May 11, 2008

Rezko Connection Tars One Democrat -- Not Another

Somehow, despite the close personal financial dealings between Barack Obama and Tony Rezko, the presidential candidate has avoided any significant political damage from the connection.

Not so another Democrat rising star.

As the corruption trial of the political fund-raiser Antoin Rezko winds to a close here, testimony about power-brokering at the highest levels of state government has battered the career of an Illinois politician who once had his sights set on the White House.

When the trial began two months ago, national attention focused on how Senator Barack Obama of Illinois might suffer because of his connection to Mr. Rezko, a former patron who made a fortune on fast food and real estate.

But it is Gov. Rod R. Blagojevich, an ambitious chief executive who has not been charged and denies any wrongdoing, who is left flailing in the wake of weeks of testimony. His name and administration have surfaced repeatedly, described as a participant in the kickback schemes of which Mr. Rezko is accused.

While Mr. ObamaÂ’s campaign for the presidency has been dogged by questions about Mr. Rezko, the fallout for him has so far been slight. Mr. Obama, who has not been accused of any crime, donated money that was raised for him by Mr. Rezko to charity and said he regretted what he called his bad judgment on a property sale between their families.

Granted, the accusations against Blagojevich are pretty damning, and ought to damage any politician. But when you consider that when Barack Obama goes home he does so to a place that he owns because of a sweetheart deal with a corrupt insider, I remain amazed at the lack of damage that has been done to him by the financial connections between the two. Maybe Geraldine Ferraro was on to something a couple of months back.

But there is another question Americans should be asking -- given the throughly corrupt nature of Illinois politics over the last decade (and Chicago politics over the last century), does the election of an Illinois Senator from Chicago make any sense?

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Latino Group Charges Demo-Discrimination

Yeah, that Texas Two-Step process that was so incompetently implemented by the Democrats (who proved that since they can't run their own party they surely aren't competent to run the state), has been deemed by Hispanic groups to be so fatally flawed as to illegally and unconstitutionally deny proper representation to Hispanic voters.

The Texas Democratic Party was sued Friday by Latino advocacy groups that say the primary and caucus system used in the state's March 4 presidential contest unfairly diluted Latino votes.

The League of United Latin American Citizens of Texas and the Mexican-American Bar Association of Houston sued in federal court, arguing that the party failed to seek clearance required by the U.S. Justice Department for the process, the so-called Texas Two Step. The groups also say the system effectively discriminates against Latino voters by giving them fewer delegates.

Texas Democrats distribute the state's 193 delegates using both a primary and a caucus, but the distribution favors state Senate districts that had high voter turnout in the most recent presidential and gubernatorial elections. That meant that on March 4, predominantly Hispanic districts, in which turnout was low in 2004 and 2006, got fewer delegates than others, particularly urban, predominantly black districts. Latino districts generally favored Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton; black districts favored her rival, Barack Obama.

"The manner used to allocate the delegates ... undervalues Latino Democratic voters and does not provide Latino voters with an equal opportunity to participate in the nominating process and to elect candidates of their choice," the lawsuit says.

My question is why anyone is surprised by this outcome. After all, Democrats in Texas undervalued Hispanic voters from the day Texas was admitted to the United States back in the 1840s right up until it found that the only way to hold on to power was to throw Hispanics a bone -- but only one that the meat had been gnawed off of first.

On the other hand, the GOP has always been open to Hispanic voters, and remains so right into the present day. And for all the efforts of liberal partisan hacks to portray opposition to illegal immigration as anti-Hispanic racism, anyone with a lick of sense knows better -- including a great many immigrants to this country who played by the rules to get here legally. After all, the GOP has never has a "Whites Only" sign at its primary polling places -- that was the Democrats for most of their history.

Maybe the time has come for Hispanic voters to say "hasta la vista, baby" to the Democrats.

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May 12, 2008

McCain Ahead In Electoral Vote Race?

National polls get big play in the media, but really don't matter.

After all, the Constitution doesn't count the national totals for anything. It is the Electoral College totals that determine the outcome of the election -- and polls show something very interesting there, according to the analysis by this blogger.

Click the map to get the supporting data that this is based upon the latest polling data. McCain leads Obama in a whole lot of states -- mirroring the red state/blue state dichotomy we have seen over the two elections. Even where there is not enough polling data, we can infer which way certain states are trending -- some for McCain, some for Obama.

The result of these projections rather strikingly place McCain ahead 249-237 electoral votes, with the states of Ohio, Michigan, Wisconsin, and New Mexico being toss-ups. Victories in any two of the Midwestern states would give John McCain the electoral victory, while Obama would have to win do one of the following:

  • win Michigan, and Ohio.
  • win Wisconsin, Ohio, and New Mexico.

That's it. Nothing else does it if the other states remain static, which is unlikely to happen over the next 25 ½ weeks.

Questions that need to be asked at this point are as follows:

  • Will Obama pick Bill Richardson as VP in order to secure those five electoral votes in New Mexico -- and if he doesn't will the perceived slight swing the state towards the Republican nominee from Arizona, since he is regarded as friendly by the large Hispanic voting bloc there.
  • Does Obama hurt himself by picking a running mate from one of the three Midwestern states, given that his home state is Illinois? Can McCain help himself by doing so -- especially an Ohioan?

There is a lot of calculus that needs to go on between now and the conventions -- and the conventions and election day. My guess is that it will likely swirl around how to win in Ohio -- the critical prize this fall.

There also remains one other possibility. All other things remaining equal, we could end up with an electoral vote tie if McCain wins Ohio and Obama wins the other three states. Quite frankly, I don't dare predict what would happen in that case without knowing the exact composition of the House of Representatives at the start of the new Congress in January -- and the political implications of the election going to the House of Representatives so soon after the craziness of the 2000 election absolutely boggles the mind.

I know I'm going to check back at Brian's Electoral Projection website regularly to see how the numbers crunch. I suggest that you do, too, since this election will probably be a squeaker!

UPDATE: Allahpundit discusses the same topic at Hot Air, looking at Marc Ambinder's projections at The Atlantic. They've got it pegged at 245-221, with 72 electoral votes in play. And they do raise the 269-269 scenario.

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May 10, 2008

Al Sharpton's Tax Cut For The Wealthy

Well, at least for one wealthy individual -- himself.

Big corporations give him money. Presidential candidates seek his endorsement. He has influential friends in Congress and the governor's mansion. The Rev. Al Sharpton has emerged over the past decade as perhaps the nation's most prominent civil rights leader, a status that was demonstrated again this week when he led protests against police brutality that briefly shut down six of Manhattan's major bridges and tunnels.

But he still carries baggage from his early days as a fire-breathing agitator: Government records obtained by The Associated Press indicate that Sharpton and his business entities owe nearly $1.5 million in overdue taxes and associated penalties.

Now the U.S. attorney is investigating his nonprofit group, a probe that an undeterred Sharpton brushes off as the kind of annoyance that civil rights figures have come to expect from the government.

"Whatever retaliation they do on me, we never stop," he told the AP. "I think that that is why they try to intimidate us."

Gee -- it is somehow "retaliation" to try to enforce the laws of the United States against a tax cheat who owes $1.5 million dollars? If any of us ordinary folks -- especially those of us who are white, vote Republican, and don't make our livings off of race-based hustling and lying -- were to owe that much money to the government, we wouldn't have a pot to piss in and would probably be in jail. Why is Sharpton still walking the streets? And will a Democrat president simply issue him a pardon to make this little tax problem all go away?

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Clinton Donor Investigation

What is it with Hillary Clinton donors and the law?

Federal prosecutors have opened a criminal investigation into a Washington-area donor to Hillary Clinton's presidential campaign, investigating whether he illegally reimbursed other contributors.

The case is similar to one brought last year against Norman Hsu, a New York businessman who was indicted in November on charges of paying associates for donations to the New York senator. The Clinton campaign ultimately returned more than $800,000 raised by Mr. Hsu, who was also accused of cheating investors out of millions of dollars.

The new investigation centers around contributions last year by William Danielczyk, chairman of Galen Capital Corp., a northern Virginia private-equity firm, and by the executive's family, employees and investors, according to lawyers and others close to the case.

Investigators are seeking to determine whether the contributions Mr. Danielczyk solicited for Sen. Clinton were then repaid by his company. It is a federal crime to reimburse political contributions, punishable by fines and sometimes imprisonment.

And here I thought that it was the GOP that was the party of big-money financiers who are out to buy elections. Interesting, isn't it, that such folks keep turning up in the campaigns of Democrats -- at least those of Democrats named Clinton, and have for the last 15 years or so.

After all, honesty is such a lonely word.

Cue the music!

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Not A Bribe -- But It Doesn't Seem Kosher

Candidate A loans her campaign $11 million. Candidate B offers to pay off that debt to herself if she drops out of the race and gives him a clear shot at their party's presidential nomination. That is the latest rumor.

The latest rumor making the rounds is that maybe Barack Obama will pay off Hillary's $11 million loan to her campaign if she quits the race. I suppose that makes some kind of sense — and it would be a gracious and unifying gesture from Obama — but I'm not sure why Hillary would really be moved by this. She and Bill have earned over $100 million in the past few years and Bill obviously has tremendous earning capacity in the future. $11 million just isn't a big deal to them.

Now I know that failed candidates work to pay off their campaign debts, and that other candidates are allowed to help them. But what if that debt is all to the candidate herself, and there is a quid pro quo deal on that. Doesn't it have the appearance of impropriety, even if it is perfectly legal and above board?

Warren over at Coyote Blog certainly thinks it does -- and wonders how the Democrats would have reacted to newt Gingrich offering such a pile of cash to buy off challengers for Speaker of the House.

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May 09, 2008

How To Stop Clinton Mischief Against President Obama

Andrew Sullivan, referencing TNR's The Plank, raises a good question on his blog.

The trouble is: the Clintons will create mischief wherever they are. If Obama becomes president without them they will do all they can to undermine, destroy, and polarize him. The question is how one deals with sociopaths like them. It's not easy.

I disagree.

There is a very simple way of avoiding the entire problem.

It involves casting a ballot for John McCain and your GOP candidates for House and Senate, and urging every other person who loves America to do likewise.

