Saturday, September 13, 2008

Obama may set another fundraising record

By GottaLaff

Obama May Set Another Fundraising Record

"Barack Obama may be playing possum," Bloomberg observes.

He "hasn't done much to refute the notion" his financial edge over Sen. John McCain "may be shrinking. So far, though, Obama's aides privately say they're keeping a low profile so donors don't get complacent, suggesting that August contributions -- to be disclosed next week -- will top February's one-month record of $55 million. And Palin, while energizing Republicans, has also motivated Democratic donors."
Suh-weet.

Washington Post picks up anti-Palin protest story

By GottaLaff

We posted the story here, the video here, and the photos here.

Now the Post writes it up here:

A couple of hours after Gov. Sarah Palin returned to the Outside, as Alaskans call the Lower 48, her local critics swarmed an Anchorage intersection to correct the widespread impression that the whole of the Last Frontier endorses her candidacy.

The midday protest outside a city library drew a crowd in the high hundreds -- perhaps surging past a thousand -- from the city's relatively liberal environs, who seemed very happy to see one another and be reminded that they are not alone.

"The whole thing grew out of frustration," said Charla Sterne, one of the organizers, who like several people at the rally declined to say where they worked (several said they were state employees and feared retribution).

"Last week this was just ten women sitting around talking about this perception that all of Alaska supports Sarah Palin. We apparently hit a nerve and started a movement," Sterne said.

[...]" Drivers on 36th Avenue saw a little girl waving a sign "Don't Ban My Books." [...]

"My mom is from Alaska. She's a working mother. She's good looking," said Nolan. "So she seems to be qualified to be vice president."

There were also a few score Palin supporters in the mix, most of them alerted to the event by a conservative talk show host.

Eddie Burke of KBYR-AM showed up in person, but while there was no evident friction between the two camps, cheerful chants of "O-bam-ah" effectively drowned out whatever he was saying to the cameras in the center of a mini-media scrum.

The din did not prevent reading the signs, pro and against:
Bush In A Skirt
Palin: She Be Failin'
I Love My Alaska Girl
Jesus Was a Community Organizer
We Luv Our Lady Guv
Palin: Thanks But No Thanks
Smearing Alaska's Good Name One Scandal @ a Time
Candidate To Nowhere
Rape Kits Should Be Free
Voted For Her Once: Never Again!
Community Organizers are the Real Patriots
Barbies for War
I Shall Not Be Pandered To
Give Palin Your Vote AND Your Draft Age Child
Sarah Palin: So Far Right She's Wrong
Sarah Palin Is My Hero
Alaska Is Not Frisco
Gun Rights
Coat Hangers for McCain
Sarah Palin, Undoing 150 Years of American Feminism
Hockey Mama for Obama (on a hockey stick)

Maybe real news is making a comeback.

Axelrod on the "1982" ad + NBC on the wheels coming off the Straight Talk Express

By GottaLaff

First, David Axelrod answers a question that we've asked here at TPC:

Q: Back to that 1982 ad talking about email, are you worried about offending those people in America who aren't necessarily that computer literate, older voters? Or are you worried about voters thinking that's not a big issue to be talking about.

Axelrod - "Well, I think it goes beyond the computer literacy. It goes beyond you know sort of whether you have ideas that are forward-looking or backward-looking and that's the most important thing. I think most people understand that the president of the United States needs to be in touch and understand both what's going on in the lives of the American people and what we need to do to get this country moving again in the future and that includes being in touch with the technology that exists today. But it's kind of a metaphor for Sen. McCainks views. Sen. McCain is sitting on the back of the truck looking backwards and wants to repeat the same mistakes we've seen for the last eight years."
And next, NBC tells us a little of what we've been needing to hear:
WHEELS COME OFF STRAIGHT TALK EXPRESS?

From NBC's Mark Murray
For a candidate who prides himself in "straight talk" -- and whose political image in part is based on that truth-telling reputation -- Saturday proved to be a brutal day for John McCain and his campaign.

First came a front-page New York Times piece noting that McCain "has drawn an avalanche of criticism this week from Democrats, independent groups and even some Republicans for regularly stretching the truth." There was also an accompanying fact-check of McCain's latest TV ad, which called it the "latest in a number that resort to a dubious disregard for the facts."

The Washington Post gave "four Pinnochios" to McCain's recent assertion on "The View" that Palin never took earmarks as Alaska governor. Then the Boston Globe reported that Palin didn't really travel inside Iraq as has been claimed. And Bloomberg News said that the McCain camp may not have been exactly truthful in estimating the size of its recent crowds. "Now officials say they can't substantiate the figures McCain's aides are claiming."

To top it off, McCain spokesman Brian Rogers said this to the Politico about the increased media scrutiny of the campaign's factual claims: "We’re running a campaign to win. And we’re not too concerned about what the media filter tries to say about it.”

[see this post from earlier]

Not surprisingly, the Obama camp has pounced on all this, issuing a memo to reporters entitled "Unraveling the myth of the Straight Talk Express."
Welcome to the real world, corporate media. Please feel free to stay until at least November 4th.

Palin: I Didn't Really Fire Monegan; He Quit!

By GottaLaff

TPM:

In an extensive interview with The New Yorker from before she was tapped for the VP slot, Sarah Palin admitted she spoke to the state police commissioner about her problems with her trooper ex-brother-in-law -- but then maintains the commissioner wasn't actually fired by her, but instead quit in lieu of taking an unrelated demotion.
The New Yorker:
She said that one of her goals had been to combat alcohol abuse in rural Alaska, and she blamed Commissioner Monegan for failing to address the problem. That, she said, was a big reason that she’d let him go—only, by her account, she didn’t fire him, exactly. Rather, she asked him to drop everything else and single-mindedly take on the state’s drinking problem, as the director of the Alcoholic Beverage Control Board. “It was a job that was open, commensurate in salary pretty much—ten thousand dollars less”—but, she added, Monegan hadn’t wanted the job, so he left state service; he quit. [...]

