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Saturday, July 31, 2010

Fireworks, $250,000 in Jewelry, and a Vegan Cake - Oh My

What is a vegan cake you ask, never fear all the lavish details are here:
At some point during the ceremony, there will be a fireworks display along the Hudson River, and the ever-conscientious Clintons have made contingency plans in the event of a power outage. "Apparently, they have an army of electricians and carpenters in case there is a thunderstorm and the lights go out," said Jim Langan, executive editor of the Hudson Valley News. "Electricians have been told to wear tuxedos." Chelsea will be draped in $250,000 worth of jewelry, and—if her recent trip to the Vera Wang boutique in New York City is any indication—will likely don a Vera Wang dress at some point. Hillary is rumored to be wearing Oscar de la Renta, a favorite of hers who she's worn to dozens of public events and fancier affairs like inaugural balls. Bryan Rafanelli, the head of Rafanelli Events, is the wedding planner and Laura Pensiero, one of Oprah Winfrey's favorite chefs, is rumored to be the event's caterer. Post-ceremony, the guests will nosh on a gluten-free vegan cake. And $15,000 is being spent on portable toilets.
Well if one must eat cake it might as well be of the gluten-free vegan sort I guess.  No word on who designed the tuxedos electricians were required to wear.  I do wonder who was responsible for the unfortunate dress Hillary chose to wear to the rehearsal dinner.  There is absolutely nothing flattering about that dress.  A good designer could have or should have led her away from this choice.  Anyone spotting a designer claiming that fiasco gets to keep the bouquet.

After nearly two years of the Obama administration, I certainly have a greater appreciation for the Clintons.  This does not mean I am willing to buy the media meme Chelsea's wedding is "the closest thing we have to an American royal wedding."   Jenna Bush received no such distinction when she married during her father's term in office and we did have that whole revolution thing a couple hundred years ago.   Nevertheless, here's hoping the bride and groom have many happy years together.

Looks like the death panel has rendered a verdict on Charlie Rangel

Swallow the blue retirement pill Charlie:
"I think Charlie Rangel served a very long time and served-- his constituents very well. But these-- allegations are very troubling," Obama told Harry Smith in an interview to be aired on the "Early Show." and first broadcast on the CBS Evening News with Katie Couric.

"And he'll-- he's somebody who's at the end of his career. Eighty years old. I'm sure that-- what he wants is to be able to-- end his career with dignity. And my hope is that-- it happens. "
Frankly my dear, Charlie doesn't give a damn what the death panel says, he prefers the harshly-worded reprimand instead:
A House investigator says the panel handling Rep. Charlie Rangel's ethics case has recommended a reprimand by the full House — but that decision could be months away.
Rep. Gene Green, who's on the subcommittee that investigated the New York Democrat, says that's the recommended penalty for the 20-term New York Democrat. Rangel is facing 13 charges of wrongdoing.
Uh oh, maybe he wasn't supposed to know  13 separate charges of wrongdoing would only get him a reprimand:
Green explained that the four-person investigative panel's recommended punishment “wasn’t supposed to be included” in the 13-count ethics indictment.

“It’s not an option that is typically published, I screwed up. And I’m going to call Zoe and apologize,” Green told The Hill on Friday afternoon.

Green explained that though the subcommittee had the “authority to recommend” a punishment, “it’s up to the full committee to make that decision.”

Later, Green told reporters that he had made the call to Lofgren to apologize. He also said a final decision on a punishment for Rangel could be made by the entire House.
Hey swamp cleaning is hard work folks.  Hei Ho - Hei Ho - it's under the bus he goes sang the eight little Democratic dwarfs in dire straits back in their districts.

 Perhaps they'll sing another chorus for Maxine Waters while they're at it.

More at Memeorandum

Friday, July 30, 2010

Ten Buck Fridays: Patricia Sullivan Patriot to defeat Alan Grayson

This week's Ten Buck Friday winner is Patricia Sullivan the Patriot committed to chaining down the Federal Government.  Patricia is a home schooling mother of four running on a platform of fiscal responsibility, limited government, free markets and strong national defense.  She is running for the Republican nomination to be the candidate to remove Alan Grayson from Congress.



Don't forget to label your donation "Ten Buck Fridays"

Make your donation to Patricia Sullivan here.




Thursday, July 29, 2010

Most Articulate President Ever: Obama calls African-Americans a ‘mongrel people’ on The View

Via Memeorandum
Perhaps President Obama should have taken Ed Rendell's advice and skipped the estrogen fest we have come to know as "The View:"
When asked about his background, which includes a black father and white mother, Obama said of African-Americans: "We are sort of a mongrel people."


"I mean we're all kinds of mixed up," Obama said. "That's actually true of white people as well, but we just know more about it."
The Hill gets out the mop to clean up after that disaster:
The president's remarks were directed at the roots of all Americans. The definition of mongrel as an adjective is defined as "of mixed breed, nature, or origin," according to dictionary.com.