OTB comments on Sullivan's "sociopath" label.

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Obama Shows Ignorance Of Country He Wishes To Lead

Good grief -- even my worst student knows how many states there are!

He's visited 57 states? What has he been smoking/snorting? Or maybe he's added the state of denial, the state of ineptitude, the state of delerium, the state of inexperience, the state of intoxication....

Let's be honest, too -- if John McCain had said this we would be duly informed by the acolytes of Obama that John McCain is too old and mentally unfit to serve as President of the United States.

H/T Marc Ambinder, Hot Air

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My Question For Obama

Beth over at MVRWC points readers at the GOP’s new “Can We Ask” website, where interested citizens can post questions that they would like Barack Obama to answer. I dropped by a short time ago and posed this one for the candidate – one which I suspect the news media will avoid asking him at all costs.

You support education policies that mean that most children in Washington will remain trapped in failing public schools. Will you commit to sending your daughters to those same schools rather than hypocritically sending them to private schools that your education policies place beyond the reach of every other child living in government housing in Washington?

I’m sure we all know the answer to that one. He’ll most likely emulate Bill and Hillary Clinton and Al and Tipper Gore, rather than Jimmy Carter – or George Bush, for that matter, whose daughters attended public school in Austin, Texas while he was governor.

But it would be interesting to know how he can support sentencing the children of Washington, DC to some of the worst schools in the nation – especially if they aren’t good enough for his own children.

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Bloomberg Seeks Suppression Of US Constitution In Gun Suit

One of the obligations of the courts in the United States is to guarantee that the US Constitution is followed. If New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg has his way, though, one court will ban any mention of portions of the framework of American government during the trial of a lawsuit seeking to enforce New York City gun laws against gun shop owners in other states – even though their procedures conform to federal law and the laws of their respective states.

Lawyers for Mayor Bloomberg are asking a judge to ban any reference to the Second Amendment during the upcoming trial of a gun shop owner who was sued by the city. While trials are often tightly choreographed, with lawyers routinely instructed to not tell certain facts to a jury, a gag order on a section of the Constitution would be an oddity.

* * *

City lawyers, in a motion filed Tuesday, asked the judge, Jack Weinstein of U.S. District Court in Brooklyn, to preclude the store’s lawyers from arguing that the suit infringed on any Second Amendment rights belonging to the gun store or its customers. In the motion, the lawyer for the city, Eric Proshansky, is also seeking a ban on “any references” to the amendment.

“Any references by counsel to the Second Amendment or analogous state constitutional provisions are likewise irrelevant,” the brief states.

In other words, the city is taking the position that a federal court should not allow a little thing like the Constitution to interfere with efforts to infringe upon legal activities that are protected by the Constitution – and that similar state constitutional provisions should not be allowed to interfere with the city’s attempt to interfere with legal activities in other states.

Frankly, the court ought to slap this frivolous motion down with extreme prejudice – and fine Mayor Bloomberg and the lawyers involved in filing it with penalties to be paid from their own pockets. After all, every last period, comma, and semicolon of the US Constitution is always a legitimate matter for lawyers to bring up in a courtroom.

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New Obama Church Shocker

More questions have been raised about the judgment of Barack Obama and his decision to remain associated with Trinity UCC. After all, how can we trust the judgment of any man who would stay a part of an organization propagating these ideas?

en. Barack Obama (D-Ill.) recently said his relationship with his long-time pastor and friend Rev. Jeremiah Wright "changed" after what Obama called the clergyman's "divisive and destructive" remarks at the National Press Club. Later, however, Obama stressed his loyalty to the Trinity United Church of Christ in Chicago, where he has been a member for many years.

Articles published in the Trinity United Church of Christ bulletin in 2007 carried controversial comments written by people other than Jeremiah Wright. Those comments included the claim that Israel worked with South Africa to build an "ethnic bomb" that would kill blacks and Arabs, that the Pentagon was training Latin Americans to be terrorists, and that the TV networks are run by right-wing racists.

On Sunday, May 4, Obama told NBC's Tim Russert, on "Meet the Press," that he was still a member of Trinity United Church of Christ and said of the Wright controversy, "I think that the American people understand that when I joined Trinity United Church of Christ, I was committing not to Pastor Wright. I was committing to a church and I was committing to Christ. And it is a wonderful church."

Yeah, this wonderful church – at which leaders spew forth racist venom from the pulpit and bigoted bile in the church bulletin.

Examples include the publication of the following:

  • Rev. Reginald Williams, the associate pastor for social justice at Trinity United, published a piece in the bulletin stating that the words of Don Imus were indicative of the fact that "the major networks are run by right-winged conservatives who still see black people as subhuman and portray black people as such."
  • Williams, in another piece, argued that the training of Latin American soldiers by the United States constituted the training of terrorists.
  • Published apiece by an advisor to leaders of the anti-white, anti-Semitic Nation of Islam, Elijah Muhammad and Louis Farrakhan, which accused Israel of working on an “ethnic bomb” that would kill only blacks and Arabs.

So, in light of these published statements of hate-filled racism, anti-Americanism, and anti-Semitism, does the claim that Wright’s outrageous statements constituted something new and unusual really ring true? Does the claim that his statements were unrepresentative of Trinity UCC as a whole seem plausible any more? And does the argument that he was “committing to a church” and “committing to Christ” really hold up to scrutiny when his “wonderful church” consistently supported the most outrageous of ideologies from the pulpit and in official publications?

At a minimum, these latest revelations ought to raise questions about Barack ObamaÂ’s truthfulness and his judgment, as well as the sort of beliefs he would carry with him into the White House. Can America really afford to take a chance on such a man?


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Obama: Stating The Truth Is A Smear

When is telling the truth not OK?

When Barack Obama says its not, thatÂ’s when.

At the root of the dispute is McCain's decision to call attention to a Hamas adviser's apparent affinity for Obama. The adviser, Ahmed Yousef, said in a recent interview: "We like Obama and hope that he will win the election."

McCain used those comments in a fundraising appeal and has cited them in interviews.

Asked about the matter Wednesday during a taping of "The Daily Show with Jon Stewart," McCain said: "It's indicative of how some of our enemies view America. And I guarantee you, they're not going to endorse me."

In an interview Thursday with CNN, Obama accused McCain of trying to smear him by repeating the comments.

"This is offensive, and I think it's disappointing, because John McCain always says, 'Well, I'm not going to run that kind of politics,'" Obama said. "And then to engage in that kind of smear, I think, is unfortunate, particularly since my policy toward Hamas has been no different than his."

Now excuse me for one moment – I think it is highly relevant that one of America’s terrorist enemies has come out and declared that it wants to see a particular candidate elected. It leads one to wonder why that would be the case – and leads to the unavoidable conclusion that the preferred candidate is viewed as relatively weak and the opponent is viewed as stronger by our nation’s enemies.

Strangely enough, Democrats like to tout how foreign governments and opinion polls prefer a break from the policies of the Bush years. Why shouldn’t it be fair game to note that Hamas and other terrorist organizations do as well? After all, it is just as relevant – even if it is an inconvenient truth for Barack Obama..

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May 08, 2008

I Support Cindy McCain

Her stance here is a principled one, especially since releasing the returns would disclose a great deal of financial information about not only her finances, but those of her adult and minor children.

Cindy McCain says she will never make her tax returns public even if her husband wins the White House and she becomes the first lady.

"You know, my husband and I have been married 28 years and we have filed separate tax returns for 28 years. This is a privacy issue. My husband is the candidate," Cindy McCain, wife of Republican presidential nominee-in-waiting John McCain, said in an interview aired on NBC's "Today" on Thursday.

Asked if she would release her tax returns if she was first lady, Cindy McCain said: "No."

The Arizona senator released his tax return last month, reporting he had a total income of $405,409 in 2007 and paid $84,460 in federal income taxes. He files his return separately from his wife, an heiress to a Phoenix-based beer distributing company whose fortune is in the $100 million range.

Sen. McCain is routinely is ranked among the richest lawmakers in Congress, but he and his wife have kept their finances separate throughout their marriage. A prenuptial agreement left much of the family's assets in Cindy McCain's name.

In other words, for nearly three decades it has been the practice of the couple to keep their finances separate -- and demands that these assets be treated as joint property is simply wrong.

Howard Dean is, of course screaming about this decision.

Of course, there is a historical precedent for the much wealthier wife of a presidential nominee refusing to release her complete tax returns for precisely these reasons -- and I believe Cindy McCain should follow that practice precisely.

Teresa Heinz Kerry reported income of just over $5 million last year, slightly more than half of it from investments in tax-exempt municipal and state bonds, her 2003 income tax return shows, confirming her status as the wealthiest spouse of any major party nominee in United States history.

Ms. Heinz Kerry on Friday released a small part of her 2003 income tax return, unlike her husband, Senator John Kerry, and President Bush and his wife, Laura, who have made their full tax returns available for public inspection. The Kerrys file separate tax returns, a common arrangement when one spouse is wealthy.

The two-page document, posted at johnkerry.com, showed total income of $5,073,554 last year. Her primary source of income was the tax-exempt bonds, investments that generally produce a lower interest rate, but those in the highest tax brackets can often pocket more cash if they choose municipals.

* * *

Nothing about the trusts that benefit Ms. Heinz Kerry herself and her three sons was disclosed. These trusts, set up after the 1991 death in an airplane crash of her first husband, Senator John Heinz, the heir to the H. J. Heinz Company fortune, are believed to be worth about a billion dollars.

* * *

Tax documents that would indicate if Ms. Heinz Kerry has offshore accounts were withheld, as were the schedules detailing her charitable deductions, interest expenses and the nature of the $14,412 in capital gains she reported. But Paul Bschorr, a lawyer for Ms. Heinz Kerry, said Friday that none of her personal investment accounts or accounts controlled by her family trust are deposited outside the United States, a step some wealthy American use to defer or escape taxes.

No information was provided about how much income was earned by trusts of which she is the beneficiary. If the trusts are as large as reported - and the Kerry campaign has not challenged the billion dollar estimate - then even a modest 5 percent return would have generated $50 million of income, 10 times what was on the two pages released by Ms. Heinz Kerry. A statement released by the Kerry campaign noted that income taxes are paid directly by the Heinz family trust, in addition to taxes that Ms. Heinz Kerry pays.

