the Mayor of Wasilla, Alaska and as the governor of Alaska. But this brings up an important question. If Republicans think that Palin is more qualified to be President than Obama, based on her 6 years as mayor of a small town and her 20 months as governor of Alaska, isn’t she more qualified to be President than John McCain? After all, McCain has only served in the House and Senate. He’s never been a mayor or a governor, so he has no executive experience. So, what exactly makes him think that he should be President and Palin should be his VP? Shouldn’t Sarah Palin be running for President of the United States with McCain as her VP?

Josh Marshall at TPM puts this in perspective.

Stephan Savoia / AP

TAGS: Barack Obama, GOP, John McCain, mccain, NATO, obama, Republicans, Sarah Palin

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Sarah Palin? Nice.


Friday, August 29, 2008 - 11:30 am (EST)
By a.p.

Hot on the heels of Obama’s brilliant speech last night:  Sarah Palin is John McCain’s running mate (CNN reports).

Seriously?  Governor of Alaska, Sarah Palin?  You mean the same Sarah Palin that is currently under “a $100,000 investigation to determine if Palin dismissed Alaska’s public safety commissioner because he would not fire” State Trooper Mike Wooten, Palin’s ex-brother-in-law?

Nice.

I get it — use a female candidate to sop up whatever remaining bitter, diehard Clinton stragglers there are (I’m willing to bet that number is in the ballpark of 10 to 15 post DNC).  I suppose the GOP bonus here is that the woman in question is already ahead of the curve as far as questionable practices and cronyism goes.  Nice to see that they’re really going for that Bush/Cheney ‘08 feel even at the VP level.

For more on the investigation, here’s former Public Safety Commissioner Walt Monegan on KUDO-AM 1080 (the guy she fired).

Win Mcnamee, Getty Images
(Photo Credit:Win Mcnamee, Getty Images)

*edit: The Dems are out in full force on this (phew), and — in an ironic turn of events — are highlighting her inexperience (for example: up until last year all she’d ever been, politically-speaking, was mayor of a town of 9,000, and now she’s ready to be a “heartbeat away” from the Presidency?) — HuffPo has lots more.  This is really going to put a damper on McCain’s ability to call out that “ready to lead?” crap, as she’s both younger and far less experienced than Barry.

It may be premature, but I’m already seeing some compare this to the Dan Quayle selection.  All I can say at the moment is that I agree with Schumer…I can’t wait for the Biden-Palin debate.

Also, god bless wikipedia (in fairness, this is definitely cropped out of context, but that in no way mars its entertainment value):

TAGS: Bush, debate, dog, election, GOP, John McCain, mccain, MSNBC, obama, political, Politics, Practice, Sarah Palin

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Hillary


Wednesday, August 27, 2008 - 9:07 pm (EST)
By a.p.

demconvention.com

Waiting for the inevitable spectacle of Bill, considering Hillary…

OK, so I’m still a bit bitter that Obama / Clinton couldn’t bury the hatchet enough to get her a ticket invite.  And I’m also peeved at Budget Clinton’s antics in the close down of the primary race — she said some things she shouldn’t have, and she handed the Republicans a couple loaded guns.  Though ultimately, let’s be honest — so did Biden.  It’s politics — the GOP can and will spin it into oblivion…along with everything else.  We should take care to not follow suit.

And, as a further caveat, I could never wholeheartedly back Clinton for the top spot on the ticket, as oligarchies really freak me out (go figure).  But that’s of no consequence here.

What does matter at the moment is that, last night, Clinton proved why she was such a contender in the first place — not for her relations with a former President, but for her own skills as an orator, leader, and politician.  I may not make friends in some circles with a statement like that, but those are pretty pedantic circles anyway.

Admittedly, the speech intermittently threatened to tumble into self-aggrandizement (which the Democrats needed like I need my ex-girlfriend’s status updates), but she managed to steer clear of an egregious error — recognizing her own accomplishments, embracing her millions of supporters, and promptly pushing and connecting that phenomenal energy straight over to Obama based on the issues (while getting in a few effective digs at McCain).  She didn’t address her prior attacks on Obama point-by-point — or that ad of McCain’s that uses her words — but she made it pretty fucking clear that a McCain presidency would be a disaster, and that Obama was the only way to ride… ’nuff said as far as I’m concerned.

Again, this is politics — she doesn’t need to paint him as the second coming, she needs to outline the case for his presidency.  And she did just that.  Let sleeping dogs lie on the personal front.

