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Politics : Formerly About Advanced Micro Devices -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: RetiredNow who wrote (360233)11/26/2007 12:23:48 PM
From: longnshort  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1576287
 
Hillery the rug muncher:

excerpt: (On p.41 of Flowers’ autobiography "Gennifer Flowers: Passion and Betrayal", Gennifer asked Bill if there was any truth to the rumor that Hillary was having an affair with another woman. Bill laughed and said (referring to Hillary): "Honey - she’s probably eaten more p—y than I have.")

Today I came across an interesting blog post by Ron Rosenbaum about a story the L.A. Times is sitting on. Read the post here
It’s a story about a "potentially devastating sexual scandal involving a leading Presidential candidate. Supposedly everyone in the DC mainstream media knows about it
And yet the LA Times does not know what to do about it!
As quoted from the story:

“Sitting on it” because the paper couldn’t decide the complex ethics of whether and when to run it.

Complex ethics??? What would the complex ethics be about a politician having an affair on their spouse?

If you read the story below - he is not referring to John Edwards - a non story surfaced about a supposed affair he had on the campaign trail.

I believe the story is about Hillary Clinton having a lesbian affair with her "Right Hand Woman" Huma Abedin. Who is Huma you ask? Follow this link to read all about her.

Here is a list of reasons I think the story below is about Hillary and Huma.

For some strange reason the story I posted Hillary’s Mystery Woman: Who is Huma is my 9th most popular visited page on this blog! I insist you have to be VERY knowledgeable on Clinton information to have heard about Huma Abedin. The traffic going to my site is coming from search engines. I’m convinced people are hearing about the Hillary - Huma relationship and are going to Google to see if anything is written about this lesbian relationship. I have hundreds of blog posts on this site - and my 9th most popular page is about a unknown campaign aid to Hillary Clinton???? This just does not make sense to me.
I have been receiving emails about Huma - one came for a Department of Justice computer (ISP) stating this: "I am close enough to both Hillary and Huma to know that it is an open secret on the campaign that those two are romantically involved. It is something you will never get them to verify though…"
If you’ve noticed recently the Mainstream Media has been churning out stories about how "romantic Bill Clinton is when he returns" to visit Hillary. How feminists have great relationships. Some gay organization flat out asked Hillary IF she was gay. She denied it, but wouldn’t you follow that question up with "Hillary, if you are not gay, are you Bi-sexual?" Etc, Etc Etc. Why all of the fuss about Bill and Hillary’s marriage? At first I was guessing that the Polling Data was showing that voters were indicating they were having problems with Bill and Hillary’s strange marriage, that voters might have thought she was Gay or anti-marriage. But after connecting the dots here - I am thinking that all of this media attention to the Clinton marriage is about crises control about this story that the LA Times is surpressing.
According to my limited research the Clinton camp has tried to keep Huma’s existence real quiet. I at first suspected it to be because of her nationality and Hillary’s creepy relationships with India and Pakistan.
To read up on these strange connections view these links: Gupta and Jinnah
Huma according to information sent to me is possibly living with Hillary at her house in DC
It is common knowledge that Hillary is bi-sexual. According to Bill’s long-time ex-girlfriend Gennifer Flowers, Hillary enjoyed performing oral sex on other women. On p.41 of Flowers’ autobiography "Gennifer Flowers: Passion and Betrayal", Gennifer asked Bill if there was any truth to the rumor that Hillary was having an affair with another woman. Bill laughed and said (referring to Hillary): "Honey - she’s probably eaten more p—y than I have."
So, IF the LA Times is sitting on this story BECAUSE the want to protect Hillary - that’s par for the course. You know without a doubt IF this was about a Republican Presidential candidate - they would have not problem whats so ever bombarding the media with this story over and over and over again!

nohillaryclinton.com



To: RetiredNow who wrote (360233)11/26/2007 1:12:41 PM
From: Road Walker  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 1576287
 
MM,

I like Huckabee the best of the Reps, and I think he has an outside chance at the nomination. But the Dems are better aligned to my thinking. The closest candidate is Richardson, with a miss on immigration.

John



To: RetiredNow who wrote (360233)11/26/2007 1:22:10 PM
From: bentway  Respond to of 1576287
 
Five Things Mike Huckabee Doesn't Want You to Know About Him

By John Gorenfeld, AlterNet
Posted on November 22, 2007, Printed on November 26, 2007
alternet.org
( I think Huckabee looks likeable, sane, but...)