Obama did not appear to be making an inflammatory remark with his statement and the audience appeared to receive it in the light-hearted manner that often accompanies interviews on morning talk shows.
Yes of course we often hear that light-hearted banter from the Jerry Springer genre. When in Rome as they say...


Elizabeth Hasselback had her work cut out for her as the lone conservative on the show.  Nevertheless she challenged Obama on jobs and his promise to heal the planet and all that:
He was challenged by Elisabeth Hasselbeck, the conservative voice on the all-women panel, about his claim to have saved 2.5 million jobs with his recovery act and his inability to unite the country.


On the latter, Obama said that "right after the election there was a sense of hopefulness and unity," but "the politics of the economic recovery" and steps he took to save the auto companies created a partisan divide.


"My hope is that I've tried to set a tone in the debate that says, 'Look, we can disagree without being disagreeable,'" Obama said.
Really Mr. President you've tried to set a tone have you?  Really??


Heh, did Rush Limbaugh really Fed-ex knee pads to Joy Behar for the interview?

Surprise - Shirley Sherrod to sue Andrew Breitbart

H/T Hot Air
Alas, Sherrod's 15 minutes aren't over yet:
Ousted Agriculture Department employee Shirley Sherrod said Thursday she will sue a conservative blogger who posted a video edited in a way that made her appear racist.
Sherrod was forced to resign as director of rural development in Georgia after Andrew Breitbart posted the edited video online. In the full video, Sherrod, who is black, spoke to a local NAACP group about racial reconciliation and lessons she learned after initially hesitating to help a white farmer save his home.
Speaking Thursday at the National Association of Black Journalists convention, Sherrod said she would "definitely" sue over the video that took her remarks out of context. Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack has since offered Sherrod a new job in the department. She has not decided whether to accept.
Sherrod said she had not received an apology from Breitbart and no longer wanted one.
"He had to know that he was targeting me," she said.
It's a debatable point who is targeting who here. On the merits, Jonathan Turley doesn't think much of her chances in court beyond the potential to embarrass Breitbart in discovery.   It is equally plausible she is the one embarrassed.

Cross posted at Potluck

Much more on this at Memeorandum

Heh, Nice Deb adds this:
The woman does not make a credible plaintiff, but since she’s had amazing luck with the courts, she must figure, what the heck.
Exit question: Given the fact that the new media is now sniffing around that Pigford v Glickman case, wouldn’t you think there are some Bureaucrats at the USDA sort of  wishing this woman would just go away?
Ed Morrissey thinks the Obama administration is as anxious as anyone to see Miss Sherrod and her lawsuit safely out of the headlines

More "All is well" from the DCCC

Via Memeorandum

Democrats appear determined to continue hypnotizing their fundraising base with the notion there is absolutely no chance they will lose the House this year.   Greg Sargent dutifully offered his space at The Washington Post to assist Democrats in spreading the good news that hopes for a continued Democratic majority are far from dead.  Sargent offers a secret memo obtained through an unnamed source which the reader is expected to accept as "a window on Dem thinking about the political landscape in a difficult year." Sargent notes two key points:
 First, Republicans simply can't put enough seats in play to win the House. Second, the Tea Party has become a massive liability nationally in multiple unappreciated ways.
Make no mistake, much of this memo is sheer unadulterated garbage intended to calm fears and keep the cash flowing to the massive Democratic war chests.

On the left, Charlie Cook adds up the Democrats' math and finds the scenario plausible if Democrats maintain their financial advantage while Nate Silver tears to shreds the faulty assumptions and desperate math contained in the memo in a post titled, "It's Like Mathematically Unpossible for Republicans to Win the House, or Something."(language warning applies)  On the right Michael Barone finds Democrats poised to take a "thumping."  Bruce McQuain sums it up:
This memo has Nancy Pelosi – who we all know is a math whiz – written all over it. She took great exception to Robert Gibbs saying a week or so ago it was possible that the Democrats may lose the House in November. This is her wacky reasoning to a tee.
Though the first part of the memo seems to be discredited on the left and the right, the argument the tea party is a massive liability enjoys no such agreement.  Both Silver and Matthew Sheffield make the point that on a "macro view" the tea party has successfully rebranded conservative ideas.  Silver, however, takes some heart in the notion the tea party may be costing Republicans "a few opportunities where inexperienced and/or wacky candidates are nominated," citing Sharron Angle and Rand Paul as examples.  Perhaps this inspired Sheffield to caution tea party backed candidates to be careful when discussing ideas that are not widely understood by the general electorate.   With or without the tea party, Democrats have little else to offer in the way of substantive debate.  They certainly can't run on their accomplishments.  This leaves the "we may be incompetent but they're crazy," strategy as their only viable path to avoid complete annihilation in November.