In the process, she cemented her position as a matriarch of both the Democratic party and the women’s movement in general (if she wasn’t both already), but she did it with a strange grace and style that left me feeling like she was just up there doing us all a favor.

Also, as an aside, Hillary was back in the character that she has historically been known and loved for.  Gone was the scheming and pandering of a desperate candidate on the stump — the overly placating and phony presentation of a woman dancing awkwardly between an air of disbelief at imminent failure and a tenuous hope in some sort of inevitable triumph.  And thank god she got that out of her system.

The best news?  The Democratic party came out of the primary season with not one but two powerhouses.

demconvention.comWatch her slide from a whole load of “I’m awesome, thanks” over to “Barack Obama for President”:

“I ran for president to renew the promise of America. To rebuild the middle class and sustain the American Dream, to provide the opportunity to work hard and have that work rewarded, to save for college, a home and retirement, to afford the gas and groceries and still have a little left over each month.

To promote a clean energy economy that will create millions of green collar jobs.

To create a health care system that is universal, high quality, and affordable so that parents no longer have to choose between care for themselves or their children or be stuck in dead end jobs simply to keep their insurance.

To create a world class education system and make college affordable again.

To fight for an America defined by deep and meaningful equality — from civil rights to labor rights, from women’s rights to gay rights, from ending discrimination to promoting unionization to providing help for the most important job there is: caring for our families. To help every child live up to his or her God-given potential.

To make America once again a nation of immigrants and a nation of laws.

To bring fiscal sanity back to Washington and make our government an instrument of the public good, not of private plunder.

To restore America’s standing in the world, to end the war in Iraq, bring our troops home and honor their service by caring for our veterans.

And to join with our allies to confront our shared challenges, from poverty and genocide to terrorism and global warming.

Most of all, I ran to stand up for all those who have been invisible to their government for eight long years.

Those are the reasons I ran for president. Those are the reasons I support Barack Obama. And those are the reasons you should too.”

Welcome back, Hill.  And thanks.

YouTube Preview Image

TAGS: attack, Barack Obama, dog, economy, global warming, GOP, Hillary, Iraq, mccain, obama, Politics, Race, Republicans, spin, Vice, war, youtube

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DNC Baby. Political Round Up…


Monday, August 25, 2008 - 1:25 pm (EST)
By Ray LeMoine

Denver!!!

I love the Obama font. And Michelle’s looking good…

OMG He’s Black!!!
Slate noticed Obama is black. In a story sub-headed “RACISM IS THE ONLY REASON MCCAIN MIGHT BEAT HIM,” Jacob Wesiberg, Slate’s eic, states the obvious. Duh. A black dude with a middle name of Hussein is running against an Irish John and it took Slate 19-months to write the obligatory Holy Shit This Guy is Black story? I love Slate. But they’ve sucked lately. Georgia’s war didn’t get any coverage. They haven’t run much from Afghanistan. And they’re election stuff has been 2nd tier. Where’s Meghan O’Rourke? Hopefully at the DNC.

Bubba Factor
Are the Clintons trying to steal the DNC? Politico thinks so (and Drudge leads with it). Tensions Boil, reads the headline:

One flashpoint is the assigned speech topic for former president Bill Clinton, who is scheduled to speak Wednesday night, when the convention theme is “Securing America’s Future.” The night’s speakers will argue that Obama would be a more effective commander in chief than his Republican rival, Sen. John McCain (Ariz.).

The former president is disappointed, associates said, because he is eager to speak about the economy and more broadly about Democratic ideas —emphasizing the contrast between the Bush years and his own record in the 1990s.

The Clintons are the non-story of the week…

All About Joe
Everyone in America is eager to learn about Joe Biden, O’s veep. His book, Promises to Keep (Random House 2007), is now a bestseller:

As of Sunday afternoon, the book was at No. 31 on the amazon.com bestseller list, and No. 11 on Barnes & Noble’s list.

It’s 24 on the Amazon list right now.

I’ve seen Biden speak on a hand-full of occasions. Most notably, I saw him at a foreign policy luncheon at the Kennedy Museum during the 2004 Boston DNC. Biden sat on a panel with Madeline Albright and Iraq’s deputy PM, among others. This was when Iraq was in the midst of a two-front uprising. On Iraq, Biden was fluid though a little over state-y.

At the time, rumblings of an 08 Biden run were abuzz, but the two foreign affairs junkies with me were convinced he’d be a great Sec State but not Prez material. I never considered him for VP. But what a great choice. Biden’s funny, can be a dick, and knows his stuff. Considering he lost his wife and child at 29, ascending to the second highest office in the land to serve in their honor makes me happy as a little girl who got a pony for her b day.