Look who's the dark horse now: Not Fred Thompson, the Law & Order actor whose get-off-my-lawn glower was initially mistaken by the media for Reaganesque magic, but Mike Huckabee, the ex-Arkansas governor with the beady stare and steely proclamations about the Iraq war. You might remember him from the Fox News Channel debate in September, when he reproached Ron Paul by appealing to the "honor" of the Republicans as a reason to keep occupying Baghdad -- winning both applause and comparisons to Star Trek's Klingons.

Suddenly, heading into the primary season, it's Huckabee who is making moves, polling at 24 points in the crucial primary state of Iowa. (Thompson: three points.) His ratings, as his campaign is gloating, put him within striking distance of Mitt Romney, the former governor of Massachussetts

So who is he? His latest ad finds him repeating Chuck Norris internet jokes, borrowing for his campaign a har-har style from Jesse "The Body" Ventura that would suit him well if it were 1999 and he were promising to give Minnesotans tax breaks instead of vowing (as he did the other day) to bomb Iran "in a heartbeat" without consulting Congress if President Huck deems it necessary. "Like our Founding Fathers," Norris wrote in a mass email to Huckabee supporters on Nov. 13, playing to conservative evangelicals frustrated by bad choices, "he's not afraid to stand up for a Creator against secularist beliefs."

A complex figure, Huckabee, an ex-Baptist minister, has been treated in the media as a simpleton, with more attention devoted to his folksiness than his foreign policy (raised in poverty, he comes by this duck-hunter schtick more honestly than did George W. Bush.) But that's chicken scratch next to the pile of controversies that have remained out of sight.

Here are five things you probably didn't know about him.

1. Clinton conspiracy theories inspired his biggest mistake.

Like today's 9/11 Truthers, some conservatives in the 1990s were fixated on signs allegedly revealing monstrous crimes -- in their case not discrepancies in the melting point of steel but murders and other dark acts supposedly masterminded by the Clinton family. "Clinton's biggest crime," claimed New York Post scribe Steve Dunleavy in 2000, was allowing a Vietnam veteran named Wayne DuMond to go to prison for 50 years after being convicted -- falsely, Dunleavy said -- for the 1985 knifepoint rape of the 17-year-old cheerleader Ashley Stevens, a distant cousin of the Clintons. "That rape never happened," Dunleavy said.

In cloudy circumstances, DuMond had suffered castration before his jailing. He said a lynch mob had severed his testicles. They somehow ended up as trophies on the desk of a crooked local sheriff, Coolidge Conlee. In the view of the theorists, Conlee was somehow an "ally" of the Clintons, conjuring up a world in which state politics were on the scale of The Dukes of Hazzard. "He didn't have no right to take them," DuMond said of his balls in 1988.

By the time Huckabee became governor, it was believed by many on the Right that DuMond had not only been maimed but also framed by the Bill & Hillary Octopus. Responding to the pressure, Huckabee said DuMond had gotten a "raw deal" and wrote to the imprisoned DuMond: "Dear Wayne, [m]y desire is that you be released from prison. I feel that parole is the best way for your reintroduction into society to take place."

In June 2001, Ashley Stevens heard on her car radio that DuMond -- let loose by the state of Arkansas -- had beein seized for strangling 39-year-old Carol Shields in Kansas City, leaving her naked and bound on a bed. Authorities had also suspected DuMond in the similar rape-murder of a 23-year-old pregnant victim, Sarah Andrasek.

Huckabee has since sought to pin the blame on a parole board for freeing the ingrateful DuMond. The next year, however, the Arkansas Times took home an alt-newsweekly award for a piece, "Huckabee Frees Career Rapist," in which numerous inside sources said it was the governor who made the decision.

2. Win over the Christian Right? He is the Christian Right.

At 15, in a small church in Hope, Ark., young Mike Huckabee came to the pulpit with a pitcher of grape juice. As he poured water into it, he cautioned the flock against "watering down the blood of Christ." Likewise, after college, Huckabee picked the most fire-and-brimstone employer imaginable.