Bruce McQuain points to the most credible argument in the DCCC memo.  The greatest risk to conservative hopes Pelosi will be forced to surrender her gavel comes from third party candidates who will surely split the vote and potentially hand Democrats a win in hotly contested elections.  In my own district one libertarian candidate decided to drop from the race in order to avoid being the spoiler while another perennial candidate prefers to indulge his narcissistic fantasy, "the country needs him."  While this candidate has no serious chance of winning the election he has pulled as many as 6000 votes from the Republican candidate in previous elections.  Consider that the Republican candidate Mike Fitzpatrick lost his seat to the current incumbent Patrick Murphy in 2006 by a mere 1500 votes.  In the 7th Congressional District Jim Schneller is working to have himself listed on the ballot as an Independent though the Independence Hall Tea Party has wisely endorsed the Republican front runner Pat Meehan.  Vulnerable Democratic incumbents everywhere are dreaming they will be blessed with spoiler candidates to split the vote of the enthused conservatives they know intend to vote in November.

At this point in the race, polling information that could provide a clearer picture of the size of the tide Democrats fear most is in short supply.  What we have seen thus far gives us ample reason to hope the tide is on our side as Michael Barone seems to believe:
Today a lot more Democratic incumbents seem to be trailing Republican challengers in polls. Jim Geraghty of National Review Online has compiled a list of 13 Democratic incumbents trailing in polls released over the past seven weeks.

Some of these poll numbers are mind-boggling. Tom Perriello, a 727-vote winner in Virginia 5 in 2008, has been running two weeks of humorous ads showing what a hard worker he is. A poll shows him trailing Republican state Sen. Robert Hurt 58 to 35 percent.

In industrial Ohio 13, which Barack Obama carried 57 to 42, a poll shows incumbent Betty Sutton trailing free-spending Republican Tom Ganley 44 to 31 percent.

As Geraghty notes, we haven't seen polls released by many other Democrats on Republican target lists. Most are conducting polls; many have reason to release favorable results if they're available. This looks like a case where the absence of evidence is evidence of absence.
Whether these early polls accurately reflect a sea change for Democrats will surely be tested as we get closer to November.  Perhaps if the races are closer those tempted to indulge their ideological instincts will think better of a decision to vote for a spoiler merely to prove a point.  For now, it seems the best evidence that Democrats are in dire straits is exhibited in the continual orchestrated effort to hypnotize their base with the frantic message "All is well."

Tuesday, July 27, 2010

It's 3 AM and the call comes for leadership - where is Barack Obama?

Once upon a time it wasn't safe to criticize the "wildly popular" President; it appears all bets are off.   November Starts Now.  It's 3 AM and the call comes for leadership - where is Barack Obama?


Really Congressman Sestak? Really??

H/T:Hot Air

Less than 100 days out from the November elections Congressman Joe Sestak hands the Pat Toomey campaign a sound bite that will live in infamy. In what has to be the weakest attempt of any Democrat to distance themselves from Nancy Pelosi to date, Sestak says he can't decide if Pelosi is a liberal:
Sestak, speaking at the Pennsylvania Press Club, was asked whether he believes Speaker of the House Pelosi is a liberal or a pragmatist. Sestak describes himself as the latter.

He said he didn't know, but also said he never looks at her voting record.
Really Congressman Sestak? Really??


Aww, poor guy he is so sensitive about being unfairly linked with Nancy Pelosi and Barack Obama:
The subject is especially sensitive for Sestak, who recently lost a battle with Pennsylvania television stations to pull a commercial that says he "gives it 100 percent to Nancy Pelosi." Sestak argued that he hasn't voted with Pelosi every single time (it's about 97 percent ), but the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, which paid for the ad, won the argument that on the big issues of the day — health care, energy, economic stimulus — Sestak has voted with Pelosi.

High-profile political figures, such as Pelosi and President Barack Obama, who are linked to so-called liberal policies, are not viewed favorably in many areas of Pennsylvania. For Sestak, his general election rhetoric has been explaining that why his votes with them on most issues is a matter of personal principle, not staunch ideology.

"I will stand up against my party's interest whenever it doesn't help Pennsylvanians," he said.
Make no mistake, Congressman Sestak stands up against his party if and when it suits his career plans. The rest of the time he can be found voting arm-in-arm with the Obama/Pelosi agenda. Perhaps he is hoping that Pennsylvanians are too busy clinging bitterly to their guns and bibles to notice .

Monday, July 26, 2010

Photo of the day

Via POWIP in aptly titled post, "Today’s entry for the “a picture is worth a thousand words” file." This seems to be an appropriate photo response to the question posed in this Denverpost.com editorial though Instapundit links the t-shirt best capturing the substance of the Denver Post lament.