Howard Dean certainly didn't raise a fuss about this practice in 2004 -- it should satisfy him in 2008, unless he wants to engage in a little bit of Michelle Obama-style bar raising. After all, if it was good enough for a seditious gigolo like John Kerry and his wife, it should be good enough for a true American hero like John McCain and his wife.

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Immovable Object And Irresistible Force Collide On May 20

That is when one candidate for the Democrat nomination plans to declare himself the winner. On the other hand, the other candidate plans on staying in all the way to the convention, seeking to convince the party she is more electable.

Not long after the polls close in the May 20 Kentucky and Oregon primaries, Barack Obama plans to declare victory in his bid for the Democratic presidential nomination.

And, until at least May 31 and perhaps longer, Hillary ClintonÂ’s campaign plans to dispute it.

ItÂ’s a train wreck waiting to happen, with one candidate claiming to be the nominee while the other vigorously denies it, all predicated on an argument over what exactly constitutes the finish line of the primary race.

The Obama campaign agrees with the Democratic National Committee, which pegs a winning majority at 2,025 pledged delegates and superdelegates—a figure that excludes the penalized Florida and Michigan delegations. The Clinton campaign, on the other hand, insists the winner will need 2,209 to cinch the nomination—a tally that includes Florida and Michigan.

“We don’t accept 2,025. It is not the real number because that does not include Florida and Michigan,” said Howard Wolfson, one of Clinton’s two chief strategists. “It’s a phony number.”

Wolfson said they intend to contest the DNC’s 2,025 number “every day,” as well as any declaration of victory made by Obama based upon that number, because it does not include Florida and Michigan.

Pass the popcorn, please. This one will be quite entertaining.

Personally, I urge Hillary to contest the race all the way until the convention, just like this guy did in 1980 even though he was much further behind.

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McCain Releases Service Records

And in doing so, the Arizona Senator and GOP presidential nominee has beaten the time taken by John Kerry to release his full records by over four years!

From his five years in a North Vietnamese prison camp to his tenure as the NavyÂ’s liaison to the Senate, John McCainÂ’s Navy record boils down to a series of unadorned paragraphs that bestow upon him some of the nationÂ’s top military honors.

The Navy recently released McCain’s military record — most of it citations for medals during his Navy career — after a Freedom of Information Act request by The Associated Press.

McCain was awarded a Silver Star Medal for resisting “extreme mental and physical cruelties” inflicted upon him by his captors from late October to early December 1967, the early months of his captivity, according to the citation. The North Vietnamese, according to the Navy, ignored international agreements and tortured McCain “in an attempt to obtain military information and false confessions for propaganda purposes.”

McCain, now the Republican PartyÂ’s likely presidential nominee, was taken prisoner in October 1967 after he was shot down while on a mission over Hanoi. He wasnÂ’t freed until March 1973, after the United States signed peace agreements with the North Vietnamese. His captors tortured him and held him in solitary confinement. Still, he declined an offer of early release until those who had been at the prison longer than him were let go.

That decision earned McCain a Navy Commendation Medal. Although McCain was “crippled from serious and ill-treated injuries,” he steadfastly refused offers of freedom from those holding him prisoner. “His selfless action served as an example to others and his forthright refusal, by giving emphasis to the insidious nature of such releases, may have prevented a possibly chaotic deterioration in prisoner discipline,” the citation says.

McCain attended the U.S. Naval Academy from 1954 to 1958, and was commissioned as an ensign in June of that year. He retired in April 1981 with the rank of captain. In that time he received 17 awards and decorations. Besides the Silver Star Medal, McCain also received the Legion of Merit with a combat “V” and one gold star, a Distinguished Flying Cross and a Bronze Art Medal with a combat “V” and two gold stars.

WhatÂ’s more, his record is not tainted by seditious activities upon his return from Vietnam, but is instead marked by an exemplary effort to return to duty despite the severe injuries he suffered at the hands of the captors to whom John Kerry and his fellow anti-war activists gave aid and comfort while our nation was at war.

Compare this record to the records of John McCainÂ’s Democrat opponents. One has left a slime-trail of lies, deceit, and borderline criminal activity behind her. The other has taken a preacher of anti-American racial hatred as his spiritual leader, an corrupt businessman as his real estate partner, and an unrepentant terrorist as a political associate. Which one of these three has consistently displayed the judgment and integrity necessary for greatness in office? Only John McCain.

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Clinton Using Foreign Cash To Fund Campaign?

Here’s an interesting little tidbit for you – the cash Hillary has loaned/donated to her campaign comes out of the community property assets shared by both her and Bill Clinton – and includes money earned by Bill Clinton from foreign companies and governments.

ClintonÂ’s campaign says the New York senator has lent more than $11 million to her presidential campaign to date, far more than the $10 million she reportedly earned from previous books sales.

On a conference call with reporters Wednesday morning Clinton Communications Director Howard Wolfson said there was no distinction between Mrs. ClintonÂ’s money and Mr. ClintonÂ’s money in the account.

“I dispute the notion that there is a difference between her share of her joint assets and her own money," Wolfson said. "There is no distinction between her share of their joint assets and her money. Her money is their share of her joint assets."

Wolfson noted “legally she is entitled to use up to 50 percent of their joint assets if she chooses.”

Since leaving the White House former President Clinton has earned millions in speaking fees, mostly from foreign countries like the United Arab Emirates and the PeopleÂ’s Republic of China.

Campaign finance laws forbid foreign money from entering U.S. elections, but no laws forbid foreign monies being stored in a joint checking account by a candidateÂ’s spouse and later being accessed by the candidate.

Apparently it doesn’t just take a village to keep your campaign afloat – it takes a foreign village to do so.

Of course, it seems pretty clear to me that there isn’t a legal question about the money being used. After all, this is money that Bill Clinton earned (if you can call it that) through speaking fees and honoraria. So while the sources of cash are foreign governments, this is not a case of foreign governments directly donating to the campaign. But it does raise issues of Bill Clinton being paid by and financially beholden to foreign governments for his livelihood while his wife serves in the Senate – or maybe even the executive branch.

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May 07, 2008

Clinton Staying In

For reasons that seem almost unfathomable, because she needs to run the tables in the remaining primaries to even have a hope of winning the nomination -- and that ain't gonna happen.

Hillary Rodham Clinton says she will remain in the presidential race "until there's a nominee." The former first lady declined to say whether that meant through the roll call of the states at the Democratic National Convention this summer.

Now that is a truly ambiguous phrase. Does that mean until the Denver convention? Or until Obama gets enough superdelegate support? Or something else? After all, it won't be until the convention that there actually is a nominee -- even if there is a mass swing of superdelegates for Obama.

And she seems to be interested in staying in the race longer -- and is dipping into personal funds to do it.

Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton lent her presidential campaign $6.4 million over the past month, her campaign said Wednesday, underscoring the financial advantage held by her rival, Barack Obama.

The money more than doubled Clinton's personal investment in her bid for the Democratic nomination. She gave her campaign $5 million earlier this year.

A campaign aide said Clinton gave her campaign another $5 million on April 11, more than a week before the Pennsylvania primary. She then again dipped into her personal wealth for $1 million last week and $425,000 on Monday, one day before the North Carolina and Indiana primaries.

Seems to me like she is throwing good money after bad. After all, she ought to know it takes a village to fund a presidential campaign -- and all the Democrat Party's village idiots are lined up to give money to the Obama campaign. I can't imagine her overcoming the fundraising deficit.

And more supporters keep abandoning the Hillary Clinton campaign -- the latest being George McGovern.

Former Sen. George McGovern, an early supporter of Hillary Rodham Clinton, urged her to drop out of the Democratic presidential race and endorsed her rival, Barack Obama.

After watching the returns from the North Carolina and Indiana primaries Tuesday night, McGovern said Wednesday it's virtually impossible for Clinton to win the nomination. The 1972 Democratic presidential nominee said he had a call in to former President Clinton to tell him of the decision, adding that he remains close friends with the Clintons.

"I will hold them in affection and admiration all of my days," he said of the Clintons.

This is a big deal -- not because McGovern has a vote at the convention (he doesn't), but because the former South Dakota Senator and Dem. presidential nominee was scheduled to campaign with her this week in SOuth Dakota. It doesn't look good for him to switch, does it?

And the superdelegates, who will ultimately decide this race, are ready to make their move as well.

Is it time to stick a fork in the former First lady? Or does she yet have another trick up her sleeve? I don't see how she could, but she intends to fight another day -- and since the commentators have been wrong about this race at every turn, I suppose anything is possible.

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Good Economic Times In Texas

We keep hearing from the pathetic partisan hacks on the Left how bad the economy is, and how it is all the fault of the Republicans I wonder if they are planning on ignoring two articles from todayÂ’s Houston Chronicle.

After all, one tells us that the “slumping housing market” down here is really booming – and that new home sales are outstripping the number of new homes being built.

Houston-area builders are selling more homes than they're building, leading to a shrinking supply of new homes on the market.
That's according to the latest survey by Metrostudy, a national consulting company that tracks housing.

Housing starts dropped year-over-year 28 percent to around 34,500 during the 12 months ending in March. But builders closed on 39,880 homes during the same period.

In the first quarter, the area's new housing supply fell to 2.7 months, meaning it would take that long to sell all the finished homes on the market based on prior sales activity. That's an amount experts consider stable, according to Metrostudy.

Brian Binash, president of the Greater Houston Builders Association and Wilshire Homes, said builders have scaled back so much that he's anticipating a shortage of homes as early as this summer.

The shrinking inventory, combined with low interest rates and continued job growth, could lead to higher prices if demand spikes.

"If you're thinking of waiting until this summer or later, I wouldn't," Binash said.
Prices already rose in the first quarter.

The median price of a new home was $202,287, up 15 percent over last year.

Yes, there are fewer homes being built – but I suspect that has something to do with the predictions made over the last few months that we were entering a weak housing market. I’d have to say those predictions were wrong.

And then there is this other story, about the reality that the Texas economy is booming and setting records in tax receipts.