In the '70s, there were still two strong factions of Southern Baptists, the fundamentalists and the moderates. The more liberal Baptists hadn't yet gotten the boot. No moderate, James Robison -- a self-described "dark-visaged, angry preacher" for whose TV ministry Huck became communications director -- raged against gays. In one piece of footage, Huckabee's boss bellows that he is "sick and tired, hearing about all the radicals and perverts and the liberals and the leftists and the Communists coming out of the closet. It's time for God's people to come out of the closet, out of the churches and change America!"

As press flack, Huckabee had to handle the fallout in 1979 when Robison was kicked off the Dallas station WFAA for citing a National Enquirer report that gays seduce and kill children. Huckabee went on to organize a 1980 strategy session for Robison and the Christian Right as they sought to carve out a role for themselves under Reagan's Morning In America. Robison, who in his mellower old age has a show on the gold-plated Trinity Broadcasting Network, remains an important liaison between the Bush administration and the Christian Right, and has endorsed his old friend. (It should be noted, however, that as a leader in the Southern Baptist Convention, Huckabee was to the left of a fundamentalist rival he defeated.)

Despite Huckabee's undiluted credentials -- as someone who helped to build the Moral Majority, as a governor who fought to stop gays from adopting -- he has been slighted by other like-minded Christian leaders. He's suffered the indignity of watching evangelist Pat Robertson endorse, in his place, the licentious, pro-choice mayor of New York, Rudy Giuliani. The buzz is that other Christian Right leaders just aren't sold on Huck as a safe bet. One reason is that he's already pissed off other parts of the party's base. For example:

3. If you're a Minuteman, you'll hate Huckabee.

In the world of Free Republic, the conservative internet community, real Republicans are holding out for a hero to save them from the Mexican immigrants they believe are trying to establish an evil Aztec caliphate in the Southwest. Posts one patriot: "Huckabee. He's that pro-amnesty governor who lost a lot of weight, right?"

One evening in 2005 during the Minuteman craze, Dr. Wesley Kluck, a pediatrician in the Bible Belt town of Arkadelphia, sat down to e-mail a plea for help to his old classmate, Huckabee. Years ago, Kluck's third-grader daughter had proudly announced she was learning Spanish to talk to a new best friend. The friend's mother, Juanita Hernandez, got up before dawn to debone chickens for the food giant Tyson Foods, in a plant along Interstate 65 at an industrial park in nearby Gum Springs.

But just after sunrise, U.S. agents in khaki uniforms had stormed the place. They arrested over a hundred workers, stranding 30 children to fend for themselves.

Around midnight, Kluck tells AlterNet, an email arrived from a concerned Mike Huckabee, who moved to help the families. He personally paid $1,000 to help and demanded an explanation from the federal government. "How is our government benefiting from an abandoned 1-year-old?" Huckabee asked. His constituents were furious. They called up the governor's office, swearing at him for helping the Mexicans. The calls, Huckabee said, were running "1,000 to 1" against him.

Even his worst enemy in Arkansas -- the maverick Arkansas Times editor Max Brantley, who busted Gov. Huckabee for several ethical violations involving gifts and cash -- credits Huck with a rare streak of kindness towards poor immigrants. And that's not all: Huckabee, eating sandwiches with reporters one day, frankly called some fellow Republicans "driven by sheer racism."

So jokes about sending Chuck Norris to secure the border will not be enough to endear Huckabee to the GOP's nativist wing.

4. He supports a crazy tax plan.

On the one hand, Huckabee has managed to alienate the tax-cuts-for-the-rich crowd. Big corporations haven't invested in him. The Club for Growth has run ads calling him too liberal. He "destroyed the conservative movement in Arkansas," complains old-school, right-wing activist Phyllis Schlafly. And one former state GOP legislator, in an interview with AlterNet, suggests that a lot of people's feelings were hurt when Huckabee compared them to "Shi'ite Republicans": extremists who didn't understand the practical considerations of governing a state like Arkansas, with its progressive tendencies.

To boost his tax cred, candidate Huckabee has eagerly signed onto FairTax, a proposal to abolish the IRS touted by Atlanta radio host Neal Boortz and at rallies nationwide. Boortz would end the income tax. Instead you'd pay a federal sales tax, and to offset resulting problems, the government would write you checks every month. How much you get depends on the number of people are in your household. And nothing else.