Photo credit goes to HackedIrl


Friday, July 23, 2010

This Week's Ten Buck Friday Winner is Chip Cravaack

Please support Chip Cravaack for Congress and help unseat an eighteen-term incumbent, Rep. Jim Oberstar(D-MN).   RightKlik has this video posted produced by Cravaack for Congress in order to introduce this fine candidate:



No Sheeples Here has a fine write up on benefits to removing Oberstar from Congress:
Rep. Oberstar is now in a congressional caucus made up of extreme liberals like Nancy Pelosi (D-CA), Steny Hoyer (D-MD), Charles Rangel (D-NY) and Barney Frank (D-MA). These people are hardcore leftists who bear no resemblance to Hubert H. Humphrey or Henry (“Scoop”) Jackson. Today’s elected Democrats stand for very different things than their predecessors, and unfortunately Rep. Oberstar has moved to the left with them. Let’s take a look at Oberstar’s record to see how he fits the Eighth Congressional District.

Despite Congressman Oberstar’s assurances that there would be no taxpayer funding of abortion under Obamacare, it was reported that the President approved $160 million for the state of Pennsylvania to implement a new insurance program that will cover abortions.
Let's free Mr Oberstar to fulfill his dream of spending 10 years in Paris.   Sigh - the pompous Oberstar longs for the oysters of Normandy, the most delicious in the world n'est ce pas.  The last thing the country needs is another 2 years of Oberstar in Congress dining on French oysters while we pick up the tab.

Be sure to mark the donation form "Ten Buck Fridays."   There are 65 bloggers supporting this movement and it is still growing:

38. Potluck
49. Wyblog
56. Wizbang




Thursday, July 22, 2010

Politzoid: “And you may ask yourself … MY GOD! WHAT HAVE I DONE!!”

As Allahpundit said this is three and a half minutes of brilliance:

Confidence in Congress at new low

Via Memeorandum
Of the 16 institutions Gallup asked respondents to rate for their levels of confidence, Congress ranked dead last once again:

Note the drop in expressed confidence for the presidency over the past year while the institutions frequently targeted by the President made some gains. Confidence in the medical system received the largest gain among institutions targeted by the President and Congress.  Though big business and HMO's are still quite low in terms of public confidence, the repeated attacks made against them in order to sell unpopular legislation could have resulted in at least some loss of confidence. Instead the Presidency, Congress and surprisingly the military take the biggest hits. Perhaps the news General McChrystal voted for Obama and naively expected a fair interview from Rolling Stone shook some confidence in the military.

Note too, the historic expression of confidence in Congress as measured by Gallup:
Since Democrats gained control of Congress in November 2006, confidence has steadily declined.  The minor gain in 2009 is likely explained by the Hope and Change election that many believed also gave Democrats control of Congress as well.   As we now know, many Obama voters mistakenly believed Republicans were in control.   I wonder if Democrats have noticed approval is now several points lower than the last time they lost control.

Journolist: Trashing Sarah Palin

What's a group of liberal journalists and activists to do when faced with the unexpected pick by the Republican nominee of a little-known maverick Governor from Alaska?   Trash her of course, the question is how:
But in many other exchanges, the Journolisters clearly had another, more partisan goal in mind: to formulate the most effective talking points in order to defeat Palin and McCain and help elect Barack Obama president. The tone was more campaign headquarters than newsroom.

The conversation began with a debate over how best to attack Sarah Palin. “Honestly, this pick reeks of desperation,” wrote Michael Cohen of the New America Foundation in the minutes after the news became public. “How can anyone logically argue that Sarah Pallin [sic], a one-term governor of Alaska, is qualified to be President of the United States? Train wreck, thy name is Sarah Pallin.”

Not a wise argument, responded Jonathan Stein, a reporter for Mother Jones. If McCain were asked about Palin’s inexperience, he could simply point to then candidate Barack Obama’s similarly thin resume. “Q: Sen. McCain, given Gov. Palin’s paltry experience, how is she qualified to be commander in chief?,” Stein asked hypothetically. “A: Well, she has much experience as the Democratic nominee.”

“What a joke,” added Jeffrey Toobin of the New Yorker. “I always thought that some part of McCain doesn’t want to be president, and this choice proves my point. Welcome back, Admiral Stockdale.”

Daniel Levy of the Century Foundation noted that Obama’s “non-official campaign” would need to work hard to discredit Palin. “This seems to me like an occasion when the non-official campaign has a big role to play in defining Palin, shaping the terms of the conversation and saying things that the official [Obama] campaign shouldn’t say – very hard-hitting stuff, including some of the things that people have been noting here – scare people about having this woefully inexperienced, no foreign policy/national security/right-wing christia wing-nut a heartbeat away …… bang away at McCain’s age making this unusually significant …. I think people should be replicating some of the not-so-pleasant viral email campaigns that were used against [Obama].”
Hey, what if we say she was a sexist pick?:
Chris Hayes of the Nation wrote in with words of encouragement, and to ask for more talking points. “Keep the ideas coming! Have to go on TV to talk about this in a few min and need all the help I can get,” Hayes wrote.

Suzanne Nossel, chief of operations for Human Rights Watch, added a novel take: “I think it is and can be spun as a profoundly sexist pick. Women should feel umbrage at the idea that their votes can be attracted just by putting a woman, any woman, on the ticket no matter her qualifications or views.”