The nation may be on the verge of a recession, but the Texas economy is doing well enough for Comptroller Susan Combs to predict Tuesday that the Legislature will have a $10.7 billion surplus when it convenes in January.

Much of the extra money can be attributed to record oil prices. While motorists are being socked with ever-increasing gasoline costs, oil and gas employment in Texas has been booming, the comptroller's office reported.

If Combs' early forecast holds up, Gov. Rick Perry would like to return part of the money to the taxpayers in the form of tax cuts or rebate checks, spokesman Robert Black said. But those steps would need legislative action.

Oil and gas employment in Texas grew by 7.5 percent between March 2007 and March 2008, leading an overall increase of 214,000 Texas jobs, comptroller's spokesman R.J. DeSilva said.

Consequently, sales tax revenue, a major source of state government income, also continues to grow.

And, DeSilva added, Texas has been insulated more than other states from the sub-prime mortgage lending crisis. Texas, he said, avoided the housing price bubbles that hurt states like California and Florida.

Now I would disagree with the notion of returning all of that money in the form of tax cuts – there are a number of infrastructure projects that could be helped along, and a substantive improvement in teacher salaries and/or health insurance is also in order, since Texas lags behind other states in these areas. But the fact that we have a surplus of $10.7 billion should be seen as one more indication of robust economic health – and make it difficult for the Democrats to poor-mouth their way to victory in this fall’s elections.

Just remember, folks – Democrat leaders say this economic news is all the fault of Republicans, and that Democrats have nothing to do with it. Seems to me that one would therefore have to be a real jackass to vote for the Democrats this fall, given that we are in a GOP sponsored boom economy!

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May 06, 2008

McCain Continues Making His Case

I amy not agree with everything John McCain says, but yesterday he addressed one of the two issues nearest and dearest to my heart -- the courts.

Republican presidential candidate John McCain said on Tuesday he would appoint judges in the mold of conservatives John Roberts, Samuel Alito and former Chief Justice William Rehnquist if he were elected in November.

In a speech in Winston-Salem, the Arizona senator said he would "look for accomplished men and women with a proven record of excellence in the law, and a proven commitment to judicial restraint."

"I will look for people in the cast of John Roberts, Samuel Alito, and my friend the late William Rehnquist -- jurists of the highest caliber who know their own minds, and know the law, and know the difference," McCain told an audience at Wake Forest University.

Roberts, the current chief justice, and Alito were both named to the U.S. Supreme Court by Republican President George W. Bush. Legal experts say they have helped shift it to the right. The court has the final word on questions of U.S. law and its rulings affect the rights of all Americans.

What the article doesn't note is that William Rehnquist was also one of the great scholars of the Supreme Court in the last generation -- and that legal scholars of all stripes have noted that Roberts and Alito are superbly qualified jurists whose work on the court has been impeccable from a legal standpoint. One would think those would be good things -- especially since Americans overwhelmingly view the Supreme Court as properly balanced or too liberal.

Not that this matters to the NY Times.

On a day when Mr. Obama won a decisive victory in North Carolina and Mrs. Clinton eked out a win in Indiana, Mr. McCain spoke about his judicial philosophy. He is determined to move a far too conservative and far too activist Supreme Court and federal judiciary even further and more actively to the right.

Mr. McCain predictably criticized liberal judges, vowed strict adherence to the FoundersÂ’ views and promised to appoint more judges in the mold of Chief Justice John Roberts and Justice Samuel Alito. That is just what the country does not need.

The Times editorial then goes on to complain that the Court has failed to uphold racial discrimination in school assignments, citizens' rights to participate fully in politics, and mischaracterized a decision upholding Roe v. Wade as undercutting the right to abortion and falsely claimed a retrenchment on voting rights -- despite the fact that the decision was written by reliably liberal Justice John Paul Stevens!

Whose views are out of step with those of America and the requirements of the Constitution? Not John McCain's -- it is those of the New York Times, and the Democrat candidates for president. For them, only an unbalanced, left-wing court that ignores the dictates of the Constitution as written will do.

That alone is reason enough to support John McCain.

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Low Class Dem Official/Blogger Mocks McCain Military Service

You can always count on John over at Bay Area Houston to show class and dignity when commenting on political issues -- not.

Over at his site, incontinence jokes about John McCain are considered deep thought. And a Photoshopped picture of the career navy officer and former POW mocking his military service is considered to be incisive commentary on the issues that matter to America by this local Dem mover and shaker.

This is, of course, the guy who organized the protest at John O'Neill's house four years ago -- over failure to give due deference to the military service of John Kerry, even though those questioning his record were his own fellow Swift Boat captains. McCain's heroism is much better documented, fully supported by his fellow POWS, and not tainted by seditious activities when he returned to the United States. But in the eyes of some liberal Democrats, including this one, McCain's undeniably heroic service is fair game.

But then again, I believe that he has plenty of free time to come up with hateful, anti-veteran images.

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Hillary Is Toast

I'm going to say it -- I was wrong yesterday when I stated that a split in Indiana and North Carolina would likely favor Hillary Clinton -- because i could never have foreseen the margins being what they were.

Yes, i expected one state to be a blowout, and the other to be tight -- but Hillary was supposed to run away with Indiana and the winner in North Carolina was going to barely pull it out.

Instead we got the exact opposite.

Senator Barack Obama won a commanding victory in the North Carolina primary on Tuesday and lost narrowly to Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton in Indiana, an outcome that injected a boost of momentum to Mr. ObamaÂ’s candidacy as the Democratic nominating contest entered its final month.

The results from the two primaries, the largest remaining Democratic ones, assured that Mr. Obama would widen his lead in pledged delegates over Mrs. Clinton, providing him with new ammunition as he seeks to persuade Democratic leaders to coalesce around his campaign. He also increased his lead in the popular vote in winning North Carolina by more than 200,000 votes.

Frankly, I don't see how Hillary Clinton can make a case that she deserves the nomination after yesterday's vote totals are considered. Having been decisively thrashed in a state where she was gaining only a few days ago is troubling -- and barely winning in a state she was supposed to win handily should serve as an indication that Democrats have made up their mind. I don't even believe an infusion of cash into the campaign from supporters can help (Obama will still have an advantage there) -- and superdelegates should begin flocking to Obama's banner in the next few days. I simply do not see any way for her to take it away from him.

Andrew Sullivan has a great roundup of opinion from bloggers and commentators.

MORE AT Malkin, MVRWC, GayPatriot, STACLU, Hot Air

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Voices Of Ignorance Spreading Lies That Divide

That would be Rosie O'Donnell, echoing Jeremiah Wright.

Rosie O'Donnell defended Rev. Jeremiah Wright on the "Today" show on Monday, saying Barack Obama's former pastor "made sense to me."

The comedian also compared herself to Wright, saying "some people confuse passion for rage." She also came to Wright's defense on his views on the origins of AIDS.

Yeah, it is true that some people confuse passion with rage. But some folks also confuse celebrity with intelligence, which is why you are even asked your opinion on serious political topics.

And that Wright made sense to you is no surprise, Rosie. We all heard you on The View, where you stomped off because rational comments by one of your fellow panelists didn't make sense and therefore enraged you. You have no more contact with reality than Wright does.

And then there is this gem -- proving that O'Donnell doesn't know squat.

O'DONNELL: But Kathie Lee, you know what it's like for someone to pull one quote out of context for you.

He was comparing it to when the government did give syphilis to black Americans for 40 years. What he was saying is in his history, in his genetic memory, he knows what it's like for the government to infect his own people because he lived through those Tuskegee experiments. And that's what he was talking about.

The problem? The government did not give these men the clap, no matter how often the lie is repeated. What did happen was that a group of black men with advanced syphilis were not given treatment for it, even as they were told they were being treated. A recent column by National Review's Jonah Goldberg recounts what actually happened.

So what did happen? In 1932, public health researchers set out to study syphilis, particularly among African Americans, who had higher infection rates than whites. They recruited 399 black men who already had syphilis. The doctors infected no one. In fact, the patients were selected in the first place because they were tertiary-stage syphilitics who were no longer contagious.

The researchers studied the progress of the disease, without treating it, for 40 years.

Prior to the availability of penicillin in the 1940s and 1950s, the researchers couldnÂ’t have treated the men even if they wanted to. Even after standardized penicillin treatments were available, it wasnÂ’t clear that the patients could have been helped. Some of the doctors believed that treating the decades-long infections would kill the men.

Among scholars who’ve studied Tuskegee, there’s a lot of debate about how much — if any — racism was involved in the experiment. But no one disputes that Tuskegee had nothing whatsoever to do with genocide or even a desire to spread the disease among the black population.

Were the actions of those researchers reprehensible? Certainly.

Were they racist? Possibly.

Were they genocidal? No.

Were they what Wright, O'Donnell, and any number of other folks claim claim, often out of simple ignorance and the acceptance of folk tales that have grown up around this indefensible abuse of nearly 400 seriously ill souls? Absolutely not!

Goldberg offers this analysis as well -- one based less upon his own ideology than upon the research of a respected academic who has studied the Tuskegee Experiment at length.

Indeed, it’s worth noting that the Tuskegee study, launched during the pre-dawn of the New Deal-era, was symptomatic of arrogant liberal government. The study “emerged out of a liberal progressive public health movement concerned about the health and well-being of the African-American population,” writes University of Chicago professor Richard Schweder. He adds: “The study was done with the full knowledge, endorsement and participation of African-American medical professionals, hospitals and research institutes.”

In other words, there were a lot of dirty hands in this disgusting program -- and a good number of them were leading members of the black academic and medical communities of the period.

But let us return to the inanity of Rosie and the insanity of Jeremiah Wright (who, incidently, raves with all the delusional paranoia of the victims of Tuskegee in the final stages of their illness).

So let's come back to it -- there was no infection of African-Americans with AIDS by the government, just as there was no infection of black men with syphilis at Tuskegee DURING THE ROOSEVELT AND TRUMAN ADMINISTRATIONS when the bulk of the Tuskegee Experiment was carried out. And we don't need the vile untruths spread by voices of ignorance like Rosie and Jeremiah.

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May 05, 2008

What Will Happen Today

North Carolina and Indiana vote today -- and the results of the two races will be quite telling. Either Hillary Clinton's campaign ends tonight, or she fights Barack Obama to the bitter end -- whether that be the last primary in four weeks, or the floor of the convention.

