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Politics : Liberalism: Do You Agree We've Had Enough of It? -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (13474)8/19/2007 5:24:19 PM
From: Hope Praytochange  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 224728
 
kennyboy and demoRATS have no cause to whine: FEMA: Dean Prep Far Exceeds Katrina
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Published: August 19, 2007
Filed at 4:53 p.m. ET

WASHINGTON (AP) -- The federal government on Sunday advised people in south Texas to prepare for possible evacuations as Hurricane Dean heads into the Gulf of Mexico.

''The storms are unpredictable. If I was a Texas resident, particularly along that southeast coast, I would make sure that my home was ready. I would make sure that I had my three-day supply of food and water,'' R. David Paulison, head of the Federal Emergency Management Agency, told reporters at FEMA headquarters.

''If I was in an evacuation zone, I would have my plan in place, of where I'm going to go, and how I'm going to get there, what I'm going to take with me,'' he said. ''This is not a time to be complacent.''

The storm is on course for northern Mexico, but could shift and hit the region around Brownsville, Texas, Paulison said.

Of particular concern, he said, is the state's southeastern coast and its colonias, or immigrant shantytowns, that are prevalent a few miles from the Mexican border.

''There's probably about 400,000 people living in some very substandard housing. Texas is saying that they may have evacuate, if this storm does come up further north, over 100,000 out of that area. They primarily do not have any transportation,'' Paulison said.

Colonias, which is Spanish for neighborhoods, started appearing in Texas in the 1950s, usually outside city limits where there were no building codes. Already in place to help with a possible evacuation are 1,300 buses in San Antonio as well as more than 130 fixed-wing commercial aircraft and several hundred helicopters, Paulison said.

Texas Gov. Rick Perry mobilized the National Guard and search and rescue teams and shipped 60,000 to 80,000 barrels of gasoline to stations in the Rio Grande Valley.

Texas had 2,500 National Guard members ready Sunday, with plans to increase that to 10,000 by Wednesday afternoon if necessary, Paulison said. At Perry's request on Saturday, President Bush signed a pre-landfall emergency disaster declaration for Texas, allowing federal equipment and supplies to be moved in preemptively.

''We have responded very forcefully and very quickly to this event,'' Paulison said. ''We are ready.''

Louisiana Gov. Kathleen Blanco declared a state of emergency Friday, and requested a federal declaration to allow aid to flow to the state should Dean strike any part of the Louisiana coast. But Paulison said she withdrew that request once the storm seemed to veer away from her state.

Government agencies have 10 million liters of emergency water and 4 million MRE (Meals Ready to Eat) food packs available in Texas, Paulison said, while the American Red Cross has 7 million liters of water ready and its own supply of MREs.

The National Hurricane Center in Miami said the first hurricane of the Atlantic season was projected to reach the most dangerous hurricane classification, Category 5, with winds of 160 mph, before crashing into the Mexican coastline near Cancun by Monday night or Tuesday. The Mexican mainland or Texas could be hit later.

''We are going to continue to operate as if this storm is moving into the United States. I think that is a prudent thing to do,'' Paulison said after a video conference with the various federal agencies preparing to respond if necessary.

''You can't wait too long,'' he said. ''If you have to evacuate 100,000 people, particularly by bus and by air, you can't do that overnight. It takes a couple days to do that.''

He said U.S. officials already have spoken with the Mexican government about expedited processing by U.S. customs and border agencies should Mexican residents temporarily need to cross the border.

''This could be very much a border issue,'' the FEMA chief said. ''We're going to protect people regardless of which country they are in.''

Paulison took over in 2006 after his predecessor, Michael Brown, was criticized for the government's slow response to Hurricane Katrina in the summer of 2005.

Asked about the problems that ensued after that storm smashed into the Gulf Coast, Paulison said, ''From my perspective, it's not going to happen.'' He cited improved communications among agencies and said contracts are in place for buses, ambulances and relocations. ''We have those in place ahead of time, we can simply take them off the shelf,'' he said.

''Katrina was a wake-up call for all of us in emergency management and also for the federal government. We know we have to play together as a team, we know we have to respond as the federal government, not as individual agencies,'' he said.

''I do not see this country allowing another Katrina-type event to happen.''

^------

On the Net:

Federal Emergency Management Agency: fema.gov



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (13474)8/19/2007 5:32:27 PM
From: Hope Praytochange  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 224728
 
Sunday Sampler Platter: Rove Farewell Tour
By Brian Knowlton

Karl Rove made the rounds of the Sunday news shows today. (Photos: Courtesy of Fox News Sunday, Meet the Press, Face the Nation)Karl Rove undertook a three-stop farewell tour of the talk shows on Sunday – not his own decision, he said he was just doing “what I was instructed to do.”
It was unclear who was doing the instructing but apparently they included repeating recent harsh assessments of Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton. “She enters the primary season with the highest negatives of any front-runner since the history of polling began,” Mr. Rove said today. He has said he expects her to win the Democratic nomination but is optimistic that a Republican would beat her – though he wouldn’t be drawn into saying, as David Gregory suggested on NBC’s “Meet the Press,” that there “might be a desire by the Republican Party for her to be the nominee.”
Mr. Rove’s comment: “It’s going to be what it’s going to be.”