Mother Jones’s Stein loved the idea. “That’s excellent! If enough people – people on this list? – write that the pick is sexist, you’ll have the networks debating it for days. And that negates the SINGLE thing Palin brings to the ticket,” he wrote.

Another writer from Mother Jones, Nick Baumann, had this idea: “Say it with me: ‘Classic GOP Tokenism’.”
There is a lot more, so please read the Daily Caller's report.  It has been repeatedly pointed out that these attacks are not particularly newsworthy as many on the list are opinion journalists and have no obligation to follow "ethics" prescribed for straight-news reporters.  While this may be true, at least one well-known journalist,  presented ideas generated in the listserv as their own:
Time’s Joe Klein then linked to his own piece, parts of which he acknowledged came from strategy sessions on Journolist. “Here’s my attempt to incorporate the accumulated wisdom of this august list-serve community,” he wrote. And indeed Klein’s article contained arguments developed by his fellow Journolisters. Klein praised Palin personally, calling her “fresh” and “delightful,” but questioned her “militant” ideology. He noted Palin had endorsed parts of Obama’s energy proposal.
It all seems quite dishonest doesn't it?  If there is truly nothing wrong with a group of opinion journalists sharing their ideas on the best strategy to tear down a Republican nominee why not acknowledge it openly?  Why go to lengths to present ideas from like-minded colleagues without attribution as your own?  The truth is these elitist opinion-makers know full well the general public is not likely to make the distinction between opinion and straight reporting.  After all, how much unbiased reporting has the general public actually been exposed to in their lifetime?

In the case of Sarah Palin these early coordinated attacks shaped the opinions of a public that held few if any preconceived opinions about the second woman to be nominated to the position of Vice President.  Is there any doubt these private discussions where over 400 liberal journalists and activists discussed what points they would stress and which they would minimize shaped the outcome of this election?




Read more:
Liberal Bias - What Liberal Bias?!

My Take on the Daily Caller Journolist Revelations

Put Your Emails Where Your Mouth Is

Election '08: Virtual High-Fives and Online Obamagasms for Journolist

Journolist: Aiding and Abetting THE Narrative

If the Sherrod story can last one more day
Memeorandum

Tuesday, July 20, 2010

Journolist Conspiracy Exposed

Proof the media  collaborated and conspired to elect Barack Obama obtained by Tucker Carlson's Daily Caller is at once the most and least stunning news revelation in recent history.  That the media coordinate their narrative to support a liberal Democratic point of view should not be shocking to anyone who follows the news with a modicum of suspicion.   Still, the confirmation  members of Ezra Klein's private listserv of liberal journalists, professors and liberal activists coordinated their efforts to kill the Jeremiah Wright story with deflections that would smear conservative critics as racists is staggering.


In what is likely the first of a series of revelations to be exposed from the entirety of the contents of the listserv e-mail messages, The Daily Caller's Jonathan Strong reveals the lengths the members would go to protect Barack Obama from his relationship with Jeremiah Wright:
The crisis reached a howling pitch in mid-April, 2008, at an ABC News debate moderated by Charlie Gibson and George Stephanopoulos. Gibson asked Obama why it had taken him so long – nearly a year since Wright’s remarks became public – to dissociate himself from them. Stephanopoulos asked, “Do you think Reverend Wright loves America as much as you do?”

Watching this all at home were members of Journolist, a listserv comprised of several hundred liberal journalists, as well as like-minded professors and activists. The tough questioning from the ABC anchors left many of them outraged. “George [Stephanopoulos],” fumed Richard Kim of the Nation, is “being a disgusting little rat snake.”

Others went further. According to records obtained by The Daily Caller, at several points during the 2008 presidential campaign a group of liberal journalists took radical steps to protect their favored candidate. Employees of news organizations including Time, Politico, the Huffington Post, the Baltimore Sun, the Guardian, Salon and the New Republic participated in outpourings of anger over how Obama had been treated in the media, and in some cases plotted to fix the damage.

In one instance, Spencer Ackerman of the Washington Independent urged his colleagues to deflect attention from Obama’s relationship with Wright by changing the subject. Pick one of Obama’s conservative critics, Ackerman wrote, “Fred Barnes, Karl Rove, who cares — and call them racists.”

Michael Tomasky, a writer for the Guardian, also tried to rally his fellow members of Journolist: “Listen folks–in my opinion, we all have to do what we can to kill ABC and this idiocy in whatever venues we have. This isn’t about defending Obama. This is about how the [mainstream media] kills any chance of discourse that actually serves the people.”

“Richard Kim got this right above: ‘a horrible glimpse of general election press strategy.’ He’s dead on,” Tomasky continued. “We need to throw chairs now, try as hard as we can to get the call next time. Otherwise the questions in October will be exactly like this. This is just a disease.”
It was a disease alright surely not the one Richard Kim imagined however.  Who exactly was killing the discourse in the minds of these supposed journalists?  Though many members of the listserv were pundits and activists they appealed to "straight journalists" who had access to their messages to bury the Wright story:
Hayes castigated his fellow liberals for criticizing Wright. “All this hand wringing about just
how awful and odious Rev. Wright remarks are just keeps the hustle going.”