TNR Kisses Lizza’s Ass
The New Republic says 2008’s best political profile was Making It: How Chicago Shaped Obama by The New Yorker’s Ryan Lizza. Of course, Lizza used to work for TNR. Unfortunately, his piece, while long and in-depth, glossed over much of Obama’s Chicago rise. For a better portrait of O’s Chicago days, buy David Mendell’s Promise to Power.

Reading Lizza’s piece, you could tell he was practicing access journalism. I felt like Axelrod was living in his brain, revising history. Most specifically, Lizza glosses over O and Michelle’s ties to real estate developers like Valerie Jarrett, Allsyon Davis, and Tony Rezko. Jarrett is who got the Obamas into politics (luring Michelle to city hall in the 80s). It was Jarrett, Rezko, and Davis who gave O his initial $$$ for his state senate run.

These folks are also (in)famous in Chicago for pushing private-public housing partnerships. Yes: in the early-90s, Chicago’s public housing authority was a mess. And these Jarrett-Rezko-Obama private-public policies made sense, at the time. What doesn’t make sense is why so many of the public units Jarrett ran (as CEO of Habitat INC, a title she holds today) went to shit under her watch. Or how Rezko took $40 million plus in federal tax credits, ran complexes into the ground, then moved into condo development with the dough he earned. A high number of the units owned by these folks are now back in public hands. Weirder still, Obama continues to support these policies without modifications even though they failed.

For all the right wing media’s attacks, Obama’s housing policy—which has left thousands of poor blacks negatively affected—has been left largely untouched. Valerie Jarrett is hated by blacks on the South Side. She’s #3 or 4 in the Obama campaign. Yet she’s only received minimal—and glowing—coverage. Why? You can’t Swift Boat a guy for fucking over the very poor blacks that white GOP assholes love fucking over. If anything, Obama’s questionable South Side housing record would help him with the Swift crowd.

Happy DNC viewing everyone…

TAGS: 2004, attack, Bill Clinton, BOOKS, Boston, Bush, Denver, economy, election, georgia, GOP, Iraq, Joe Biden, John McCain, mccain, New York, obama, political, Politics, Racism, war

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Ranking Obama’s VP Choices


Monday, August 18, 2008 - 12:43 pm (EST)
By Ray LeMoine


Barry at the bar in Reno, yesterday…EMMANUEL DUNAND/AFP/Getty Images

So, here we go. One week until the Democratic National Convention in Denver. Obama is expected to announce his running mate this week, and I’m gonna rank my top choices. Since I’m still not sure America will vote for a black dude named Barack over a honky named John, my VP picks are based on national following, potential honky attraction, and voter trust value . 

1. John Kerry
This was floated by WBZ Boston Friday and picked up by Drudge this weekend. I think Kerry supplies everything Obama needs to win undecided voters’ trust. Kerry’s been a Senator for decades. He’s fought the GOP in a Presidential election—and won more votes than any Democrat ever. He served in Vietnam, with honor. He’s a national brand who’s been uber-vetted. Obama-Kerry is a sure win.

2. Hillary Clinton
George Stephanopoulos says she’s a “50-1″ shot. Still, Obama-Clinton is another can’t lose option. No one hates Republicans more than Hillary (they tried to ruin her family, dammit!), and she got 18 million votes in the primary. I disagree that the Clintons’ “baggage” would really affect Obama. Even post-Gore and Cheney, the VP is still a relatively weak office. Clinton as VP would neutralize her.

3. Joe Biden
As much as I love Biden, he is a bit of a loose cannon and may wind up as a liability in the general—kind of like a smart Dan Quayle. But the guy has the Washington and foreign affairs experience Obama lacks. I don’t know if it’s a sure thing, but Obama-Biden is a great ticket.

4. Sam Nunn
Nunn’s a fine peacenik, but after three decades in Washington, he’s hardly a changenik, and if you’re gonna forgo the whole “new politics” thing you mine as well pick an established national candidate like Kerry or Clinton. Nunn might be able to deliver Georgia, but he won’t help much in winning voter trust nationally.

5. Kaine, Bayh, Warner…
Yes, each brings a potential swing state victory, but none are nationally known, meaning the O Team will have to sell two personas instead of just The One. 

Whatever happens, Obama better not pick a Republican.