The cash awards, or "prebates," are supposed to offset how hard it will be on poor people to pay more for groceries. For the middle class, it has the allure of the government paying you, instead of vice-versa, while you get to fire your accountant and throw out your paperwork, unless of course you're a store owner, in which case you become neighborhood taxman. Says Huck: "I would like April 15 to be another beautiful spring day in America."

Bruce Bartlett, an economics adviser in the Reagan administration, has accused FairTax of originating in the Church of Scientology, which has historically seen the IRS as a mortal enemy. For some time the IRS refused to honor L. Ron Hubbard's pyramid scheme as a tax-exempt religion, so his acolytes dreamed up an awfully similar plan to obliterate the agency. FairTax activists, however, maintain that the resemblance between the two plans is coincidental.

But what's important is whether FairTax itself is workable. Analysts across the political spectrum have said it isn't. Costs could far exceed the promised 23 percent sales tax, and possible side effects include instantly creating a tax-free black market for everything, screwing up important deductions and punishing older people who've paid the old way.

5. If you enjoyed the Terri Schiavo case, you'll love the Huckabee administration.

After Huckabee became governor of Arkansas in 1996 -- taking over from the corrupt Democrat "Jim" Guy Tucker, who had refused to leave office -- he grabbed national headlines with a governor's intervention that year to block the state from paying $419 for a retarded 15-year-old girl's abortion, her pregnancy stemming from being raped by her stepfather on a camping trip.

Huckabee held up Medicaid payment for the operation. He claimed his hands were tied by the state constitution, Amendment 68, which prevented underwriting of abortions unless the mother's life was endangered. The Supreme Court had thrown arguments from Christian Right governors like these out before. But Huck held to his guns, which threatened to end the $900 million annual agreement with Washington that gave his state medical money, so long as it played by federal rules.

A compromise was finally reached in which private money footed the bill. Afterward Arkansas Democrat-Gazette columnist Michael Leahy accused Huckabee of having played a moralistic version of poker with the meek, remarking:

We do not need any affable benevolent men playing Supreme Ruler. Maybe it's the kind of role that a lot of us would slip into if similarly thrusted into high office. Maybe it's what a lot of people fantasize about in the shower, the selfish, autocratic things we would do if our word were law, our prejudices were given full berth, our resentments were settled -- and to hell with mortals' rules.

Read more of John Gorenfeld's work at gorenfeld.net.
© 2007 Independent Media Institute. All rights reserved.
View this story online at: alternet.org



To: RetiredNow who wrote (360233)11/26/2007 3:44:00 PM
From: tejek  Respond to of 1576287
 
Ethanol glut hits home in BioTown, USA

Douglas Belkin
Wall Street Journal/Associated Pess
Vail, CO Colorado
November 1, 2007

Two years ago, Indiana Governor Mitch Daniels came to the small farm town of Reynolds in northwestern Indiana corn country to christen it BioTown, USA. The goal: to attract bioenergy companies and set an example by fueling the town's cars, homes and businesses with cheap, environmentally friendly energy.

"This is America's first BioTown in the making," Gov. Daniels declared in front of about 300 people at Reynolds's fairgrounds. But like dozens of U.S. farm towns counting on bioenergy to revitalize their economies, Reynolds is now learning a tough lesson about the difficulties alternative fuels face. Last month, VeraSun Energy Corp. announced it was stopping construction on an ethanol plant nearby.

"I think this has made everyone a little nervous," says Janice Farrell, manager of a BP gas station in Reynolds that features ethanol fuel pumps. Her lunch-time food sales had jumped since last spring when construction workers from the ethanol site started coming in. Recently, her revenue has dropped by $1,000 a week.

A boom in corn-based ethanol has boosted prices for grain farmers and lifted farm incomes as the industry nearly doubled capacity since January 2005. But now a glut of ethanol supply — and a sharp drop in price — is reining in expansion.

Recently, proposed facilities in Minnesota, South Dakota and Iowa have put construction plans on hold. An older plant in North Dakota has stopped making ethanol, laying off most of its 34 workers. Seventy-three plants are under construction nationwide, according to the Renewable Fuels Association in Washington. But dozens of other planned projects are stalled — leaving towns hoping for more jobs in limbo.

Seven of Nebraska's 19 ethanol plants opened this year and seven more are scheduled to open by the second quarter of next year. But in the past few months, only one plant has begun construction, says Steve Sorum, project manager for the Nebraska Ethanol Board. Another 43 are stuck in planning stages. "The pace of building has slowed," he says.