“Our country disappears people. It tortures people. It has the blood of as many as one million Iraqi civilians — men, women, children, the infirmed — on its hands. You’ll forgive me if I just can’t quite dredge up the requisite amount of outrage over Barack Obama’s pastor,” Hayes wrote.

Hayes urged his colleagues – especially the straight news reporters who were charged with covering the campaign in a neutral way – to bury the Wright scandal. “I’m not saying we should all rush en masse to defend Wright. If you don’t think he’s worthy of defense, don’t defend him! What I’m saying is that there is no earthly reason to use our various platforms to discuss what about Wright we find objectionable,” Hayes said.
I suppose the straight news reporters were expected to be brave in the face of threats to kill ABC for having dared to question a candidate for the presidency of the United States about his association with the radical Jeremiah Wright let alone any other known radicals from Obama' past.  If the listserv didn't enlist cooperation to coordinate messaging among all like minded liberals desperate to elect Obama, it could accomplish a bit more through intimidation.

Andrew Breitbart sums this up rather well:

JournoList: …Yes, But the Reporters at Pravda Weren’t Such Insufferable Assholes

American journalism died a long time ago; today Tucker Carlson got around to running the obituary. What The Daily Caller has unearthed proves beyond a shadow of a doubt that most media organizations are either complicit by participation in the treachery that is Journolist, or are guilty of sitting back and watching Alinsky warfare being waged against all that challenged the progressive orthodoxy. The scandal predictably involves journalists posing as professors posing as experts. But dressed down they are nothing but street thugs. They deserve the deepest levels of public consternation. We must demand that they do.

The only way that the media will recover from the horrifying discoveries found in the Journolist is to investigate and investigate until every guilty reporter, professor and institution is laid bare begging America for forgiveness. Will they do it?
Will they do it?  We'll be watching to see

More on this at Memeorandum

Monday, July 19, 2010

Halperin: Dems in a panic as reality sets in

Mark Halperin made an appearance on "Morning Joe" to give details on his report for Time Magazine that paints a fuller picture of Democrats in disarray as they realize harsh reality they may well lose their majority while Obama keeps his job:

Mark Halperin made an appearance on "Morning Joe" to explain his report in Time Magazine that gives a fuller picture of Democrats in full panic mode as they realize Pelosi might have to hand over that gavel while Obama keeps his job:
It seems that behind the scenes Democrats are doing what Democrats do best - blaming and finger pointing. I find it tremendously difficult to muster up sympathy for Nancy Pelosi as she faces the prospect she may have to turn over that gavel. While House Democrats might be inclined to resent losing their jobs after having walked the plank for the Obama agenda, they did the walking and now they must pay the price.

Democrats mistakenly believed there was time to sell their policies to an outraged electorate after losing Massachusetts. Now that the reality has set in the Dems are out of time to sell those policies, Halperin reveals the two-part strategy Democrats adopted to minimize their losses in November:
The two-part scheme was pretty straightforward. First, Democrats planned a number of steps to head off, or at least soften, the anti-Washington, anti-incumbent, anti-Obama sentiment that cost them the Massachusetts seat. Pass health care, and other measures to demonstrate that Democrats could get things done for the middle class; continue to foster those fabled green shoots on the economy, harvesting the positive impact of the massive economic stimulus bill passed early in the Administration; heighten the contrast between the two parties by delivering on Wall Street reform and a campaign-funding law to counteract January's controversial Supreme Court decision. Use all of those elements to contrast the Democrats' policies under Obama with the Republicans' policies under Bush, rather than allow the midterms to be a referendum on the incumbent party.

The second strand of the Democrats' plan was more prosaic and mechanical. Recruit strong candidates for open seats. Leverage the White House and congressional majorities to raise more money than the other side. Make mischief by playing up the divisions between the Tea Party and the more traditional elements of the Republican Party, in part to increase the chances that more extreme, less electable candidates edge out moderates in GOP primary battles. Do extensive opposition research and targeted messaging in the fall to delegitimize Republican candidates in the minds of centrist voters. Coordinate below the radar with labor unions, environmentalists and other allies on get-out-the-vote efforts, focusing on young, nonwhite and first-time voters who came out for Obama in 2008.
That Democrats thought passing health care would really help them with Independents and the middle class shows how truly out of touch they are with mainstream America.  Clearly they missed the message driving Scott Brown's campaign, he was the 41st vote to stop ObamaCare.  Whether Democrats misinterpreted or deliberately denied the reality their health care agenda was unpopular is a matter for debate.  In either case, the reality appears to have just now hit home that they will have to pay the piper.  This means we can expect a lot of part two of the strategy between now and November - prepare for full-scale Democratic mischief making and shenanigans

I am not sure what positive aspects Democrats hoped to harvest from their massive stimulus bill.   Perhaps Sheriff Joe was sent forth yesterday to admit there were mistakes made on stimulus- mistakes naturally lobbed at the feet of the three Republican votes they needed to pass the debacle.  I highly doubt, however, the message the stimulus wasn't big enough will sell with the moderate middle that has fled the big spending Democrats in droves.