Trooper Wooten has admitted to Tasering the boy and shooting the moose, and he was disciplined for these things within the department, but, under the union contract, he could not be fired at the Governor’s whim. (He had been cleared of the threat to Palin’s father, but disciplined for drinking and driving, which he still denies.) It was obvious that this continued to frustrate Palin. She also seemed to forget that you should not talk about your affairs when they’re under investigation. Troopergate was the one subject about which she seemed keen to explicate the details. She wanted to persuade me that firing Walt Monegan had nothing to do with Trooper Wooten; that it was in no way a conflict of interest or an abuse of power. But, as she spoke, she seemed to be saying something else—that her vendetta against Wooten was wholly justified. [...]

As governor, Palin has done nothing to impose her religious or social views. [...] So it was startling to see Palin emerge in the last days of August as an icon of the evangelical base of the Republican Party, and as a fierce—often vituperative—partisan scourge, mocking Barack Obama’s character and positions. It was startling, too, to hear her, in her début speech to the Republican National Convention, reading a script that consistently distorted her own record. [...]

The control of Palin by the McCain campaign was one of many ways in which it transformed her into someone largely unrecognizable to people who knew her in Alaska, where she hadn’t shown a great interest in national economic issues other than energy policy, or in international affairs, and where she was viewed as more often seeking the attention of the press than avoiding it. [...]

As a public speaker, Palin was known for expressing goals and voicing good intentions with gusto, if with few specifics. As she talked about her hopes for Alaska, she often seemed to skip from slogan to slogan without ever touching solid ground.
It's a long piece, but those are some of the highlights. Bush III.

Hitting back hard: Obama's straight-talk memo to the press corps

By GottaLaff

If McCain can pilfer "change" from Obama, then he can swipe "straight talk" from McCain. Here's a sample of the OBAMA CAMPAIGN MEMO: Unraveling the myth of the Straight Talk Express that he sent out to the press corp:

While the media is slowly starting to call the McCain campaign on their dishonest tactics, McCain’s staff boasts that they don’t care. As a McCain spokesman told the Politico [you can read it here], “We’re running a campaign to win. And we’re not too concerned about what the media filter tries to say about it.”
He then goes on at great length to expose Palin/McCain for who they are, correcting their despicable myths with fact. Please go take a look.

H/t: Sean

Chipping away at Palin's image

By GottaLaff

How many ways is the Oil Mom's image slowly tarnishing? Why, here are some examples now! Here and here! And whaddya know, the New York Times is even jumping in. It's about time:

Interviews show that Ms. Palin runs an administration that puts a premium on loyalty and secrecy.

Bush III.

The governor and her top officials sometimes use personal e-mail accounts for state business; dozens of e-mail messages obtained by The New York Times show that her staff members studied whether that could allow them to circumvent subpoenas seeking public records.
Cheney II.

Rick Steiner, a University of Alaska professor, sought the e-mail messages of state scientists who had examined the effect of global warming on polar bears. (Ms. Palin said the scientists had found no ill effects, and she has sued the federal government to block the listing of the bears as endangered.) An administration official told Mr. Steiner that it would cost $468,784 to process his request.

When Mr. Steiner finally obtained the e-mail messages — through a federal records requesthe discovered that state scientists had in fact agreed that the bears were in danger, records show.

Their secrecy is off the charts,” Mr. Steiner said.[...]

Last summer State Representative John Harris, the Republican speaker of the House, picked up his phone and heard Mr. Palin’s voice. The governor’s husband sounded edgy. He said he was unhappy that Mr. Harris had hired John Bitney as his chief of staff, the speaker recalled. Mr. Bitney was a high school classmate of the Palins and had worked for Ms. Palin. But she fired Mr. Bitney after learning that he had fallen in love with another longtime friend.

“I understood from the call that Todd wasn’t happy with me hiring John and he’d like to see him not there,” Mr. Harris said.

The Palin family gets upset at personal issues,” he added. “And at our level, they want to strike back.

Laura Chase, the campaign manager during Ms. Palin’s first run for mayor in 1996:

“I said, ‘You know, Sarah, within 10 years you could be governor,’ ” Ms. Chase recalled. “She replied, ‘I want to be president.’

She must be thrilled with the expiration date of her running mate, then.

In 1997, Ms. Palin fired the longtime city attorney, Richard Deuser, after he issued the stop-work order on a home being built by Don Showers, another of her campaign supporters.

Your attorney, Mr. Showers told Ms. Palin, is costing me lots of money.

She told me she’d like to see him fired,” Mr. Showers recalled. “But she couldn’t do it herself because the City Council hires the city attorney.” Ms. Palin told him to write the council members to complain.

Meanwhile, Ms. Palin pushed the issue from the inside. “She started the ball rolling,” said Ms. Patrick, who also favored the firing. Mr. Deuser was soon replaced by Ken Jacobus — then the State Republican Party’s general counsel.

“Professionals were either forced out or fired,” Mr. Deuser said.

Ms. Palin ordered city employees not to talk to the press. And she used city money to buy a white Suburban for the mayor’s use — employees sarcastically called it the mayor-mobile.

Next:

But in 1995, Ms. Palin, then a city councilwoman, told colleagues that she had noticed the book “Daddy’s Roommate” on the shelves and that it did not belong there, according to Ms. Chase and Mr. Stein. Ms. Chase read the book, which helps children understand homosexuality, and said it was inoffensive; she suggested that Ms. Palin read it.

Sarah said she didn’t need to read that stuff,” Ms. Chase said. “It was disturbing that someone would be willing to remove a book from the library and she didn’t even read it.

“I’m still proud of Sarah,” she added, “but she scares the bejeebers out of me.

And that was from someone who is proud of her. Next, she was up against Tony Knowles in the general election... shades of her current crammage:

Not deeply versed in policy, Ms. Palin skipped some candidate forums; at others, she flipped through hand-written, color-coded index cards strategically placed behind her nameplate.