ItÂ’s almost over.

Well, not quite. But the Democratic presidential primaries taking place on Tuesday in North Carolina and Indiana have more delegates up for grabs than any of the remaining contests. For political, demographic and mathematical reasons, those states have the potential to reshape the competition between Senators Hillary Rodham Clinton and Barack Obama.

Simple scenarios.

1) Obama wins both races. Hillary Clinton's campaign is dead.

2) Hillary Clinton wins in Indiana, but loses big in North Carolina. She fights on through June, but no one takes her campaign seriously.

3) Hillary Clinton wins in Indiana, and comes within 4 points in North Carolina. Clinton fights through June, and likely concedes after the final votes are in June 3.

4) Hillary Clinton wins both Indiana and North Carolina. The race for superdelegates is on, and we are likely to see a flor fight at the convention that will dwarf anything in recent memory.

I'd like option #4 personally -- and not just because of the damage it would do to the Democrats. We haven't really had a convention where the events inside the hall mean anything in my lifetime -- it would be nice to see a return to the days when conventions matter, even if it is the exception to the rule.

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Half-Truth Herbert

For a columnist in the New York Times to make the argument that a presidential candidate does not support the troops is a rather daring thing, given the utter lack of support for military personnel shown by that pathetic liberal rag over the lat four decades.

But when the claim is that a seditious weasel like Bob Herbert to challenge the credentials of John McCain on that score in a mendacious column straight from the DNC talking points is outrageous!

At the top of the list of no-brainers in Washington should be Senator Jim WebbÂ’s proposed expansion of education benefits for the men and women who have served in the armed forces since Sept. 11, 2001.

Oh, really? Why Webb's bill? Why not some other proposal? Because Webb is a Democrat? Or because it is the most costly, most complicated proposal designed to encourage short-term enlistments rather than military careers?

ItÂ’s awfully hard to make the case that these young people who have sacrificed so much donÂ’t deserve a shot at a better future once their wartime service has ended.

And no one -- outside of the same left-wingers who don't support the troops -- is making that argument.

Senator Webb, a Virginia Democrat, has been the guiding force behind this legislation, which has been dubbed the new G.I. bill. The measure is decidedly bipartisan. Mr. WebbÂ’s principal co-sponsors include Republican Senators Chuck Hagel of Nebraska and John Warner of Virginia, and Democratic Senator Frank Lautenberg of New Jersey.

(All four senators are veterans of wartime service — Senators Webb and Hagel in Vietnam, Warner in World War II and Korea and Lautenberg in World War II.)

Democratic presidential candidates Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton are on board, as are Harry Reid, the Senate majority leader, and Nancy Pelosi, the speaker of the House.

So what?

Who wouldnÂ’t support an effort to pay for college for G.I.Â’s who have willingly suited up and put their lives on the line, who in many cases have served multiple tours in combat zones and in some cases have been wounded?

We did it for those who served in World War II. Why not now?

Actually, nobody argues against or fails to support an effort to pay for college for such folks. For Herbert to imply that anyone does not is to set up a strawman. But even if one were to oppose it, you could distinguish between an all-volunteer force like we have today and the draftee armed forces of WWII. But as I have said, no on disagrees with college benefits.

Well, you might be surprised at who is not supporting this effort. The Bush administration opposes it, and so does Senator John McCain.

Bullshit, Bob. Tall, steaming piles of partisan liberal bullshit. What they oppose is Webb's proposal, not paying for college for servicemen and women.

Reinvigorating the G.I. bill is one of the best things this nation could do. The original G.I. Bill of Rights, signed into law by President Franklin Roosevelt in 1944, paid the full load of a returning veteranÂ’s education at a college or technical school and provided a monthly stipend. It was an investment that paid astounding dividends. Millions of veterans benefited, and they helped transform the nation. College would no longer be the exclusive preserve of the wealthy and those who crowned themselves the intellectual elite.

As The New York Times wrote on the 50th anniversary of the G.I. bill: “Few laws have done so much for so many.”

“These veterans were able to get a first-class future,” Senator Webb told me in an interview. “But not only that. For every dollar that was spent on the World War II G.I. bill, seven dollars came back in the form of tax remunerations from those who received benefits.”

Well, no one can disagree here -- though Democrats insisted upon watering down that benefit decades ago. Today it is a matching funds program, not a grant program. Webb's bill will not change that I guess he doesn't care about the troops so much after all, does he?

Senator Lautenberg went to Columbia on the G.I. bill, and Senator Warner to Washington and Lee University and then to law school.

The benefits have not kept pace over the decades with the real costs of attending college. Moreover, service members have to make an out-of-pocket contribution — something over $100 a month during their first year of service — to qualify for the watered-down benefits.

This is not exactly first-class treatment of the nationÂ’s warriors.

But then again, Webb's bill does not significantly change that, according to any source I have seen.

The Bush administration opposes the new G.I. bill primarily on the grounds that it is too generous, would be difficult to administer and would adversely affect retention.

Sort of -- the Bush Administration opposes the bill because it sets up a complicated scheme that makes benefit levels vary from state to state and institution to institution, and creates a larger bureaucracy to do so -- and also provides incentives to leave the military rather than continue to serve. That is just bad policy.

This is bogus. The estimated $2.5 billion to $4 billion annual cost of the Webb proposal is dwarfed by the hundreds of billions being spent on the wars weÂ’re asking service members to fight in Iraq and Afghanistan. WhatÂ’s important to keep in mind is that the money that goes to bolstering the education of returning veterans is an investment, in both the lives of the veterans themselves and the future of the nation.

Notice, Herbert can't refute the claims of the administration -- so he dismisses them as irrelevant. Always a sign of a dishonest argument.

The notion that expanding educational benefits will have a negative effect on retention seems silly. The Webb bill would cover tuition at a rate comparable to the highest tuition at a state school in the state in which the veteran would be enrolled. That kind of solid benefit would draw talented individuals into the military in large numbers.

Not necessarily. And the problem remains that the legislation would still encourage folks to leave the service immediately, not stay and make a career of it.

Senator Webb, a former secretary of the Navy who specialized in manpower issues, said he has seen no evidence that G.I.Â’s would opt out of the service in significantly higher numbers because of such benefits.

So what he wants to see is an actual exodus of personnel before he will acknowledge he is wrong -- followed by endless whining about "taking away benefits from the troops" if his plan proves to be a disaster for our military.

Senator McCainÂ’s office said on Monday that it was following the PentagonÂ’s lead on this matter, getting guidance from Defense Secretary Robert Gates. Under pressure because of his unwillingness to support Senator WebbÂ’s effort, Senator McCain introduced legislation with substantially fewer co-sponsors last week that expands some educational benefits for G.I.Â’s, but far less robustly than Senator WebbÂ’s bill.

“It’s not even close to the Webb bill,” said Paul Rieckhoff, executive director of Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans of America, an advocacy group.

So, does the number of co-sponsors indicate the merits of a bill? Also, why doesn't herbert mention that hte expanded benefits -- which are still significantly more generous than the current configuration of the GI Bill -- includes more generous benefits for career military personnel, as well as provisions for allowing career enlisted personnel who don't use their benefits themselves to assign them to a son or daughter. Notice that Bob Herbert doesn't bother to tell you what McCain actually proposes -- after all, the facts might get in the way of your drawing the right Left conclusion. Just a quote from someone from one of the small veteran's organizations. What's wrong -- couldn't he get someone from the American legion of VFW to speak out against McCain's proposal?

Politicians tend to talk very, very big about supporting our men and women in uniform. But time and again — whether it’s about providing armor for their safety or an education for their future — we find that talk to be very, very cheap.

And the talk of newspaper columnists smearing a true American military hero is even cheaper, Bob -- and slimy even for a seditious rag like the New York Times.

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May 04, 2008

McCain-Jindal

I've made no secret of my admiration for Louisiana's Bobby Jindal, a man who already has more relevant and credible experience to qualify him for the White House than does Barack Obama, a man a decade his senior. But I don't know that I like the talk of him being John McCain's choice for VP.

Another McCain staffer called my attention to this finding in the latest Fox News poll: McCain led Obama in the straight match-up, 46 to 43. Voters were then asked to choose between two tickets, McCain-Romney vs. Obama-Clinton. Obama-Clinton won 47 to 41.

That reversal of a three-point McCain lead to a six-point deficit for the McCain ticket suggests what might happen (a) when the Democrats unite, and (b) if McCain were to choose a conventional running mate, who, as it were, reinforced the Republican brand for the ticket. As the McCain aide put it, this is what will happen if we run a traditional campaign; our numbers will gradually regress toward the (losing) generic Republican number.

Maybe thatÂ’s why, in separate conversations last week, no fewer than four McCain staffers and advisers mentioned as a possible vice-presidential pick the 36-year-old Louisiana governor, Bobby Jindal. TheyÂ’re tempted by the idea of picking someone so young, with real accomplishments and a strong reformist streak.

It might also be a way to confront the issue of McCain’s age (71), which private polls and focus groups suggest could be a real problem. A Jindal pick would implicitly acknowledge the questions and raise the ante. The message would be: “You want generational change? You can get it with McCain-Jindal — without risking a liberal and inexperienced Obama as commander in chief.” I would add that it was after McCain spent considerable time with Jindal in New Orleans recently, and reportedly found him, as he has before, personally engaging and intellectually impressive, that the campaign’s informal name-dropping of Jindal began.

Everything said about Gov. Jindal in this piece is accurate. However, I'd rather wait four years to see him on the national ticket, after he has successfully cleaned up the problems and corruption that piled up during decades of Democrat misrule in Louisiana. That state needs help -- and Bobby Jindal has made a great start towards fixing it. But with less than a year as governor to his credit, it seems like a place on the national ticket is coming a bit too early -- but I'd be fired up and ready to support him in the event of his selection.

But Jindal may be signaling his reluctance to sign on to the national ticket in today's Washington Times.

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Do The Wright Thing

I wonder -- how many pastors would survive the sort of improprieties that appear to have gone on here?