Nevertheless it appears the RNC correctly assessed the state of affairs behind the scenes in Democratic circles after Robert Gibbs admitted the House was in play. The following video was circulated by the RNC in response to Pelosi's guarantee she would keep her gavel:


Saturday, July 17, 2010

Potent Quotables and a Few Great Reads

I agree with Camp of the Saints,  Chris Wysocki's great quote explaining the earthquake in Washington is spot-on:
A mild earthquake shook the Washington, DC area this morning. The 3.6 magnitude trembler was the largest ever recorded for the area.

The USGS attributed the incident to all of the Founding Fathers rolling over in their graves at the same time.
Via Facebook
Congressman Paul Ryan's appearance on CNBC's Squawk Box gives us a clear map of the "fork in the road" we will face as a debt crisis and entitlement explosion are soon to collide.  Ryan would surely choose the path less traveled by many politicians including our Progressive President:
"Are we going to reclaim the American idea -- an entrepreneurial economy where you make the most of your life, you tap your potential, we reinvigorate the principles of liberty, freedom, free enterprise -- and defend the morality of that -- or are we going to abandon that and switch over toward a European-style, cradle-to-grave welfare state where we drain people of their incentive and will to make the most of their lives and make them more dependent on the government?"

"[Progressives] believe that we ought to have the government so much more involved in our lives, as the more determining factor in our lives, rather than ourselves. So we have to ask ourselves a question: Do we want an entrepreneurial society that gets prosperity turned back on in the 21st century, where individual merit, entrepreneurial activity defines the American economy, or are we going to have more and more people dependent on the government for their livelihoods? And that is going to drain them of their ability and their will to make the most of their lives. That's sort of the fork in the road we are at, and it's really being precipitated by the current direction of our government and the debt crisis because of entitlement explosion that's coming in the future. Those things are coming together. We've got to make a decision in 2010 and in 2012 what kind of country we want to be in the 21st century economy."



"It is our choices Harry, that show what we truly are, far more than our abilities."
Albus Dumbledore

A few more great choices in Saturday reading:

Saturday reads: Campus "diversity," Big Brother and your BMI

A mid-summer's political outlook

Krauthammer Warns of Four More Years

Via Anne Leary:  Obama’s Beach Blanket Recovery: It’s Happy, Snappy & Incredibly Crappy.


Darth Vader, Only You Could be so Bold


Via Potluck   The Living Hologram's Popularity Sucks and it's all W's Fault

Friday, July 16, 2010

Ten Buck Fridays: The winner is Van Irion

Right Klik has the winner of this week's 10 Buck Friday poll and offers a bit of background information on Van Irion the candidate for Tennessee's 3rd Congressional District:
Van Irion has been married for 14 years, and he and his wife have two young daughters. A patent and Constitutional attorney with his own law firm, he's admitted to practice law before the U.S. Supreme Court. He has handled several Constitutional cases pro bono, including Obamacare Class Action.

Van is a veteran of the U.S. Air Force, having served in Operation Desert Shield as an Air Traffic Controller. Van has a biochemistry degree from the University of California and founded a biotech company to research treatments for stroke and acute injury. He served many years as a volunteer fire fighter and EMT.

Van is currently seeking to serve the public again as the U.S. Congressman for Tennessee’s 3rd Congressional District.
 Van Irion's donation page

Please be sure to note Ten Buck Fridays on the donation form:
From a profile piece on The Daily Caller Van Irion explains why he carries a pitchfork to campaign events:
Where Van Irion goes, so does his pitchfork.

The Republican congressional candidate — and avid Tea Party supporter — running for east Tennessee’s 3rd District seat keeps the farm tool at his side, whether he’s giving speeches or glad handling constituents, as a reminder of what his candidacy is about. Irion, 42, practices civil law in Knoxville and is hardly a Tennessee farmer, but he said his campaign prop “represents the angry mob.”

“In these parts farmers use pitchforks to clean their manure out of their stalls,” he explained during an interview with The Daily Caller. “And I tell people everywhere I go that I’m gonna take the pitchfork to the House floor and clean the manure out of the Capitol.”
Anyone willing to clean the manure out of the Capitol and bring a lawsuit against ObamaCare has my support.

 Please visit Van Irion's donation page directly or follow the link on  his website

Thursday, July 15, 2010

Pelosi Counting on YOU to Insure Dems Control the House

After her week-long hissy fit over Press Secretary Baghdad Bob's statement that the House was "in play" this November, Pelosi ups the ante with a guarantee Democrats will control the House after November.   She has a secret weapon up her sleeve - YOU
Here is what will happen in November. Democrats will keep control of the House. Period.