Alchem Ethanol in Grafton, N.D., last month halted production at its nearly 25-year-old plant housed in a former potato-storage facility. The plant couldn't make a profit amid high corn prices and dropping ethanol prices, which have slid 55 cents since May to $1.75 a gallon, according to Oil Price Information Service. Alchem's general manager Kevin Rauser says he hopes the plant will reopen in the spring.

Reynolds, population 521, seems an ideal location for an experiment in biofuels. It is at the intersection of two highways and two rail lines, near research facilities at Purdue University and close to an abundance of corn, hogs and cattle.

The town is hungry for growth. The Midwest farm crisis of the 1980s decimated the town center that older residents remember, and now downtown Reynolds is little more than a two-block intersection anchored on one end by the BP station and a Frosty Freeze and the USA Restaurant on the other.

Gov. Daniels's plan was cautiously welcomed. "BioTown, USA: Fingers Crossed but Eyes Open" was the headline in a September 2005 editorial in the local Journal & Courier.

The state put up about $500,000 to start the project, helping to install pumps for E-85 fuel — 85 percent ethanol and 15 percent gasoline — and converting fire trucks to use E-85. General Motors Corp. backed giveaways and discounts for local residents on cars that can use E-85.

By this spring, about 160 of the cars and trucks in Reynolds were running on E-85. A new plant to turn pig waste into electricity was expected to be online by next summer. Another facility to turn manure into home-heating fuel was being planned.

The BioTown buzz seemed to be spreading. Connie Neininger, director of economic development in White County, where Reynolds is located, says she fielded about 200 phone calls from different companies interested in moving to the area to take advantage of the cheaper energy the bioenergy infrastructure would produce. Proposals ranged from a tilapia fish farm to manufacturing facilities to a fertilizer plant.

Then VeraSun Chairman and Chief Executive Don Endres announced in April that his company intended to build an ethanol plant nearby, in part because "the town is clearly forward-thinking." A deal was worked out for a portion of VeraSun's tax payments to go toward construction of its plant and to nearby public infrastructure improvements that would support the facility. VeraSun bought 320 acres and graded a parking lot big enough to handle cars for 400 construction and plant workers.

Rising prices for corn and the prospect of the new plant helped push up the price of farm land in the area by $1,000 an acre.

When VeraSun announced it was suspending construction of the plant, a measure of anxiety crept back into town. Though Mr. Endres says construction will begin again in the spring, the steady stream of workers stopping in Reynolds for a meal or to inquire about buying a truck slowed down.

Many locals remain optimistic about prospects for bioenergy. "You want to keep fighting in the Mideast for oil?" asks Tom Westfall, whose family has owned land in Reynolds for 120 years and today farms about 500 acres of corn, soybeans and wheat. "I hope this whole town develops around BioTown."

VeraSun this week announced the start-up of a 110-million-gallon-per-year plant near Albion, Neb., its fifth to be up and running. The company says the Albion plant was near completion when the ethanol market dropped, while only a few months of construction had been done at the plant near Reynolds, making it more economical to stop work there.

"A lot of what we're doing right now is managing expectations," says John Heimlich, a farmer and president of the White County Commissioners. "This is a revolutionary period. It's going to take years to really start to assess the impact."

The ethanol industry could get help from the new energy bill if Congress lifts the amount of renewable fuels that the oil industry is required to blend into gasoline, but prospects are unclear. Some analysts think ethanol prices could remain depressed for a year or more — even though ethanol is now priced much lower than gasoline, which is hovering around $2.90 a gallon.

However, Jeff Broin, chief executive of closely held Poet, the biggest U.S. ethanol maker, with 21 plants, says the company will build plants at its traditional steady pace.

In August, a unit of Little Sioux Corn Processors LLC of Marcus, Iowa, shelved plans for a stock offering to build a 100-million-gallon ethanol plant in Akron, Iowa. But Akron Mayor Harold Higman says the town will continue to benefit from the biofuels industry. A plant to make biodiesel — which can be sold directly to gas stations without going through blending facilities, as ethanol does — is on track for ground-breaking in the spring. And local farmers are still benefiting from high grain prices, he notes.

The ethanol plant "would have certainly been frosting on the cake," he says. But "we can still eat cake," he adds. "We don't have frosting on it, but someday we will."


vaildaily.com