The Rev. Jeremiah Wright, Barack Obama's loose cannon of a spiritual adviser, stole the wife of a parishioner - after the man sought Wright's help in saving his troubled marriage, the former husband told friends.

Delmer Reed, 59, confided to pals that he believed the minister moved in on his wife while Wright was counseling the couple at his Chicago church in the early 1980s, The Post has learned.

"That's exactly how he said it," Reed's divorce lawyer, Roosevelt Thomas, told The Post.

"It looks like Delmer might have been right," he said, because after Delmer and Ramah Reed were divorced, she got remarried - to Wright. "Either that or this was the biggest coincidence in the world."

Asked about the relationship between Wright and his ex-wife, Reed told The Post, "Oh, the things I could tell you."

Initially, he didn't believe the rumors.

"People were telling me that my extremely attractive wife was seen with the pastor," Reed said. "But I didn't believe it. I thought, 'So what?' "

Was he wrong in the end?

"Well, yeah," he said.

Reed won't however, take the next step and outright accuse Wright of behaving improperly -- but not because he doesn't believe that case. Instead, he is abiding by a commitment to his children not to say anything damaging to their stepfather.

Unlike the horrendous statements from teh pulpit made by Jeremiah Wright, I don't see where this story really has anything to do with Barack Obama. But the exposure of this story now is simply one more case of chickens coming home to roost for the racist reverend.

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The "If I Were Temporary Supreme Dictator Of The US" Meme

Several fine bloggers who I respect posted on this topic on Friday, and I'd like to take a shot at it.

Q: Suppose you were elected Temporary Supreme Dictator of America.

What ten laws would you pass/repeal or government programs would you create/tear down (Assume that you would be in office for however long it would take to do these things and that any changes you make will remain in place after you leave office).


A: Were I to assume this august and dread office, I would make the following changes.

1. ANNEX MEXICO. To paraphrase an old saying about a false prophet and a mountain, why bring all these Mexicans to the United States when we can bring the United States to the Mexicans? In one fell swoop, we could eliminate most of our illegal immigration problem by making our newly acquired Mexican territories are subject to all the laws that apply in the US that make it attractive to the illegal aliens in the first place. We would solve the citizenship and anchor baby questions because all of the Mexicans on either side of the old border would now be US citizens. What infrastructure and social improvements that are needed will be taken care of by using the PEMEX oil revenues. Eventually, I'd anticipate the old Mexican states to be admitted to the Union. An additional advantage is that the border wall we will need to build to keep out Central American illegal aliens will be much shorter -- and therefore much easier to build and maintain.

2) REPEAL THE SEVENTEENTH AMENDMENT. By taking the election of US Senators out of the hands of the people and returning it to the state legislatures where it was placed by the Framers of the Constitution, we will move a long way towards restoring the states to their proper role in setting national policy for our FEDERAL union.

3) SETTLE THE DC REPRESETATION QUESTION. The District of Columbia was created out of Maryland territory, and its people should vote for members of the House of Representatives as citizens of the state of Maryland. Some method of representing them in the Maryland Legislature for purposes of selecting US Senators (See Point 2) will need to be devised.

4) REVISE THE VOTING RIGHTS ACT OF 1965. I've said it before -- the repeated renewal of the emergency provisions of the VRA has resulted in a continual focus on the problems of the 1964 Presidential election while ignoring contemporary voting rights issues. Replace the current preclearance regulations, which are based upon data nearly as old as I am, with new regulations that subject any jurisdiction with less than 50% representation in either of the two most recent presidential elections to the special supervision of the Justice Department. That way we will always be dealing with obstacles to voter participation that exist in the present, not those that have been more-or-less effectively remedied in the past.

5) EXECUTIVE ORDER OVERTURNING A NUMBER OF INAPPROPRIATELY DECIDED COURT DECISIONS. These would include Roe v. Wade, Lawrence v. Texas, Bob Jones University v. United States, Coker v. Georgia, Roper v. Simmons, and Goodridge vs. Department of Public Health, among others -- all cases in which a court exceeded its proper boundaries by taking matters that properly belong in the hands of legislative bodies and inaccurately ascribing the status of Constitutional right or prohibition to one side or another. Even where I agree with the result (the law struck down in Lawrence was idiotic and ought to have been repealed), the problem is that the judges stripped the elected legislators of their ability to legislate in areas that no legally and historically plausible reading of the federal (or in the Goodridge case, state) constitution could legitimately justify.

6) TRIPLE THE SALARIES OF MILITARY PERSONNEL, POLICE, FIREFIGHTERS, AND TEACHERS. Everyone always says they view these jobs as extremely important and says we don't pay them enough. Let's do it. This can be partially funded by placing a windfall profits tax on the entertainment industry, and a special 100% tax surcharge on the salaries and benefits of entertainment industry executives, actors, recording artists, professional athletes, and their agents for all income over 10 times the poverty level for a family of four.

7) REAL EDUCATION REFORM. As long as we have a consensus in this country that government should be paying for education, then it should pay for the education of all students through grade 12, regardless of whether they attend a public, private, or religious school. Any student in a non-public school will receive a voucher equal to 2/3 the average per-pupil expenditure in public schools in their state, provided their school offers a core curriculum of English, math, science, and social studies that meets established standards. Students may voluntarily choose to drop out after Grade 8 -- and may be permanently expelled for disciplinary or academic reasons after that point as well. Students who drop out or are expelled are done with their free education. Tracking of students based upon ability is to be encouraged so that no student is held back in an effort to make sure that no child is left behind. In addition, high school students are to be encouraged to choose a course of studies, either college prep or vocational, based upon their interests and aptitudes.

9) ABOLISH ALL LAWS RESTRICTING POLITICAL PARTICIPATION BY AMERICAN CITIZENS. Bye-bye, McCain-Feingold and other campaign finance laws that restrict the contributions of American citizens to political campaigns, or limit their ability to form organizations to engage in political speech. The only rules will be that contributions to candidates must be reported within 24 hours, and no corporate or union funds may be contributed to or expended on behalf of a candidate. Money is not speech -- but it is an essential to being able to speak in today's media-driven environment, and donations of money are certainly a form of free association.

10) THE OMNIBUS CORRECTION AMENDMENT. Once amendment can be used to fix problems and misinterpretations that have sprung up regarding the Constitution over the last two centuries. These would include:
* Banning all discrimination for or against individuals based upon race, religion, or sex.
* Clarifying that religious speech cannot be disfavored by government entities -- meaning that religious groups have equal access to public facilities as non-religious groups.
* Modifying the Second Amendment to read "An armed populace being necessary to the preservation of liberty, the right of the people to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed and its exercise is commended and encouraged. No law shall be valid that limits the right of any adult citizen not convicted of a violent felony or adjudicated mentally incompetent to go about armed in any public place, excluding prisons and mental health facilities.
* Affirming that the death penalty is constitutional, and may be applied for crimes other than murder.
* Stating that the Commerce Clause and Necessary and Proper Clause are not catch-all provisions allowing Congress to do anything they please, and that all statutes enacted under them must provide a clear and direct rationale for the use of those clauses to justify them.

Having completed my term of service to the nation, I would then return to my classroom, just as Cincinnatus returned to his farm in Roman times.

Now, why don't you folks all give this meme a try -- I'm tagging no one, but encouraging everyone to play!

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May 03, 2008

A Glaring Lie Unobtrusively Slipped In To NY Times Story

And who says that they don't editorialize in news stories?

In an article about the glut of executions likely to take place following the recent approval of lethal injection by the Supreme Court, the NY Times says this.

Experts say the resumption of executions is likely to throw a strong new spotlight on the divisive national — and international — issue of capital punishment.

Did you catch the lie in that sentence?

While capital punishment may be opposed by many countries outside the US, it is hardly a divisive practice in the United States. Polling data consistently shows that between 2/3 and 3/4 of Americans support the use of capital punishment.

But then again, what maybe what they meant by divisive was "the American people support it even though we editorialize against it."

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Why Some Commentators Are Clueless

It doesn't matter how clearly something is explained to them, they keep coming back to the same point of mystification and lack of understanding.

Take Ronald Brownstein of National Journal and MSNBC.

First, if McCain doesn't envision a 100-year American front-line combat presence in Iraq, how long is he willing to keep U.S. forces in that role? So far, all he has said is that the United States should withdraw only if it concludes that the Iraq mission is unachievable or when it has achieved success, which he defines as the establishment of "a peaceful, stable, prosperous, democratic state."

McCain hasn't said how long he would keep fighting to reach that demanding goal. Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., one of McCain's closest Senate allies, recently said he thinks that McCain would maintain current U.S. troop levels in Iraq through his entire four-year presidential term if military commanders recommended that course to maintain stability there.

Yeah, McCain hasn't given Brownstein the cutoff date that he and other liberals want. Why not? because as conservatives (and liberals who actually understand such things) have repeatedly noted for the last year or two, setting a date for withdrawal (and that is what "how long" is really asking) simply tells your enemy "how long" they need to bide their time until the US surrenders. The correct answer -- one that Brownstein seems unwilling to accept -- is "as long as it is militarily appropriate for us to continue the mission."

Brownstein then tries to distinguish the US presence in South Korea (which remains a source of great political division among South Koreans) as well as in Japan and Germany (in which we were initially an occupying power which forced our presence upon those nations at the point of a gun) from an ongoing presence in Iraq, which he argues would be both divisive among Iraqis and lead us to be viewed as an occupying power by the Iraqi people! I guess that Brownstein really isn't familiar with the history of the places he cites.

Which leads us to the third point -- the views of those who have doubts about the current Iraq strategy.

As Democratic National Committee Chairman Howard Dean asked this week, "Does anyone think ... if you keep our troops in Iraq for a hundred years, people won't be ... setting off suicide bombs?"

In an interview, retired Marine Corps Gen. Anthony Zinni, the former commander of U.S. forces in the Mideast, echoed that concern. Zinni said that McCain is right that America needs the capacity to respond to regional threats. But Zinni believes that it should do so with a light and flexible force stationed outside Iraq, probably in Kuwait. "Keeping a large formation of combat troops [in Iraq] is a mistake," he says, "because you are going to be seen as an occupier, and a colonial power, and you are going to attract people that will want to attack those forces."