Before one forum, Mr. Halcro said he saw aides shovel reports at Ms. Palin as she crammed. Her showman’s instincts rarely failed. She put the pile of reports on the lectern. Asked what she would do about health care policy, she patted the stack and said she would find an answer in the pile of solutions.

Then she sold the reports on EBay. Snark. Next:

While Ms. Palin took office promising a more open government, her administration has battled to keep information secret. Her inner circle discussed the benefit of using private e-mail addresses. An assistant told her it appeared that such e-mail messages sent to a private address on a “personal device” like a Blackberry “would be confidential and not subject to subpoena.

The governor’s office did not respond to questions on the topic.

Ms. Palin and aides use their private e-mail addresses for state business. On Feb. 7, Frank Bailey, a high-level aide, wrote to Ms. Palin’s state e-mail address to discuss appointments. Another aide fired back: “Frank, this is not the governor’s personal account.”

Mr. Bailey responded: “Whoops!

Bush III, Cheney II.

Many lawmakers contend that Ms. Palin is overly reliant on a small inner circle that leaves her isolated. Democrats and Republicans alike describe her as often missing in action. Since taking office in 2007, Ms. Palin has spent 312 nights at her Wasilla home, some 600 miles to the north of the governor’s mansion in Juneau, records show.

During the last legislative session, some lawmakers became so frustrated with her absences that they took to wearing “Where’s Sarah?” pins.

Many politicians say they typically learn of her initiatives — and vetoes — from news releases.

Mayors across the state, from the larger cities to tiny municipalities along the southeastern fiords, are even more frustrated. Often, their letters go unanswered and their pleas ignored, records and interviews show.

At an Alaska Municipal League gathering in Juneau in January, mayors across the political spectrum swapped stories of the governor’s remoteness. How many of you, someone asked, have tried to meet with her? Every hand went up, recalled Mayor Fred Shields of Haines Borough. And how many met with her? Just a few hands rose. Ms. Palin soon walked in, delivered a few remarks and left for an anti-abortion rally.

The administration’s e-mail correspondence reveals a siege-like atmosphere. Top aides keep score, demean enemies and gloat over successes. Even some who helped engineer her rise have felt her wrath.

There's your charismatic hockey mom... unplugged.

Anti-Palin Protest: The photos

By GottaLaff

Revel in it (click on images to enlarge):





H/t: Jane

Anti-Palin Protest: THE VIDEO

By GottaLaff



H/T: PADDY!

Hundreds turn out for anti-Palin protest

By GottaLaff


The Awakening:
Hundreds of protesters are outside the Loussac Library in Midtown Anchorage in a rally against Gov. Sarah Palin candidacy for vice president. At least 100 of Palin supporters are on the other side of the street. [...]

It's the first public demonstration against Palin since she accepted McCain's offer on Aug. 29.

The protesters include a mix of Obama supporters, anti-war protesters, abortion-rights advocates and people upset that Palin asked a Wasilla librarian about removing books from the Wasilla library.

Protesters said they were surprised at the size of the crowd, and said it was the result of e-mails that have been forwarded over the past few days about the event.

"I was stunned when I was coming here; I ve never seen anything like this," said Marybeth Holleman of Anchorage.

Most of anti-Palin protesters are on the south side of 36th Avenue, in front of the library. The Palin supporters are across the street on the north side, with many shouting "Sar-ah! Sa-rah!"

The sweet, sweet sound of the tide turning.

25% of U.S. oil production knocked out by Ike

By GottaLaff

I'm bumping the video up to make the point again, since I pushed it downthread too quickly.

Ike Brings Oil Woes
About a quarter of the U.S.'s total oil production has been knocked out for almost two weeks due to storms

The arrival of Hurricane Ike in southern Texas shut down the heart of the nation's oil and gas industry, as companies evacuated production platforms and closed down refineries along the Gulf Coast [...]

Officials from the Department of Energy said 14 of 17 oil refineries on the Texas coast between Corpus Christie and Beaumont were shut down, and the other three were on reduced runs, cutting about 19 percent of the nation's refining capacity.

In addition, 98 percent of the Gulf coast's oil production and 94 percent of its natural gas production was shut down for the storm, according to the Interior Department's Minerals Management Service.

The Energy Department focus today was on the impact on refiners, and whether supplies of gasoline, diesel and jet fuel would be constrained for days or weeks, similar to what occurred when hurricanes Katrina and Rita struck Louisiana and Texas within a month in 2005 and disrupted energy production for months.

Drill, baby, drill is sounding more and more shrill, baby, shrill.

Alan Greenspan- "Country can't afford McCain's tax cuts"

So John, where would we cut spending? Maybe all those nice earmarks your VP scrabbled for last year and this one?


WASHINGTON— Alan Greenspan says the country can't afford tax cuts of the magnitude proposed by Republican presidential contender John McCain -- at least not without a corresponding reduction in government spending.

"Unless we cut spending, no," the former Federal Reserve chairman said Friday when asked about McCain's proposed tax cuts, pegged in some estimates at $3.3 trillion.

(snip)

McCain has said that he would offset his proposed cuts -- including reducing the corporate tax rate and eliminating the Alternative Minimum Tax that has plagued middle-class families -- by ending congressional pork-barrel spending, unnecessary government programs and overhauling entitlement programs such as Medicare and Social Security.

Democrats pounced on Greenspan's comments, in part because McCain professed last year that he was weaker on economics than foreign affairs and was reading Greenspan's memoir, "The Age of Turbulence," to educate himself.

"Obviously he needs to go back to that book and study it some more," Sen. Claire McCaskill, D-Mo., said during a conference call arranged by the campaign of Democratic nominee Barack Obama.

Florida paper blasts John Sidney McCain

By GottaLaff

Via an editorial from the St. Petersburg Times:

McCain's straight talk has become a toxic mix of lies and double-speak. It is leaving a permanent stain on his reputation for integrity, and it is a short-term strategy that eventually will backfire with the very types of independent-thinking voters that were so attracted to him. [...]