TAGS: Boston, Denver, election, georgia, GOP, Hillary, Hillary Clinton, Joe Biden, John Kerry, Nas, NATO, obama, Politics, Republicans, war

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Celebrities and War


Monday, August 11, 2008 - 4:58 pm (EST)
By Geoff Kenyon

As Hassan pointed out on this site last Thursday, John McCain is a bit of celebrity himself.

 YouTube Preview Image

The Obama campaign finally came out with an ad hitting on that point. I watched in dismay in 04 as the GOP turned Kerry into a French aristocrat, who flip flopped, and lied in order to win his purple heart. They went as low as to hand out Purple Heart band aids at their convention.

It is pathetic that this is the level that we have sunk to already in August, but so is the nature of US politics. If Obama is going to win this thing his campaign must be quicker at countering these silly attacks. When Paris Hilton is quicker to respond then a presidential campaign you know you are in trouble.

Meanwhile, as our media helps turn the election of the next president into a reality show, the NYTimes reports that Russia is pressing into a 2nd front in their war against Georgia. President Bush has decided to stop cheering at the Olympics and actually discuss a matter of global importance when he holds a press conference at 5:15 in the Rose Garden. Will he confront his soul mate?

Below Bush & Putin at Olympics

On a side note, if you were Russia and just had an election that the world looked at as a joke, wouldn’t you send your newly elected president to represent your country in Beijing instead of the prime minister who everyone already thinks is running the country? Instead they send Putin and then wait for the beginning of the Olympics to start a war.

TAGS: attack, election, georgia, GOP, John McCain, mccain, obama, Olympics, paris, Paris Hilton, Politics, putin, russia, war, youtube

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Funny Nas Blog Post


Friday, August 8, 2008 - 11:19 am (EST)
By Ray LeMoine


Black GOPs

Sasha Frere-Jones went to see Nas at the Rock the Bells Fest at Jones Beach last week and wrote this for his New Yorker blog. In an intro, Jones establishes this post as “service journalism,” but this is one the best paragraphs he’s ever written:

Nas: this rapper currently has the #1 album in the country. He said he loves Al Sharpton and Jesse Jackson but they are “out of here.” Nas is, according to Nas, the new voice of the young people. “I talk your talk, I dress your dress,” he said. I didn’t see anyone in the audience wearing a white shirt, white jeans, designer sunglasses and a blingy crucifix, so maybe what he meant is that he’s the new voice of Russian real-estate developers. People always talk about what a great lyricist Nas is, and he certainly was when “Illmatic” came out fourteen years ago. Which is maybe why he did more songs from that album than any other album from his catalogue during his set. It was nice of Jay-Z to come out for the “Black Republicans” cameo. Do you know how much people like Jay-Z? More than they like anyone else. I’ve see Jay-Z pop up at three shows, and every time it happens, you remember what it’s like to be at a genuinely exciting event. And then Jay-Z leaves. Bad idea, the Jay-Z cameo, for anyone who is not named Jay-Z.

No two artists have been awesome longer than Nas and Jigga. Both are still relevant after 15 years. What white pop artists can say the same? NIN? Pearl Jam? RHCP? Nyet. Even The Boss turned corny after 1982. (Btw, The Boss was at The Box last night with the Sting.)

TAGS: GOP, Jay, Jesse Jackson, New York, Republicans, russia, The Box, youtube

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McCain: The Real Celebrity


Thursday, August 7, 2008 - 12:57 am (EST)
By Hassan Chop

Take a look at McCain’s IMDB page (hat-tip to TPM). He’s appeared in “24,” “Wedding Crashers,” and “SNL” (twice). Can he seriously claim that Obama’s nothing more than a celebrity when he’s done his fair share of tv and movies? I know that the whole point is to mock Obama as being vacuous, but this is a weak charge.

True, McCain’s celebrity attack ads seem to have helped him make up some ground on Obama. Gallup’s daily tracking poll had Obama up by 2 on August 6th (compared to 9 on July 26th, which was his largest lead). Still, Time has Obama up 46% to 41% (though they said he’s fading a bit on the issues), and AP has him up 47% to 41%, and the latest CBS poll has him up 45% to 39%, so it seems like nothing much has changed. It’s still Obama’s election to lose, but he’s still got a lot of work to do.

More importantly, is this how McCain plans to win? By tearing Obama down instead of telling people why he should be president? Hey, it might work, but it’s a very risky strategy, and it speaks to how desperate McCain has become. After relentlessly mocking Obama about his idea to inflate tire gauges to save some gasoline, McCain just admitted that he supports it as well! His childish approach to this election is getting very old, very fast, and the press is beginning to call him on it. Look, McCain is engaged in a debate with Paris Hilton. Who’s vacuous now?