Which begs the question -- having achieved success and victory in Iraq, what makes Dean, Zinni, and others believe that the same tactics will not be adopted by al-Qaeda against American forces in Kuwait? After all, their success will merely embolden them in their efforts to drive the Crusaders" of the "Great Satan" out of Dar al-Islam (the House of Islam). Will Dean and Zinni (and their ideological successors) tell us a decade from now that we must withdraw from Kuwait because the cost in American casualties is too high? After all, the logic of Iraq will be just as applicable in Kuwait if even a small segment of Kuwaitis becomes radicalized.

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Another Philandering Democrat

Now I've maintained a certain position on extramarital affairs by politicians -- I don't really care about them unless they involve serious criminality or official misconduct. That was my standard for opposing Bill Clinton during the Lewinski thing, and my standard for not caring about the extramarital affairs of most politicians.

That said, Ohio's Democrat Attorney General needs to resign from office immediately.

Ohio's attorney general admitted an extramarital affair with an employee Friday, soon after three of his aides were fired or forced out after an investigation found evidence of sexual harassment and other misconduct.

Leader of both parties were critical of Attorney General Marc Dann, one of several Democrats swept into office in 2006 after a scandal over state investments sullied Republicans. He apologized to his wife and supporters but promised not to step down.

"I'm embarrassed. I have taken responsibility for what I've done," he told reporters.

Dann had lived with two of the aides at an apartment during much of his first year in office and some of the alleged harassment by one of the aides occurred there.

"I did not create an atmosphere in my public and personal life that is consistent with the important mission of the Office of Attorney General ...," Dann said. "I am heartbroken by my failure to recognize the problems being created and by my failure to stop them."

In other words, Dann's sexual misconduct was a part of a pattern of such behavior in the Office of the Attorney General which he did nothing to stop and which his own conduct helped to foster. As such, any clean-up of the office is going to require his exit, based upon the same standards applied to the other employees in the office.

H/T Malkin

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May 01, 2008

Yea, How The Nutroots Have Fallen

They can't keep their candidates off of FoxNews.

The nationÂ’s top Democrats are suddenly rushing to appear on the Fox News Channel, which they once had shunned as enemy territory as the nemesis of liberal bloggers.

The detente with Fox has provoked a backlash from progressive bloggers, who contend the party’s leaders are turning their backs on the base — and lending credibility and legitimacy to the network liberals love to hate — in a quest for a few swing votes.

In a span of eight days, Sen. Barack Obama (D-Ill.), Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton (D-NY.) and Democratic National Committee Chairman Howard Dean are all taking their seats with the network that calls itself “fair and balanced” but is widely viewed as skewing conservative.

With the partyÂ’s presidential contest reduced to hand-to-hand combat, Democrats are turning to the ratings leader among cable news channels in a clear rebuff to the liberal activists known as the Netroots.

Markos Moulitsas, founder of the leading liberal site Daily Kos, told Politico’s Michael Calderone: "Democrats are being idiotic by going on that network.”

Ari Melber, the Net movement correspondent for The Nation, told Politico by phone that progressive activists and the Netroots are “not happy about it.”

“I don’t think that it is tenable to completely neglect or ignore what your base wants,” Melber said.

Of course, it is absurd for Democrats to stay after the highest rated cable news channel. After all, that is where the viewers -- including a lot of the independents that they claim to be reaching out to. Why cede those voters to the GOP by making Fox a Democrat-free zone?

Besides -- who are the KOSsacks and DUmmies going to vote for this fall in a fit of disapproval of the Fox interviews -- John McCain?

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April 30, 2008

Headline Spinning

The story has one message -- but the headline tells us something else entirely.

NBC/WSJ Poll: Bush A Liability To McCain

But as we read into the article, the real story seems to tell us something else.

Indeed, even though Democrats have an 18-point advantage over Republicans in a generic presidential ballot test (51-33 percent), this latest NBC News/Wall Street Journal survey shows Obama besting McCain by only three points (46-43 percent) and Clinton topping the Arizona senator by only one (45-44 percent).

So what we are actually told in the story is that John McCain is essentially tied with both of his Democrat rivals. The Bush thing in the headline is essentially a red herring. Indeed, the information in the headline seems to match up pretty well with the number of folks who seem intent upon voting for the Democrat who gets their party's nomination -- they would never vote for McCain, and are simply parroting the talking points that the Democrats have put forward for the last few weeks.


But then again, so is MSNBC.

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More On The Heroism Of John McCain

Here’s one of those stories I hadn’t heard before – one which reveals a great deal about John McCain.

[Ret. Col. Bud] Day relayed to me one of the stories Americans should hear. It involves what happened to him after escaping from a North Vietnamese prison during the war. When he was recaptured, a Vietnamese captor broke his arm and said, "I told you I would make you a cripple."

The break was designed to shatter Mr. Day's will. He had survived in prison on the hope that one day he would return to the United States and be able to fly again. To kill that hope, the Vietnamese left part of a bone sticking out of his arm, and put him in a misshapen cast. This was done so that the arm would heal at "a goofy angle," as Mr. Day explained. Had it done so, he never would have flown again.

But it didn't heal that way because of John McCain. Risking severe punishment, Messrs. McCain and Day collected pieces of bamboo in the prison courtyard to use as a splint. Mr. McCain put Mr. Day on the floor of their cell and, using his foot, jerked the broken bone into place. Then, using strips from the bandage on his own wounded leg and the bamboo, he put Mr. Day's splint in place.
Years later, Air Force surgeons examined Mr. Day and complemented the treatment he'd gotten from his captors. Mr. Day corrected them. It was Dr. McCain who deserved the credit. Mr. Day went on to fly again.

McCain himself had been tortured and suffered grievous injuries after his capture by the North Vietnamese. They wanted to use him for propaganda purposes, but when he refused they made him suffer. Yet when he found one of his fellow prisoners suffering and in danger of being permanently maimed due to the sadism of their captors, McCain acted in the best tradition of our country by placing himself in danger to prevent that outcome.

There is more, much more, to this article – including the beautiful story of how the McCains came to adopt their daughter Bridget. I would only add to it that there was, in fact, a second baby girl who Cindy McCain brought back to the US for medical treatment – and the couple found another family to adopt that child as well. After reading this article, tell me that John and Cindy McCain, two decent people despite their past flaws and past mistakes, would not be the sort of First Couple who would make America proud.

H/T NRO's Campaing Spot, Hot Air

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April 29, 2008

Al Franken -- Tax Cheat

If you or I were to scam multiple states out of over $70K in taxes, we would likely go to jail.

Liberal Democrat and (alleged) funnyman Al Franken gets to run for US Senate instead.

Democratic U.S. Senate candidate Al Franken, front-runner in the race to challenge Republican U.S. Sen. Norm Coleman, said on Tuesday that he has paid $70,000 in back taxes and penalties owed in 17 states, going back to 2003.

Franken, who has earned income across the country for celebrity appearances and speeches, blamed his accountant of 18 years for failing to pay the appropriate taxes owed in each state.

The accountant, Allen Chanzis of New York, "just made a basic kind of error that had a lot of ramifications," Franken said.

Franken said that he paid federal and state taxes on all of his income, but that the accountant had failed to properly distribute the tax payments.

Yeah, that-'s it -- blame it on the accountants.

At best, it is an indication that Franken is out of touch with the realities of everyday life for real Americans -- and that he lacks the judgment to hire competent professionals to do his taxes or to make sure they are paid in a proper, timely fashion.

Still, Democrats are going to try t elect him to the US Senate in Minnesota.

If he were a Republican, they'd be demanding a special prosecutor and jail time in each of the 17 defrauded states.

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It's Too Late To Turn Back Now

Like it or not, Barack Obama is permanently tied to the Reverend Jeremiah Wright, and nothing he said today did anything to sever that link -- nor, as I pointed out this morning, could it have.

Here's the heart of the statement from the press conference this afternoon.

You know, I have been a member of Trinity United Church of Christ since 1992. I have known Reverend Wright for almost 20 years. The person I saw yesterday was not the person that I met 20 years ago. His comments were not only divisive and destructive, but I believe that they end up giving comfort to those who prey on hate and I believe that they do not portray accurately the perspective of the black church.

They certainly don't portray accurately my values and beliefs. And if Reverend Wright thinks that that's political posturing, as he put it, then he doesn't know me very well. And based on his remarks yesterday, well, I may not know him as well as I thought, either.

Now, I've already denounced the comments that had appeared in these previous sermons. As I said, I had not heard them before. And I gave him the benefit of the doubt in my speech in Philadelphia, explaining that he has done enormous good in the church. He's built a wonderful congregation. The people of Trinity are wonderful people. And what attracted me has always been their ministry's reach beyond the church walls.

But when he states and then amplifies such ridiculous propositions as the U.S. government somehow being involved in AIDS, when he suggests that Minister Farrakhan somehow represents one of the greatest voices of the 20th and 21st century, when he equates the United States wartime efforts with terrorism, then there are no excuses. They offend me. They rightly offend all Americans. And they should be denounced. And that's what I'm doing very clearly and unequivocally here today.

Unfortunately for Obama, none of that matters.

After all, Barack Obama is the guy who six weeks ago the speech">told us this about Jeremiah Wright.

I can no more disown him than I can disown the black community. I can no more disown him than I can my white grandmother - a woman who helped raise me, a woman who sacrificed again and again for me, a woman who loves me as much as she loves anything in this world, but a woman who once confessed her fear of black men who passed by her on the street, and who on more than one occasion has uttered racial or ethnic stereotypes that made me cringe.

These people are a part of me. And they are a part of America, this country that I love.

Crazy Uncle Jeremiah is a part of Barack Obama -- and if he could not disown Rev. Wright six weeks ago, I don't see how we can accept the denunciation today. After all, nothing has changed from six weeks ago. The pastor has said nothing new. Unless, as Wright pointed out over the weekend, Barack Obama is just another politician doing what politicians have to do to get elected -- and in this case lying to the American public trying to save his opportunity to be president.

But I think that Barack Obama might have revealed his real reason for speaking out today. Referring to Wright's most NPC speech, he said, "It was a show of disprespect to me."