McCain's faux chivalrous outrage over Obama's purported insult is beneath him. He has been a serious public servant willing to say unpopular truths when he thought it best for the country, but he's more than willing in this election to put his name on campaign lies. The leader who says he would rather lose an election than lose a war now risks losing his reputation in an attempt to win the White House.

The headlines in every paper, as well as editorials like this one, should reflect J Sid's lies and underhanded methods, rather than lauding his equally dishonest running mate and her momentary burst of celebrity. Unfortunately, too many Americans glance at the headlines and believe that that's the whole story.

We had a misleading headline in the L.A. Times today: "Guess who was tougher: Sarah Palin or Charles Gibson". Based on those words alone, Mr. Laffy thought it was a puff piece about Palin.

But it wasn't. The author opined about invertebrate interviewers, praising Campbell Brown for her insistence that Tucker Bounds respond to her questions [video of that here].

The media needs to start doing its job instead of creating a situation in which bloggers, editorial writers, and commenters do it for them.

Andover law school convenes Bush War Crimes Conference

By GottaLaff

UPDATE: The live feed has concluded, so I took down the video image.

Saturday morning, the dean of Massachusetts School of Law at Andover will convene a two day planning session with a single focus: To arrest, put to trial and carry out sentence on criminals in the Bush Administration.

The conference, arranged by Lawrence Vevel, cofounder of the Andover school, will focus on which of Bush's officials and members of Congress could be charged with war crimes. [...]

"He is a former drunk, was a serial failure in business who had to repeatedly be bailed out by daddy's friends and wanna-be-friends, was unable to speak articulately despite the finest education(s) that money and influence can buy, has a dislike of reading, so that 100-page memos have to be boiled down to one page for him, is heedless of facts and evidence, and appears not even to know the meaning of truth," said Vevel.

The conference will focus on:

# What international and domestic crimes were committed, which facts show crimes under which laws, and what punishments are possible.

# Which high level Executive officials -- and Federal judges and legislators as well, if any -- are chargeable with crimes.

# Which international tribunals, foreign tribunals and domestic tribunals (if any) can be used and how to begin cases and/or obtain prosecutions before them.

# The possibility of establishing a Chief Prosecutor’s Office such as the one at Nuremburg.

# An examination of cases already brought and their outcomes.

# Creating an umbrella Coordinating Committee with representatives from the increasing number of organizations involved in war crimes cases.

# Creating a Center to keep track of and organize compilations of relevant briefs, articles, books, opinions, and facts, etc., on war crimes and prosecutions of war criminals.

VIDEO: Just add "I'm Barack Obama and I approve this message"

By GottaLaff

Yesterday, the Senate Committee on Energy and Natural Resources held a Bipartisan Energy Summit featuring experts from MIT, Google, Shell, and others. At one point in the hearing, Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse (D-DE) tore into the energy protest House Republicans have been holding for the past several weeks. This political stunt was meant to demand a vote on oil drilling and “attack Democrats for leaving town” in August “without doing something to lower gas prices.

After listening all the problems currently facing the country, Whitehouse asked the experts whether anyone thought drilling was the “number one issue” right now. Almost nine seconds went by with complete silence:



Now all they have to do is add, "I'm Barack Obama and I approve this message." Done. An effective ad, no attacks necessary, and the Republicans made themselves look like the fools that they are.

H/t: Think Progress

Obama Waffles: Racism in a box

By GottaLaff

Paddy told you about them. Here's what they look like:

When in doubt, escalate

By GottaLaff

Bush's default position: Secrecy and military action:

Pakistan army ordered to hit back at U.S. forces 13 Sep 2008 The Pakistani Army has been given orders to retaliate against any unilateral strike by the Afghanistan-based U.S. troops inside the country. Army Spokesman Maj Gen Athar Abbas confirmed the orders in a brief interview with Geo News on late Thursday night.

US officials evade queries on Bush's approval to Pakistan raids 13 Sep 2008 Amid strong reactions from Pakistan to US-led coalition forces' raids against militants on its soil, the Bush administration has refused to comment on the issue, evading queries on the reported go-ahead given to American special forces by President [sic] George Bush. Asked whether the forces operating in Afghanistan had the powers to launch cross-border attacks, Defence Secretary Robert Gates refused to address the issue but said the commanders had the authority to protect their troops in Afghanistan.

H/t: CLG

We'll be seeing more of Biden

By GottaLaff

Seeing more of Biden will be great. Let's hope he sharpens his attacks on J Sid now:

The Democratic veep candidate plans to play a more prominent role in the campaign to help validate Obama among white working-class voters and turn them off from McCain.

Biden’s focus will be on McCain, not Palin, campaign officials say.

Values Voter Summit sells 'Obama Waffles' with racial stereotype


Some values there guys. Why is it everytime you get two or more off these asswipes together they have to be demeaning? Imagine if at a Dem summit we sold, oh, I dunno, Moose Mom Shake N' Bake? Oops, almost forgot, IOKIYAR.


WASHINGTON—A conservative political forum on Saturday sold boxes of waffle mix depicting Democratic presidential candidate Barack Obama as a racial stereotype on its front and wearing Arab-like headdress on its top flap.

The product, Obama Waffles, was meant as political satire, said Mark Whitlock and Bob DeMoss, two writers from Franklin, Tenn., who created the mix and sold it for $10 a box from a booth at the Values Voter Summit sponsored by the lobbying arm of the Family Research Council.

Republican Party stalwarts Newt Gingrich and Mitt Romney were among speakers at the forum, which officials said drew 2,100 activists from 44 states.

While Obama Waffles takes aim at Obama's politics by poking fun at his public remarks and positions on issues, it also plays off the image of the classic pancake-mix icon Aunt Jemima, which has been widely criticized as a demeaning stereotype. Obama is portrayed with popping eyes and big, thick lips as he stares at a plate of waffles and smiles broadly.