While some Washington pundits are claiming that Republicans have the momentum, I remain more confident in our chances for victory as long as we have our secret weapon -- you.

Next Sunday, July 25th, marks 100 days from the fall elections. I have set a goal of raising $1 Million in grassroots contributions to send a powerful message to the media and to the world that we will keep control of the House and we will continue America's New Direction!

Please stand with me to send an overwhelming message of grassroots strength. If you contribute today, you will receive a special invitation to join me on our National Campaign Kickoff Conference Call.
 Well who doesn't want that special invitation to join her conference call?  That this week's hissy fit is tied to a giant grassroots fundraising effort calls into question the well-publicized hysteria over Gibb's seemingly obvious statement of fact.  Of course there are enough seats in play for Democrats to lose the House.  The question was whether the Democrats' disillusioned base truly understood the stakes.  They do now, don't they?  I guess we will see whether or not the base is as unenthusiastic as we've been told repeatedly they are.

Of course setting a goal of $1,000,000 to send a "powerful message to the media and to the world that we will keep control of the House and we will continue America's New Direction" is not much of a goal.  If I recall correctly Scott Brown far exceeded his 24 hour goal of $500,000 capitalizing on David Gergen's rhetorical gift to the campaign.  Who knew the words "Ted Kennedy's Seat," would prove to be so lucrative? Was Gibbs' gift to the House Democrats his rare statement of obvious fact?  Somehow I doubt it but the Democrats certainly did their level best to call as much attention to the statement as they could.  


Fortunately conservative bloggers have antidote to Pelosi's guarantee she will keep her gavel and the same secret weapon -YOU.    "Ten Buck Fridays" channels grassroot support to the many fine candidates who can help wrestle Pelosi's gavel from her grip:
Each week, TBF participants are strongly encouraged (but not required) to rally behind the deserving conservative Republican who wins the poll...to provide that candidate with a substantial money bomb.

You'll notice there's no middleman in this process. Your money goes exactly where you want it to go. Contributors send their investment directly to the candidates.

Participants put the words "Ten Buck Fridays" in the online donation form so that recipients know what's happening and so that donation totals can be determined. As Lilac Sunday has noted, the "occupation" line on the online donation form is a handy place to indicate that you're a Ten Buck Fridays participant.

TBF participants are unified by the desire to support conservatives who need an extra boost, and we're sending a powerful message of encouragement to those who share our cherished values. As we shout together, our voices will be heard.
I will link the winner of this week's Ten Buck Friday poll tomorrow after the winner is announced.   Let's make sure Speaker Pelosi is relieved of her duties in November and elect strong conservative candidates in the process.

Wednesday, July 14, 2010

Chestwader Alert: Another Created or Saved Jobs Report

Much like the tales of the fish that got away, you'll need your chestwaders to slog through the muck in the latest fairy tale report on the wonders of that trillion dollar stimulus:
“The Recovery Act appears to be stimulating private investment and job creation at a time when the economy needs it most,” Christina Romer, chairwoman of the Council of Economic Advisers, said in testimony prepared for a hearing of Congress’s Joint Economic Committee.

Romer cited the Build America Bond program, which has subsidized interest costs for about $118 billion of local government securities sold to finance public-works projects, and tax credits for companies that invest in plants to build solar panels and wind turbines.

The report says the stimulus has “saved or created” about 3 million jobs, and is moving toward a goal of 3.5 million jobs by the end of the year, according to an administration official speaking on condition of anonymity before the report’s release today.

The Obama administration has been stepping up its efforts to defend the $862 billion stimulus measure passed by Congress soon after Obama took office, as the U.S. economy struggles to recover from the worst recession since the 1930s.
THREE MILLION JOBS? No, not really according to Veronique de Rugy:
As it turns out, when you unpack the numbers, you find that Romer and her team didn’t actually count how many people got a job thanks to the stimulus. Instead, the number is a projection that relies on the myth that a dollar of government spending creates up to 2.5 dollars of economic growth.

That’s strange. Robert Barro of Harvard University has estimated that, even in the best-case senario, $1 of government spending will generate between $0.40 and $0.70 of economic growth, i.e., much less than the amount of growth that we would get if that dollar was invested privately. What’s more, if that dollar has previously been taxed out the economy, then the overall effect of $1 of government spending is a destruction of $1.10 of economic growth. Not exactly the rosy projections that Romer is touting today. (And Barro is not alone. Even the most optimistic projections of the economic effect of government spending never display such numbers. Never.)
de Rugy is testifying before Congress to make this and many other points exposing the fairy tales contained in the latest fantasy report on the magical stimulus so please read the rest.  No doubt this latest "created or saved" report was designed to convince an increasingly skeptical electorate Democrats' latest experiment in Keynesian economics wasn't a complete disaster.  Perhaps they should take James Carville's latest advice and start praying instead.
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