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Politics : Stockman Scott's Political Debate Porch -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: American Spirit who wrote (74830)3/28/2007 1:41:08 AM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 89467
 
Mixing politics with pleasure

sfweekly.com



To: American Spirit who wrote (74830)3/28/2007 3:19:28 AM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 89467
 
Al Gore: Insider as Outsider

politicaldissonance.blogspot.com



To: American Spirit who wrote (74830)3/28/2007 1:42:16 PM
From: LTK007  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 89467
 
i have decided today i will write-in Ron Paul's name for president of the U.S.A..
You all can cast your vote for the MACHINE's pick, you ANT COLONY people.
A Series of posts that brought me to this decision keeping in mind i read Ron Paul's writings but never have known his face. i have known he has been the most eloquent extremely intelligent and relentless attacker of imperialism and militarism for years.
Those that would not vote for him because he is a Republican( he ran for President as a Libertarian in 1988) and can only say--PATHETIC!!!

**************************************************************
To: mishedlo who wrote (64865) 3/28/2007 11:50:51 AM
From: max90 Read Replies (1) of 64887

Wow! Who was that man just hitting Bernanke hard with awesome scolding about the fraud and disgrace of the easy credit that has caused these problems, why was the Fed saying everythin was fine when it wasn't fine, why was thereno regulation, sayiong it is just like the last bubble, deny, deny, deny until it is too late and he also was asking questions about The Presidential Working Group!!!(PPT) saying why do they work in secret, what is the basis for manipulating the market , he was just plain industrial strentgh questioning throwing fast balls at Berknanke--no soft balls, no slo-pitch.
Berkanke spent his time clearing his throat anmd saying "ah, ah, ah"
He was the Senator that spoke just before Casey, an older gent.
Can anyone identify this fellow???????????????????? Max
p.s.. o yes he attacked the whole poremise of how Fannie Mae is run
Only thing Bernanke let slip is on 2/27 evidently a super computer went CRAZY.And, per Bernanke, that was the underlying problem on 2/27.
*************************************************************

To: max90 who wrote (64878) 3/28/2007 1:07:46 PM
From: kds7 Read Replies (1) of 64887

Undoubtedly, Ron Paul. The only one with the intelligence and the guts to throw out hardballs
*************************************************************

: kds7 who wrote (64886) 3/28/2007 1:21:12 PM
From: max90 of 64887

Sir you are most correct.i just went to see a photo of Ron Paul after reading your message, and indeed it was Ron Paul that caused me to say "WOW!"
And you know he has a twinkle and a NATURAL smile. i would vote for that fellow!!! YES! Max



To: American Spirit who wrote (74830)3/28/2007 5:24:18 PM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 89467
 
Evidence Suggests U.S. Attorney Firings May Have Been Part of White House Scheme to Help Game 2008 Election

bradblog.com

Karl Rove Associate and GOP Operative Tim Griffin's Appointment in Arkansas --- and Others Like it --- Are Worth Noting as the Scandal Continues to Unravel...

Guest Blogged by Arlen Parsa

Details continue to drip out from the U.S. Attorney Purge scandal which seem to suggest that electoral politics --- and perhaps the 2008 election in particular --- may well have been at the heart of the White House/Dept. of Justice scheme to strategically place partisan operatives where they might be most useful prior to the next Presidential Election.

One such detail revealed itself on Tuesday March 20th when Senator Mark Pryor (D-AR) appeared on MSNBC's Hardball to discuss the recent purge of several US Attorneys by the Bush Administration. Host Chris Matthews opened the segment by asking Pryor how much he knew about the White House's decision to replace the US Attorney in his state, Bud Cummins, with one of Karl Rove's associates, a partisan operative named Tim Griffin.

Pryor criticized the Attorney General for firing Cummins and replacing him with Griffin, who had very little professional experience in Arkansas and had only recently moved there when Cummins was fired in December of 2006. Cummins, on the other hand, whom George W. Bush himself had appointed in 2001, had been well respected, competent, and non-partisan (despite personally being a Republican).