They Can't Stop Lying


Ya know, 10k people showing up for their rallies is impressive, so why did they have to lie? Oh that's right, they're freaking pathological.


McCain-Palin Crowd-Size Estimates Not Backed by Officials

Sept. 13 (Bloomberg) -- Senator John McCain has drawn some of the biggest crowds of his presidential campaign since adding Alaska Governor Sarah Palin to his ticket on Aug. 29. Now officials say they can't substantiate the figures McCain's aides are claiming.

McCain aide Kimmie Lipscomb told reporters on Sept. 10 that an outdoor rally in Fairfax City, Virginia, drew 23,000 people, attributing the crowd estimate to a fire marshal.

Fairfax City Fire Marshal Andrew Wilson said his office did not supply that number to the campaign and could not confirm it. Wilson, in an interview, said the fire department does not monitor attendance at outdoor events.

In recent days, journalists attending the rallies have been raising questions about the crowd estimates with the campaign. In a story on Sept. 11 about Palin's attraction for some Virginia women voters, Washington Post reporter Marc Fisher estimated the crowd to be 8,000, not the 23,000 cited by the campaign.

``The 23,000 figure was substantiated on the ground,'' McCain spokesman Tucker Bounds said. ``The campaign is willing to stand by the fact that it was our biggest crowd to date.''

(snip)

The McCain campaign said 10,000 people showed up at the Consol Energy Arena in Washington, Pennsylvania, home of the Washington Wild Things baseball team.

The campaign attributed that estimate, and several that followed, to U.S. Secret Service figures, based on the number of people who passed through magnetometers.

``We didn't provide any numbers to the campaign,'' said Malcolm Wiley, a spokesman for the U.S. Secret Service. Wiley said he would not ``confirm or dispute'' the numbers the McCain campaign has given to reporters.

Obama: John McCain is “cynically running the sleaziest and least honorable campaign in modern presidential campaign history.”

By GottaLaff

I'm stepping out for awhile, but this might get you revved up for what's coming in the next few weeks:

In a shift from the apolitical tone the presidential candidates took during Hurricane Gustav, Barack Obama did not temper his rhetoric Saturday, as his spokesman accused John McCain of “cynically running the sleaziest and least honorable campaign in modern presidential campaign history.”

John McCain wants to have a debate about national security let’s have that debate. I warned that going into Iraq would distract us from Afghanistan. John McCain cheer-leaded for it. John McCain was wrong and I was right,” Obama told a screaming New Hampshire crowd.

“The McCain-Palin ticket, they don’t want to debate the Obama-Biden ticket on issues because they are running on eight more years of what we’ve just seen. And they know it,” Obama said. “As a consequence what they’re going to spend the next seven, eight weeks doing is trying to distract you.

They’re going to talk about pigs and they’re going to talk about lipstick, they’re going to talk about Paris Hilton, they’re going to talk about Britney Spears. They will try to distort my record and they will try to undermine your trust in what the Democrats intend to do.” [...]

The McCain campaign criticized Obama for showing “zero restraint” given the storm and said “today’s attacks mark a new low from Barack Obama.”

The Obama camp’s response was even tougher. “We will take no lectures from John McCain who is cynically running the sleaziest and least honorable campaign in modern presidential campaign history,” said Obama spokesman Bill Burton. “His discredited ads with disgusting lies are running all over the country today. He runs a campaign not worthy of the office his is seeking.

You wanted tough? You got tough.

Doonesbury: McPOW edition

By GottaLaff

I just hooked up my new computer and have none of my programs installed yet. It is completely alien to me, including the keyboard, so to tide you and myself over and give Paddy a break, here's the latest wonderfully clever Doonesbury

:
(click on image to enlarge)

Media Confirms: Palin Exaggerated Trip to Iraq


What it all boils down to is that this woman and this campaign are pathological liars. Wonder how much of this we're going to hear on the the Sunday shows?


Following her selection last month as John McCain's running mate, aides said Palin had traveled to Ireland, Germany, Kuwait, and Iraq to meet with members of the Alaska National Guard. During that trip she was said to have visited a "military outpost" inside Iraq. The campaign has since repeated that Palin's foreign travel included an excursion into the Iraq battle zone.

But in response to queries about the details of her trip, campaign aides and National Guard officials in Alaska said by telephone yesterday that she did not venture beyond the Kuwait-Iraq border when she visited Khabari Alawazem Crossing, also known as "K-Crossing," on July 25, 2007.

Asked to clarify where she traveled in Iraq, Palin's spokeswoman, Maria Comella, confirmed that "She visited a military outpost on the other side of the Kuwait-Iraq border."

It was the second such clarification in as many weeks of the itinerary of what Palin has called "the trip of a lifetime." Earlier, the campaign acknowledged that Palin made only a refueling stop in Ireland...

Palin also told ABC that she had traveled to Mexico and Canada. Her campaign had previously mentioned a Canada visit, but not a trip to Mexico. Comella said yesterday that Palin had visited Mexico on vacation, and Canada once last year.

Morning Distraction- Trailer for "The Soloist"


I gotta run to the grocery store, so here's a very powerful trailer for the new Robert Downey Jr/Jamie Foxx movie. Looks wonderful.

Obama opens more North Dakota offices


BFCE. It's all about the ground game baby.

The campaign for Democratic presidential hopeful Barack Obama announced Friday it is opening two more North Dakota offices, located in Rugbyand Valley City.

That brings the grand total for Obama campaign offices in North Dakota to 11.

GOP candidate John McCain has not opened a campaign office in North Dakota, a state President Bush easily took in 2004.

New Obama Ad- The McCain Gamble



Not as hard as I'd like it to be, but I like the video game aspect of it. What do you think?