Republicans usually love these Rovian tactics, but some Republicans seem pretty fed up. Tim Pawlenty, often mentioned as a possible running mate for McCain, thinks that the GOP (and presumably McCain) should adopt Obama’s positive message (he must have found out he’s no longer in the running for VP). Some prominent Republican consultants and McCain’s former campaign adviser have derided his childish tactics. McCain’s mom said that the Paris Hilton ad was “stupid.”

John McCain: Low Road Express

TAGS: attack, debate, election, GOP, John McCain, mccain, Movie, obama, paris, Paris Hilton, Politics, Republicans, Video

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Blackwater and Me, A Love Story


Friday, July 25, 2008 - 12:38 pm (EST)
By Ray LeMoine


Dickheads

Jeremy Scahill, The Nation writer turned Blackwater book writer/expert, linked to a post of mine the other day. My post recapped an NYT blog write-up that said Blackwater, a North Carolina-based “security contractor,” was moving out of the mercenary biz, according to a spokesman. Blackwater’s comments came a day after Sec Def Gates wondered, “Why have we come to rely on private contractors to provide combat or combat-related security training for our forces?”

Sachill, in a piece headlined “Media Goofs Again,” says the story is a bunch of hype:

It seems that executives from Blackwater Worldwide, the Bush administration’s favorite hired guns in Iraq and Afghanistan, are threatening to pack up their M4 assault rifles, CS gas and Little Bird helicopters and go back to the great dismal swamp of North Carolina whence they came. Or at least that’s how it is being portrayed in the media.

Among the headlines of the past 24 hours: “Blackwater plans exit from guard work”, “Blackwater getting out of security business”, “Blackwater sounds retreat from private security business”, and “Blackwater to leave security business”. One blogger slapped this headline on his post: “Blackwater, worst organization since SS, to end mercenary work.” [The last one was my headline.]

Frankly, this is a whole lot of hype.

But I don’t think the Blackwater spokesman saying of security work, “If I could get it down to 2% or 1% [of total business], I would go there,” is a non-story. In fact, combined with Gates’ statement, this is great news.

I hate Blackwater and the entire concept of combat outsourcing almost as much as I hate Nazism. The fact is, US tax money is spent on Dogs of War who are not operating under rule of law—aka we support state sanctioned murder. We’ll be regretting allowing this to happen as long as we’re a nation.

Now, even the head of the Pentagon is angry about it. That’s damn good news to me. 

Of course, Blackwater has over the years become a multi-billion dollar defense contracting beast. Their CEO is from an old guard Michigan GOP familia. They’ve made enough cash and high-level State and Pentagon contacts to keep their business going.

Sachill writes, “Anyone who thinks Blackwater is in serious trouble is dead wrong.” I didn’t see anyone writing that. Unfortunately, as best outlined by PW Singer in Corporate Warriors (Cornell 2003), the privatization of war is here to stay.

But the fewer assholes with guns running around the better. And both Gates and Blackwater seem to be moving towards a mercenary downsizing. Sachill says this is in response to Obama’s 16-month withdrawal plan being celebrated by the world this week:

The company may be bracing for a possible shift in policy should Obama win in November. Blackwater could be contemplating resignation before termination. On the other hand, Obama has sent mixed messages on the future of war contractors under his Iraq policy. While he has been very critical of the war industry in general — and Blackwater specifically — he has also indicated he will not rule out using private armed contractors at least for a time in Iraq.

In a perfect world, US troops may be able to disengage from Iraq on large scale in the near future. I still don’t believe that’s possible. Iraq’s security gains over the past year are tenuous. If elected, Obama will likely have to keep a force of 80,000 or so in Iraq through his first term. How would he deal with providing diplomatic security for Green Zoners is unknown—will he keep the mercenaries or take MPs off the battlefield? Still, if Gates is trying to move away from privatized force protection now, the better the chances for a policy shift. And that’s not hype. It’s good news.

TAGS: dog, GOP, Iraq, obama, war

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The Myth of Barry the Lefty


Thursday, July 10, 2008 - 10:50 am (EST)
By Ray LeMoine

All this shock and awe at Obama’s centrist drift ignores history. Barack Obama was never an uber-liberal, despite his (thin) Senate voting record saying he was the chamber’s resident lefty.

No one better chronicles Obama’s rise to national power than the Chicago Tribune’s David Mendell in his book