Yes, there we have it. This isn't about principle, this is about his own ego. He's lashing out at Wright out of personal pique, rather than principle.

Anyone else need evidence that Barack Obama is simply unfit to serve as President of the United States?

By the way, I think I've found a new theme song for the Obama campaign.

H/T Malikn, Hot Air

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April 28, 2008

Too Late For Obama To Distance Himself From Wright

Barack Obama had his chance to distance himself from Jeremiah Wright back in March. After spinning through three different and contradictory reactions to his pastor's outrageous and anti-American sermons in the space of about five days, he settled on embracing the man even while disagreeing with him. Many of us rightly saw the whole process as indicative of a lack of integrity on his part.

But what it also did was inescapably bind Obama to Wright -- but as long as Wright remained in the background, there was hope that the controversy might go away.

After this past weekend, it won't. Between his Bill Moyers interview, Dalas Sermon, Detroit NAACP address, and National Press Club session, Jeremiah Wright is going to be a serious issue at least through the Democrat Convention -- and up to November, if Obama still wins the nomination.

Some, like Andrew Sullivan, are advising Obama to dump Wright completely.

But Wright's cooptation of
Obama for his own agenda - his assertion that Obama's distancing from
him is insincere - requires, in fact demands a response from Obama.

Obama needs not just to distance himself from Wright's views; he needs to
disown him at this point. Wright himself, it seems to
me, has become part of what Obama is fighting against: the boomer,
Vietnam era's obsession with its red-blue, white-black, pro and
anti-America fixations. That is not what this election needs to be
about; and Wright's massive, racially divisive and, yes, bitter provocation
requires a proportionate response.

We need a speech or statement from Obama in which he utterly repudiates this
poison, however personally difficult that may be, however damaging the
impact will be. The statement today will not do it. This is no longer about cynics trying to associate one
man's politics with another. It is  now about Wright attempting to
associate himself and some of his noxious, stupid, rancid views with the likely
Democratic nominee. Wright has given Obama no choice - and he has also
given him another opportunity. He needs to
seize it.

I respectfully disagree.

Barack Obama had his chance to denounce, renounce, and repudiate Jeremiah Wright. Unfortunately for him, that opportunity was some six or seven weeks ago, when he made his overly-hyped speech on race. And I stated at the time, his failure to quit Trinity UCC and sever his relationship with Jeremiah Wright was a profound error. To do so now would be to prove Wright's words in the Moyers interview, that Obama is nothing but a politician doing what politicians do to get elected. As such, Barack Obama is permanetly -- and perhaps fatally -- damaged as a presidential candidate.

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April 27, 2008

McCain Calls Obama Insensitive, Out Of Touch

The Arizona Senator limits his words to the poor -- but I'd include the middle class among those Obama doesn't understand or care about, too.

Republican presidential candidate John McCain on Sunday called Democratic rival Barack Obama insensitive to poor people and out of touch on economic issues.

The GOP nominee-in-waiting rapped his Democratic rival for opposing his idea to suspend the tax on fuel during the summer, a proposal that McCain believes will particularly help low-income people who usually have older cars that guzzle more gas.

"I noticed again today that Sen. Obama repeated his opposition to giving low-income Americans a tax break, a little bit of relief so they can travel a little further and a little longer, and maybe have a little bit of money left over to enjoy some other things in their lives," McCain said. "Obviously Sen. Obama does not understand that this would be a nice thing for Americans, and the special interests should not be dictating this policy."

Remember - it isn't just the poor who spend a large amount of money on gas -- the middle class does as well, between work and recreattional activities.

And Obama's plan to support a tax increase on all Americans who pay income taxes -- not to mention the reimposition of income tax on lower middle class Americans whose tax liability was reduced to zero under the Bush tax cuts -- constitutes one more example of his lack of connection with the economic realities of average Americans.

But then again, this is the same Barack Obama who couldn't get by on the $58,000 salary from his part-time job, and whose wife has indicated how hard it is to live on between a quarter-million and half-million dollars a year. If you need a clue as to how far out of contact with the economic realities of most Americans Obama really is, that should do it.

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Poor-Mouthing Obama

For all that Barack Obama and his wife try to paint themselves as "just ordinary people", I think this little detail tells us a lot about him.

After an unsuccessful campaign for Congress in 2000, Illinois state Sen. Barack Obama faced serious financial pressure: numerous debts, limited cash and a law practice he had neglected for a year. Help arrived in early 2001 from a significant new legal client -- a longtime political supporter.

Chicago entrepreneur Robert Blackwell Jr. paid Obama an $8,000-a-month retainer to give legal advice to his growing technology firm, Electronic Knowledge Interchange. It allowed Obama to supplement his $58,000 part-time state Senate salary for over a year with regular payments from Blackwell's firm that eventually totaled $112,000.

Hold on here for just a moment. Let's set aside the possible corruption angle here for a moment. Let's temporarily ignore the fact that Barack Obama was on the payroll of a campaign contributor for whom he was soliciting grant money from the state, and who made a campaign contribution once he got the grant. Let's just look at the part of the story I put in bold-faced type.

For his part-time job, Barack Obama was making $58,000 a year in taxpayer money -- and he could not not get by on that paltry amount. Never mind that he was making roughly twice the per capita income in his district (as a former Chicagoan, I'm well-aware of the area he represents and the poverty there). Never mind that the salary from his part time job put him above the average salary for teachers in the state of Illinois at that time by more than $10,000. And never mind that Michelle Obama was bringing home over $100,000 a year at the same time working in the corporate world that she now tells the little people to shun. He still needed to supplement the salary from his part-time job -- by taking cash from a political insider to use his office to get that contributor (eventually) over $320,000.

Barack Obama tries to present himself to us as the common man. He wants us all to believe that that he understands us and our struggles. This story proves that it isn't true. If you and your family can't make it on over $160,000 a year without supplementing your salary through a shady deal with a campaign contributor, you clearly aren't a man of the people -- and are instead a charlatan trying to fool the American people.

But no doubt we will hear from the Obama campaign that there is nothing wrong with Barack Obama's conduct here -- just like they continue to tell us about his financial dealings with Tony Rezko. But I think it is becoming obvious that Obama's character is a real issue from which his campaign desperately wants to distract the American people.

H/T Hot Air, Sister Toldjah

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Oppressive Speech Regulation

There is nothing so fundamentally American as citizens exercising their rights under the Constitution to speak, write, assemble and petition their government for the redress of grievances -- or to do the same for purposes of supporting or opposing ballot initiatives or candidates for office.

Yet somehow the practice in this country in recent decades has been to treat the participation of Americans in such activities as a threat to "good government" -- and burdensome campaign finance regulations have been imposed upon Americans which have the effect of criminalizing activities that our Founding Fathers would have recognized as clearly within the scope of the First Amendment.

George Will chronicles one of these cases -- a brutal act under color of law designed to suppress the speech of a band of neighbors concerned about the future of their neighborhood in Colorado.

Parker North is a cluster of about 300 houses close to the town of Parker. When two residents proposed a vote on annexation of their subdivision to Parker, six others began trying to persuade the rest to oppose annexation. They printed lawn signs and fliers, started an online discussion group and canvassed neighbors, little knowing that they were provoking Colorado's speech police.

One proponent of annexation sued them. This tactic -- wielding campaign finance regulations to suppress opponents' speech -- is common in the America of the McCain-Feingold campaign finance law. The complaint did not just threaten the Parker Six for any "illegal activities." It also said that anyone who had contacted them or received a lawn sign might be subjected to "investigation, scrutinization and sanctions for campaign finance violations."

The First Amendment guarantees freedom of association, "the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the government for a redress of grievances." The exercise of this right often annoys governments, and the Parker Six did not know that Colorado's government, perhaps to discourage annoyances, stipulates that when two or more people associate to advocate a political position, and spend more than $200 in doing so, they become an "issue committee."

Got that? Two people spending just $200 dollars together to participate in the electoral process constitutes a violation of the law unless they spend more to fill out and file paperwork registering them with the state and disclose incredible amounts of private information to the general public. What sort of information?

...they must report to the government the names and addresses of all persons who contribute more than $20; they must also report the employers of plutocrats who contribute more than $100; they must report non-cash contributions such as lemons used for lemonade, and marker pens and wooden dowels for yard signs.

Got that? For giving a mere $20 out of a sense of civic obligation, your name and address and political associations become a matter of public record. And if one gives the princely sum of $100, your employer will be disclosed to the general public. Gone are the days when good citizens at a community meeting can "pass the hat" and collect money to speak out on public issues -- reporting laws make those who conduct the meeting and the guy who owns the hat criminal.

Today's practices and laws are, dare I say it, unAmerican.

Let's look at the practices of our Founding Fathers.

Many of them wrote anonymous pamphlets published by anonymous supporters to advocate independence, the adoption of the Constitution, support for (or opposition to) the Jay Treaty, and the election/defeat of either Thomas Jefferson or John Adams in our first contested election.

I'll take their model of free speech above the regulated, domesticated and eviscerated counterfeit that the advocates of "campaign finance reform" and "public disclosure" advocate. The former is the free exercise of an unalienable right by a people fully possessing their liberty -- the latter the feckless submission of serfs to a to a ruling class that treats freedom as a revocable privilege. Would that this year's presidential race had a serious candidate who embraced the vision of the Founders regarding the First Amendment.

More At From On High.

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April 25, 2008

Wright On One Thing

Jeremiah Wright may be dead wrong on his claims that the US government supplies drugs to the ghetto, invented AIDS to kill blacks, or in any way deserved to be attacked on 9/11, but he nailed one point in his Bill Moyers interview.

BILL MOYERS:
In the 20 years that you've been his pastor, have you ever heard him repeat any of your controversial statements as his opinion?

REVEREND WRIGHT:
No. No. No. Absolutely not.

I don't talk to him about politics. And so he had a political event, he goes out as a politician and says what he has to say as a politician. I continue to be a pastor who speaks to the people of God about the things of God.

Yep, Jeremiah Wright has Barack Obama so neatly pegged – he’s just another politician who will do or say what he has to do to get elected, not a “new type of politician”. Maybe Wright should have preached more about “Thou shalt not bear false witness” than “God damn America” – it was certainly more needed by at least one of his parishioners.

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