Saturday Linkage McCain/Palin Heavy Edition


Palin confused on Social Security, other issues

Man driving friend to DWI hearing charged with DWI

McCain campaign systematically targets the news media

Bolivia declares martial law in protest-hit region

Palin could rob McCain of Jewish vote

Serial blasts rock Delhi; several injured

McCain Barbs Stirring Outcry as Distortions

Strip of Iraq 'on the Verge of Exploding'

Dick Cavett- Experience 101

Palin powers abortion groups' fundraising


Backlash indeed. Gotta and I were talking yesterday and decided that these groups are exactly who needs to take on the "rape kit" controversy. I also like the idea to call them "rape tax", which I read somewhere else, but can't remember where.

Advocacy groups on both sides of the abortion issue are reporting a surge in fundraising in reaction to newly selected Republican vice presidential nominee, Sarah Palin.

Last week NARAL Pro-Choice America had the highest grossing week since it began fundraising for the 2008 election, according to staffers, raising more than $120,000 from two e-mail alerts. Planned Parenthood also reported high fundraising numbers from e-mail appeals.

The same held true on the other side of the divide, where anti-abortion groups said Palin sparked an outpouring of money into their coffers. The Susan B. Anthony List, a group that helps promote female candidates who oppose abortion, said its weekly fundraising tripled last week.

(snip)

While abortion has failed to galvanize voters over the past few election cycles, as issues like the war in Iraq, the economy, and immigration have dominated the debate, Palin’s nomination appears to have returned it to the front burner.

Already, Palin is proving to be a lightning rod on the issue.

On the website of Feminists for Life, of which Palin is a member, President Serrin M. Foster reports of “phones ringing off the hook” and “being inundated with requests for information and help.”

On Wednesday, South Carolina Democratic Party Chairwoman Carol Fowler created a storm of controversy and was forced to issue an apology after telling Politico that McCain had picked a running mate “whose primary qualification seems to be that she hasn't had an abortion."

On the left, abortion rights groups report a flood of e-mails and calls from existing and new members who are alarmed by the prospect of a GOP ticket where both candidates would like to see Roe v. Wade overturned, with a vice presidential nominee who supports abstinence-based sex education and opposes abortion in all cases unless the life of the mother is at stake.

“That’s a pretty good indication of how fired up people are,” said Beth Shipp, political director of NARAL. “It has energized our base.”

Obama cancels SNL appearance


FYI.

WASHINGTON--With a deadly hurricane aimed at Texas, Barack Obama cancelled his appearence on Saturday Night Live on Friday evening, spokesman Jen Psaki in a statement.

"In the light of the unfolding crisis in Texas, Senator Obama has decided it is no longer appropriate to appear on Saturday Night Live tomorrow evening," she said.

Ike moves inland in Texas bringing massive flooding


Big prayers and good thoughts for all out friends in the path. This thing is very scary.


GALVESTON, Texas (AFP) - Gigantic hurricane Ike barreled into Texas early Saturday, bringing a monster ocean surge and flooding coastal areas where tens of thousands remained holed up in their homes.

The center of Ike, which made landfall at Galveston Island at about 0710 GMT, was just 25 kilometers (15 miles) northeast of Houston's international airport, lashing the fourth largest US city and a major oil hub with rain and gale-force wind.

Massive damage and flooding was reported throughout the region and more than a million people fled inland.

But officials said more than 100,000 residents of low-lying areas decided to ride out the storm despite warnings from the national weather service that a wall of water up to 20 feet (6.0 meters) high could spell "certain death."

Friday, September 12, 2008

Poor John Sidney McCain: No Palin, no audience

By GottaLaff

I've always maintained, this is the Palin/McCain ticket:

If there were any doubts that the sidekick was stealing the show, they were put to rest when Sarah Palin took off for Alaska with a wave from the tarmac by John McCain.

His crowds suddenly dwindled. The exuberant cheering heard day after day during two weeks of joint appearances went away. And the Republican presidential candidate's schedule began to resemble the lightness of May instead of the full throttle of September. [...]

Without Palin later in the day, McCain went to a diner in Philadelphia.

He held a discussion on economic woes there with half a dozen businesswomen. A large crowd backing Democratic rival Barack Obama gathered in the indoor marketplace where the Down Home Diner is located, and yelled "Obama, Obama" so loudly that McCain and his guests at times had to lean far over the table to hear each other speak.

Pathetic. His voters are actually voting for his running mate. And his running mate is a bumbling neophyte. Some ticket.

VIDEO-- John Sidney McCain: Mayors, governors don't have national security experience

By GottaLaff

Once again, I can't play this on my computer, but I have heard the sound on the radio. Priceless:


10/07: "I am prepared. I need no on-the-job training. I wasn't a mayor for a short period of time. I wasn't a governor for a short period of time"

When does being a governor or mayor for a short period of time not disqualify your credentials on national security? When you are John McCain and your task is to defend your vice presidential candidate Sarah Palin.

When does being a governor or mayor for a short period of time ABSOLUTELY disqualify your credentials on national security? When you are John McCain and your task is to defeat primary opponents Mitt Romney and Rudy Giuliani.

Sarah Louise Palin:

"Charlie, again, we've got to remember what the desire is in this nation at this time," she said to the ABC host. "It is for no more politics as usual and somebody's big, fat resume maybe that shows decades and decades in that Washington establishment, where, yes, they've had opportunities to meet heads of state."
Pre-requisite for high office: No resume. That might imply that you have, you know, experience... Like, say, giving birth five times, shooting wolves from airplanes, and forcing rape victims to pay for their own tests.

Charles Gibson interviews: Sarah Louise Palin flubs entitlement question, admits backing earmarks

By GottaLaff

Round 2:
Sarah Palin, talking about domestic policy with ABC's Charles Gibson in his second day of exclusive access on Friday, seem confused about entitlement programs--and unaware that Congress has little say in significantly reducing the costs of Social Security, Medicaid and Medicare.

When she seemed to equate these entitlement programs to agencies "where we can find efficiencies in every department" Gibson lectured her that agencies are not involved in entitlements.