But the real bombshell came near the end of the interview....

Cummins told Matthews before going on the air that he had heard a "conspiracy theory" about why the Administration had chosen to replace Cummins with Griffin, and Matthews asked him about it a short time later when they were live. "Well," Pryor said, slightly uncomfortable. "There’s kind of a conspiracy theory about that."

"Some people have pointed to that, said isn’t that strange, here [the Administration is] putting in a maybe highly-political US Attorney in Hillary Clinton’s backyard... Isn’t that odd right before the Presidential race?" Pryor explained.

The implication was that if Republicans had a partisan prosecutor in Arkansas where the Clintons lived while Bill had served as governor during the 1980s, he would be able to drudge up old political dirt on the couple in time for the 2008 elections.

Pryor was quick to add that he didn't personally subscribe to the theory, but that it was just speculation he had been hearing among political insiders.

But Griffin's nomination wasn't the only one with political and electoral undertones that might not bode well for Democrats in 2008. In fact, a report from the McClatchy Newspaper syndicate last Friday indicated that the Bush Administration has replaced US Attorneys in several key states, just in time for the 2008 Presidential election.

In April 2006, Karl Rove gave a keynote address to the National Lawyers Association, a partisan legal group. "He ticked off 11 states that he said could be pivotal in 2008," McClatchy recalled in their report.

"Bush has appointed new U.S. attorneys in nine of them since 2005."

Incidentally, during the same speech, Rove also acknowledged his friend, Thor Hearne, who had been both General Counsel to the Bush-Cheney 2004 election campaign and also Executive Director of the GOP front group "American Center for Voting Rights" or ACVR, which has engaged in voter suppression efforts via phony propagandistic reports on America's non-existent "voter fraud" epidemic since 2004. (BRAD BLOG's extensive coverage of ACVR can be found here. The group's website has suddenly disappeared since the U.S. Attorney Purge scandal has come to light.)

"I ran into Thor Hearne as I was coming in," Rove told the audience. "He was leaving; he was smart, and he was leaving to go out and enjoy the day."

"I want to thank you for your work on clean elections," he continued. "I know a lot of you spent time in the 2004 election, the 2002 election, the 2000 election in your communities or in strange counties in Florida, helping make it certain that we had the fair and legitimate outcome of the election," Rove told the Republican attorneys.

He also compared elections in "some parts of the country" to those that take place in third-world dictatorships where the "guys in charge are, you know, colonels in mirrored sunglasses." Whether he was aware of the irony of his comments is still unknown.

In any event, three of the US Attorneys Bush has nominated since the 2004 election were, remarkably enough, from the Justice Department's Civil Rights Division, which has been criticized for implementing policies which unfairly disadvantage poor, often minority voters whose political tendencies historically favor Democrats.

And Griffin himself had allegedly been involved with voter suppression. Griffin, as investigative journalist Greg Palast discovered in 2004, was one of the RNC operatives that had thought up a complicated scheme to disenfranchise Americans who did not respond to letters sent to their home addresses. Victims of the scheme whose votes were thrown away, Palast reported, included homeless people, and black soldiers serving overseas who obviously could not respond to mail, marked with "do not forward" instructions, delivered to their home addresses.

The scheme Griffin played a role in also reportedly targeted predominately African American areas in swing states such as Florida.

Griffin recently dismissed Palast's reporting in a radio interview. "I'm intimately familiar with [Palast's] allegations. That is a web article on the Internet. It's patently false," he pointed out, as if a "web article," and "on the Internet" no less, might marginalize the facts of the report. Yet Griffin may not have been so intimately familiar with the allegations from that "web article on the Internet" after all: They were aired during a report by Palast, as filed on the television program "Newsnight" for the BBC. (A video of the original report can be found on YouTube).