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (13474)8/19/2007 6:42:50 PM
From: Ann Corrigan  Respond to of 224728
 
Wait for it...half the time stories that appear in the NY Times are in some way unreliable. It's necessary to wait a wk or more, for the facts to be verified, before believing much of what's printed in that liberal fishwrapper.



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (13474)8/19/2007 7:17:11 PM
From: Hope Praytochange  Respond to of 224728
 
In a Must-Win State, Edwards Takes a Harsher Tone : edwardboy to sewers in AMES.
Keith Bedford for The New York Times

By LESLIE WAYNE
Published: August 19, 2007
DES MOINES, Aug. 18 — As he travels across lush and green rural Iowa on a bus with his wife and two young children, John Edwards is an increasingly angry man. His face may break into a sunny smile and his smooth voice may drip with Southern charm, but his words are anything but soft these days.

From Ida Grove to Pocahontas, from Onawa to Osage, Mr. Edwards, who is seeking the Democratic presidential nomination, led a 7-day, 31-stop barnstorming tour of rural Iowa this week billed as the “Fighting for One America” tour — and fighting was an apt choice of words.

At each stop, he let out the same battle cry: a populist attack on big oil, big pharmaceutical companies, big insurance companies and corporate lobbyists in Washington. These he described as being “powerful insiders” that had “rigged the system” against the ordinary working man, leaving him poorer, degrading the environment and blocking access to affordable health care.

“I’ve been fighting these people all my entire life,” said Mr. Edwards, holding forth at Cronk’s Restaurant in Denison. “I fought them in the courtroom, and I’ve beat them and beat them. We’ve got to stop being mealy-mouthed and careful. We’ve got to get rid of the robber barons. We need to have some guts.”

As his voice rose, he continued: “It makes me angry. I feel outrage. I won’t let them get away with it.”

Iowa is a must-win state for Mr. Edwards, who has been trailing Senators Hillary Rodham Clinton and Barack Obama in national polls, and he is counting on a victory in the state’s caucuses in January to catapult him into a stronger position. To that end, he has been pouring the bulk of his money, staff and own time into his effort here — not only now, as the campaign is heating up, but also over the last several years, when he was a frequent visitor to the state.

But as local polls show that his early lead here has diminished, putting him on par with Mrs. Clinton and Mr. Obama, he has become more willing to use this confrontational approach, inside of Iowa and out.


Outside the state, the Edwards campaign issues a near-daily barrage of news releases: decrying President Bush and Rudolph W. Giuliani as part of “greedy special interests,” knocking Rupert Murdoch for acquiring The Wall Street Journal, calling Mitt Romney a “radical Republican” and criticizing Mrs. Clinton for accepting donations from lobbyists.

For Mr. Edwards, whose come-from-behind rise in Iowa in 2004 turned him into a presidential contender, the question is whether this harsher tone will help or hurt him here.

Mr. Edwards says he does not think it will hurt and says Iowa caucusgoers will be swayed by his passion. But other observers here disagree — or at least see danger in this approach.

“There’s a fine line between passion and anger,” said David P. Redlawsk, an associate professor of political science at the University of Iowa and director of the university’s political poll. “It’s too early to tell which side of the line he is straddling. If he seems to be purely angry all the time, it will fail. People are not interested in a guy who is always angry.”

Mr. Edwards concedes that his tone has changed, especially since 2004.

“People say to me, ‘Last time, you were sunny,’ ” Mr. Edwards said at the Denison stop. “ ‘Why are you now being so tough and hard-nosed?’ ”

But in an interview on his campaign bus, Mr. Edwards said there was no political strategy behind his words, only deep passion. He described himself as being, at heart, an optimistic person and said voters would see this inner optimism shining through the toughness of his words.

As the bus pulled away from the Maple Inn Cafe in Osage, Mr. Edwards said his current tone was shaped by the years he had spent since 2004, when he lost as vice president, touring the country and studying the issue of poverty.

“It gave me the strong sense that I have to speak to this directly,” he said, as the bus rattled along. “If there is an edge to myself, it is because I’ve seen what happens to people and I feel on a deep level that is wrong.”

He continued: “I’m a naturally optimistic person who feels an outrage that should be expressed, and I think that will come across as genuine and authentic. There is no strategy to it. I just have to be myself.”

At each stop on the barnstorming tour, the presentations by Mr. Edwards and his wife, Elizabeth, took on the same rhythm and words. The audiences were largely composed of older rural voters who are typical of caucusgoers and, under complicated caucus rules, have power greater than their actual numbers.

Mrs. Edwards typically warmed up the crowd with a powerful pitch to voters’ pragmatism: she said her husband was the candidate who could campaign in all 50 states, especially in Southern states and in states that had recently elected Democratic governors.

“John will show up in every state and in states where others may not be competing,” Mrs. Edwards said at one stop after another. “We can’t give up states to the opposition. We will go to 50 states with the idea of winning. We can’t give up North Carolina, Louisiana, Kentucky, Oklahoma, Kansas and Tennessee. John can compete in all those states.”

In some ways, the active role Mrs. Edwards is playing in her husband’s campaign — where she has been outspoken in criticizing his rivals — mirrors the tone set by Mr. Edwards.

“Elizabeth Edwards is functioning in the same way that a vice presidential candidate does in the general election,” said Dennis J. Goldford, a political science professor at Drake University here. “The vice presidential candidate is the attack dog. She is saying things that he can’t say. But because she is his wife and because they are so close, he will have to be careful on how far he will let her go.”