Didn't Andrea Mitchell play mommy and chide her as she would a child, too? Why yes she did.

She referred to the Arizona senator as "McCain" several times in the interview.

Didn't Grandpa J Sid teach you to address him as "Mr. Grandpa"? You are so grounded.

Of note:

*For someone running against Washington--an act of Congress helped define Palin's life. Palin, 44, a high school basketball player, said, "I am a product of Title 9," a reference for the section of the 1972 act of Congress to force female sports equity.

* On earmarks--McCain is on a crusade to ban them--Palin did not make full use of an opportunity by Gibson to persuasively explain why she was for the infamous Alaskan Bridge to Nowhere before she was against it--after it was dead in Congress.

She said she just read the "writing on the wall....that project is going nowhere... circumstances have so drastically changed," she said. [...]

*She justified an earmark for an Alaskan study on the "mating habits of crabs" because it was done, she said, in the open.

So as long as you screw over Americans out in the open, it's okay? BushCo will be relieved to hear that.

*Palin differs with McCain on abortion. John and Cindy McCain would allow abortions for victims of rape and incest. Palin would only allow an exception if the life of the mother was in danger. "This is my personal opinion," she pleaded.

*On stem cell research, the McCain campaign released a radio ad Friday touting his support for stem cell research the Bush White House--and Palin opposes. [...]

*She's not a gay basher. Gibson asked Palin if homosexuality was genetic or learned and she said it's not for her to "judge" people.

*Palin said Barack Obama may regret not tapping Hillary Clinton to be his running mate. "I think he's regretting not picking her now, I do. ..."

It's good to see she's not trying to use Hillary to stir things up. And it's swell that she's refusing to judge genetics, especially when that wasn't the question. Now, about those earmarks:
Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin, in a new installment of her interview with ABC News's Charlie Gibson, backed earmarks and her right, both as a governor and a mayor, to request and secure them -- just don't call them earmarks. Call it "infrastructure."

"I was for infrastructure being built in the state," she said, "and it's not inappropriate for a mayor or for a governor to request and to work with their Congress, their congressmen, their congresswomen, to plug in to the federal budget along with every other state a share of the federal budget for infrastructure."
Oh-h-h, so that's what the kids are calling it these days.
In common Washington parlance, that is called an infrastructure earmark, a piece of the transportation and public works budget secured for specific state projects. [...]

Palin decried the abuse of the earmark process at first, pledging to join McCain in his campaign against earmarks. But Gibson pressed her hard to get her to concede that she backed the so-called "Bridge to Nowhere," linking tiny Ketchikan to tiny Gravina Island.

She finally gave in.

"What I supported was a link between a community and it's airport," she said.

She'd make the bestest vice president ever! She's readier than anyone could be to take the reins of the U.S. government if Pappy McCain were to kick the bucket. The readiest nominee in town... if she were running for vice president of the 5th grade.

Harry Reid blasts John Sidney McCain on temper

By GottaLaff


Well, somebody has to:
Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) had some of his harshest words yet for Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.) on Friday, suggesting his colleague lacks the temperament and judgment to be president. [...]

Our dangerous world calls for leaders with sound judgment, not those with a temperament prone to recklessness,” Reid said. “Our country deserves more than token shifts and lip service to change. We need to take decisive action to reverse eight years of foreign policy mistakes. That’s exactly what Sen. Obama and Senate Democrats offer.” [...]

The Republicans talk a lot about experience. When you’re the author, architect and enabler of eight years of devastating foreign policy mistakes, that’s not experience. It’s very bad judgment,” Reid said.

For more on his temper, go here and here.

"John McCain talking about putting country first, it’s fair to ask – which country?”

By GottaLaff

Obama's hitting J Sid on patriotism, attacking his "strength" while busting him for his lobbyist ties:

Sen. Barack Obama ripped into his Republican rival today for undermining American workers and prioritizing a foreign corporate agenda over domestic manufacturing.

“Ask the workers across this country who have seen their jobs outsourced!” Obama told a gathering of Florida Machinists in a satellite address. “The very companies that shipped their jobs overseas have been rewarded with billions of dollars in tax breaks that John McCain supports,” he continued. “So when American workers hear John McCain talking about putting country first, it’s fair to ask – which country?” [...]

John McCain just doesn’t get it. Just ask your brothers and sisters at Boeing. Because while it was right for the Pentagon to cancel competition yesterday for the next generation of tankers, it was wrong for John McCain to reward two of the Washington lobbyists who worked against Boeing with jobs on his campaign. Just ask the Machinists in Pennsylvania who build Harley-Davidsons. Because John McCain didn’t just oppose the requirement that the government buy American-made motorcycles, he called “Buy American” provisions “disgraceful.”

Obama was repeatedly interrupted by applause. [...] McCain was just caught sans flag pin on September 11, so this could be a ripe time for debating who is the true patriot in the race, if you’re into that sort of thing. Obama is taking a slightly higher road, tying his “country first” line to actual policies about workers in this country.

Now the question is, did he reach his audience? From the repeated applause, it seems so. So the next question is, will his message reach a larger audience?

VIDEO: "It's Over"

By GottaLaff

"It's Over" Ad:


H/t: Sean

The Intern Diaries: Rachel Maddow interviews Sarah Palin's old boss

By GottaLaff


Rachel Maddow is interviewing Sarah Palin's old boss (on Air America). Sarah was his intern.

Sidebar: But first Rachel has some fun:
"You thought it was bad when Bush said he could see Putin's soul by looking into his eyes, but she could see into Russia by... seeing Russia."
Oh-h, suh-naperoony.

Now back to the Intern Sarah Show. Kerry Kerrigan is now the v.p. of programming at the Air America affiliate in Alaska. But at one time, he had an intern named Sarah. Kerry Kerrigan was a weather guy and met Sarah in 1988 at NBC in Anchorage when she was interested in becoming a sportscaster. Then, he says, she was nice and naive, no Karl Rove influence. Straight out of college. She didn't stay there long, being a Wasilla Valley Girl who had babies soon after.