When Justice Department and White House officials first tried to explain the US Attorney firings, they claimed that several of the prosecutors who had been forced to resign had refused to follow up on allegations of "voter fraud." Some immediately recognized that "voter fraud" allegations have been the weapon of choice, of late, by Republicans attempting to make it more difficult for certain groups of Americans --- particularly those in minority areas whose voters do not typically lean GOP --- to vote, by pushing new regulations and disenfranchising Photo ID legislation as a "protective measure."

The DoJ claims that the firings were "voter fraud" related raised some skepticism at BRAD BLOG and elsewhere, and even led to the New York Times editorial page to sharply criticize the supposed rationale for the firings. It is perhaps ironic that the public explanation the Administration has given for firing the prosecutors --- specifically related to elections --- may ultimately draw more attention to what some suspect is a deeper scheme to set up a system of disenfranchisement just in time for the 2008 elections.

At least one Arkansas newspaper has called for Griffin's resignation since the US Attorney scandal began, and he has said that he would only stay until the Administration found a suitable replacement. The White House has privately worried that Griffin would not be able to pass muster in Senate confirmation hearings, which he would be required to undergo if he wanted to keep his current job. The loophole in the PATRIOT Act which allowed Griffin and others to bypass the normal confirmation process was recently closed by the Senate in a vote of 94-2. The House is expected to pick up the matter soon.



To: American Spirit who wrote (74830)3/28/2007 5:58:05 PM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 89467
 
Bush Withdraws Swift Boat Donor's Nomination as Envoy (Update1)

By Joe Sobczyk

March 28 (Bloomberg) -- President George W. Bush today withdrew the ambassadorial nomination of a Missouri business executive who donated $50,000 to a political group that questioned the war service of Senator John Kerry, Bush's opponent in the 2004 presidential election.

The decision to drop the selection of Sam Fox, chairman and chief executive of the St. Louis-based equity management company Harbour Group Ltd., as ambassador to Belgium came as Democrats on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee were lining up against the nomination.

``We received word that because of politics some members of the Senate were going to vote against'' Fox, administration spokeswoman Dana Perino said.

Fox was Bush's campaign chief in Missouri in 2004 and was listed as a ``Ranger'' by the president's re-election campaign, meaning he raised at least $200,000. He also donated $50,000 to Swift Boat Veterans for Truth, a political group that produced and ran advertising questioning Kerry's war record in Vietnam.

Kerry, who earned a Bronze Star, a Silver Star and three Purple Hearts as a Navy officer in Vietnam, said Bush made the right decision to withdraw Fox's nomination.

`Politics of Personal Destruction'

``Sam Fox had every opportunity to disavow the politics of personal destruction and to embrace the truth,'' Kerry said in a statement. ``He chose not to.''

The nomination would have been rejected by the committee if it had been brought to a vote, Perino said at a briefing, reflecting a political assessment at the White House.

Asked if Bush was aware of Fox's $50,000 contribution, she said, ``I don't believe so. I know that the president didn't when he nominated him.''

Fox told Kerry at Feb. 27 hearing on the nomination that he didn't know the content of the advertising campaign when he donated the money. ``Senator, when I'm asked, I just generally give,'' Fox said, according to a transcript of the hearing.

Kerry lobbied other Democrats, who hold the majority in the Senate, to vote against Fox. Democratic Senator Christopher Dodd of Connecticut, another member of the Foreign Relations panel, said Fox's donation to the Swift Boat group ``convinced me that he would not be an acceptable candidate to represent the United States abroad.''

To contact the reporter on this story: Joe Sobczyk in Washington at jsobczyk@bloomberg.net .

Last Updated: March 28, 2007 14:20 EDT



To: American Spirit who wrote (74830)3/29/2007 12:31:29 AM
From: stockman_scott  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 89467
 
Schumer Office: Subpoenas Ready for Rove, Miers

observer.com