Rachel: Was she smart?

Kerrigan: [pause] She seemed nice. You know how when you go on a blind date, and you ask, "Is she pretty?" and the answer is, "She's really nice."

Rachel (laughing): That's called "Alaska nice."

Kerrigan: I do a radio show now, and my callers say she's changed dramatically, drank the Kool-Aid. Totally different. Always was a staunch Republican, but she got that pseudo-reformer mantle with caveats. She turned in the oil chair, but she didn't like having a 9-5 job, so she got rid of him so she could get rid of her job.

Rachel: Bridge to Nowhere?

Kerrigan: There were 2 bridges. One was in Ketchikan. She kept the money, by the way. The other bridge was in Anchorage that leads to old dairy farm land. She allocated over $850,000 to an office 4 floors above her for that.

Rachel: She dialed back the bridge thing, talks now of investing in Alaskan infrastructure. Everyone wants their state to get good stuff, but you don't want your official who's good at that to be two faced about it.

Kerrigan: She had no choice. She read off the sheet [speech writer] Scully wrote for her, for 2 weeks, and had nothing else to say.

Rachel: TrooperGate?

Kerrigan: The bipartisan legislative council is looking into that. She's made some untrue statements. They just sent out 13 subpoenas, including First Dude Todd.

How involved was he, that's the question. He called people to the governor's office and the governor wasn't even around. They're trying to get the 1100 emails. She says she wants to answer questions, but now the city is crawling with lawyers, etc.

Rachel: Todd Palin doing state business, in the gov's office, being cc'd in emails, being the conduit for family pressure in TrooperGate... he seems to be the next big chapter.

Kerrigan: He's a big macho image guy... he really has difficulty being second fiddle to Sarah.

Rachel: Did he overstep?

Kerrigan: He wa-a-ay overstepped his bounds.

Rachel: What will happen next?

Kerrigan: A backlash from women in particular. She's not a real pro-woman candidate. TrooperGate centers around protecting her sister, but there's no real proof of the accusastions against him. She could have done a lot of things to help her sister, womens' shelters, etc. Alaska has the highest rape/incest rate in the country, yet she cut funds for safety officers. She's not walking her walk. She does NOT defend women or children, and that will come out.

Poll-itics: Obama's ahead in New Jersey edition

By GottaLaff

Marist Poll: Obama Holds Small Lead in New Jersey

A new Marist Poll in New Jersey finds Sen. Barack Obama leading Sen. John McCain among registered voters, 47% to 40%.

Among likely voters, Obama's margin falls to just three points, 48% to 45%.

Other findings: "83% of likely Democratic voters say they support their party's candidate, Barack Obama, while 87% of likely Republican voters back John McCain. And, among New Jersey's all-important likely Independent voters, including those leaning toward a candidate, 51% support Barack Obama compared with 41% for McCain."
GObama!

Palin: Democrats "hijacked" Alaska

By GottaLaff

Democrats are terrorists. Apparently, we hijacked Alaska. Yes, we hijacked an entire state without so much as a box cutter. Get ready to laugh. This is all about TrooperGate:

Maria Comella, Palin's campaign spokeswoman, just passed along the following statement about the "Democrat-led Walt Monegan inquiry" from Alaska Lt. Gov. Sean Parnell:

“As a lifelong Alaskan and public servant, I’m disappointed by the complete hijacking of what should be a fair and objective process. It is troubling to see partisan Democrats and Obama supporters abuse their power, the legal system and trust of Alaskans to smear Governor Palin to score political points. Arbitrary deadlines, inappropriate public comments and secret deals between Sen. French and 'independent' investigator Branchflower, have turned this process into a complete farce. This use of government power for political gain is an embarrassment to Alaska and the landmark ethics reform our state has achieved under Gov. Sarah Palin.”

Of course, it's worth pointing out that before McCain selected her as his running mate, Palin said she welcomed the legislative investigation into the so-called "Troopergate" controversy in Alaska. "Hold me accountable," she told Alaska reporters in July.

How ironic that the abuser of power is accusing the Democrats of abusing power. Will they accuse Bush/Cheney of abusing democracy? Will they accuse Palin of abusing the truth? I didn't think so.

Dear TPC, Here's the latest on the absentee ballot issue. Love, BradBlog

By GottaLaff

Brad Friedman, of BradBlog fame, saw our update about the Republican efforts to cage voters in the so-called "purple" states. He has an update for us, via Comments:

Thanks for the update, GottaLaff.

More details now posted here (along with the audio from my appearance today on the Hartmann show on this, as you expertly detailed!)

"McCain 'Absentee Ballot Request' Mailers Are Aggressive, But APPEAR To Be Legit"
http://www.bradblog.com/?p=6378

Brad
From the responses we've gotten here in Comments, and from the calls I've heard on the Hartmann show, I'm still wary. Stay tuned.

And thanks for the update, Brad!

UPDATE: Alaska lawmakers vote to subpoena Todd Palin

By GottaLaff

Earlier I posted that it was expected that First Dude Todd would be subpoenaed in the TrooperGate investigation.

Bingo.

The abuse of power investigation against Sarah Palin, Alaska governor and Republican vice presidential candidate, took a potentially ominous turn for her party on Friday when state lawmakers voted to subpoena her husband.

Republican efforts to delay the probe until after the Nov. 4 election were thwarted when GOP State Sen. Charlie Huggins, who represents Palin's hometown of Wasilla, sided with Democrats. ''Let's just get the facts on the table,'' said Huggins, who appeared in camouflage pants to vote during a break from moose hunting. [...]

Branchflower also asked for a subpoena for the phone records of one Palin administration official, Frank Bailey. Bailey was recorded calling an Alaska State Trooper lieutenant and discussing confidential information about Wooten, including his job application and worker's compensation claim. In a deposition taken by Palin's attorney, he testified that he never saw Wooten's file, but instead received the information from Todd Palin.

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