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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 (28006)5/14/2008 1:26:58 PM
From: TideGlider  Respond to of 224755
 
LOL Like Washington State? Education levels have little to do with being informed.

Look at you for example! Just a little storm trooper parrot with an original thought of your own.



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (28006)5/14/2008 1:33:29 PM
From: Brumar89  Respond to of 224755
 
How would you know?



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (28006)5/14/2008 6:33:16 PM
From: Hope Praytochange  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 224755
 
Mideast Needs Supple Minds Like Obama's
By RICHARD COHEN | Posted Monday, May 12, 2008 4:30 PM PT

Back in the year 2000, I boarded John McCain's campaign bus, the Straight Talk Express, and in a metaphorical sense, never got off.

Here, truly, was something new under the political sun — a politician who bristled integrity and seemed to have nothing to hide. I continue to admire McCain for those and other reasons, but the bus I once rode has gone wobbly. Recently, it veered into the mud.

I have in mind McCain's charge that Barack Obama is the favored presidential candidate of Hamas. The citation for this remark is the statement of Ahmed Yousef, a Hamas political adviser, who said: "We like Obama, and we hope that he will win the election."

Yousef likened Obama to John F. Kennedy, and said Obama "has a vision to change America" and with it the world. Yousef apparently got so carried away that he forgot that Obama has repeatedly called Hamas a "terrorist organization."

McCain seems to have forgotten that, too. His campaign has sent out an e-mail showing how guilt by association really works. "Barack Obama's foreign policy plans have even won him praise from Hamas' leaders," it said. The message went on to claim that Obama's foreign policy positions have earned him "kind words" from Hamas.

Never mind that this was the sort of campaigning that McCain vowed to eschew. More to the point is what McCain said in his own defense. Not only was Yousef's praise of Obama "a legitimate point of discussion," he said, but everyone should understand that McCain himself will be "Hamas' worst nightmare."

This aspect of McCain is my worst nightmare.

Just a day before McCain made that statement, Cindy McCain appeared on the "Today" show and responded to questions about her husband's age. She described a veritable Energizer Bunny who, among other things, plans to hike the Grand Canyon this summer. "He's just a ball of fire," she said.

At 72, McCain would be the oldest man ever elected president, and so age has to be a consideration. My concern for the moment, though, is not McCain's physical age, but his intellectual age — his willingness to revise his views and grapple with the new. Thus far, he has shown scant desire to do any of that.

He's been running around the country costumed as a George W. Bush conservative. McCain's tax plan is a joke, and his foreign policy is frightening.

When McCain says that he is Hamas' worst nightmare, what in the world is he talking about? Almost on a daily basis, Hamas launches rockets into southern Israel, occasionally killing some poor soul. The latest victim was a father of four.

Israel usually retaliates, and Palestinians — some of them just as innocent as the Israeli victim — are killed. You would think that Israel would be Hamas' worst nightmare, but aside from the occasional and fruitless retaliatory raid, it cannot figure out how to stop Hamas' deadly activities. What would McCain do that Israel has not?

McCain supports the Iraq War. But Iraq is still a mess. Iran has gained influence both there and elsewhere in the region. Syria and Iran together have made Hezbollah, another terrorist organization, an important, if not dominant, factor in Lebanon.

What would McCain do about this? Would he bomb Hezbollah? Israel has already done that. Would he occupy southern Lebanon? Israel has done that, too. Has he noticed that all this military force has accomplished next to nothing? What are the particulars of the nightmare he has in mind for a good chunk of the Middle East?

I hate to say it, but Yousef has a point. The Middle East desperately needs supple minds that are not mired in the past. I look at Gaza and don't know what to do. I have supported Israel in its policies there, but I have to admit that nothing has been gained from the non-recognition of Hamas.

War doesn't work. Isolation doesn't work. For Israel, leaving Gaza didn't work and, surely, McCain's threat to Hamas will not give it a headache — a belly laugh is more like it.

The most admirable of McCain's qualities — his life story, his integrity — make him particularly well-suited to accomplish the next president's primary task, restoring the American people's trust in their government.

But ideas matter, and on the Middle East, McCain not only has little interesting to say but, in his swipe at Obama, a distinctly ugly way of saying it.

© 2008 Washington Post Writers Group



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (28006)5/14/2008 6:36:31 PM
From: Hope Praytochange  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 224755
 
Biased Media's New Bailiwick: Recession Calls
By LARRY ELDER | Posted Thursday, May 08, 2008 4:30 PM PT

"It's a recession," said former President Harry Truman, "when your neighbor loses his job; it's a depression when you lose yours."

For people facing home foreclosure, job loss or the struggle of paying high gas prices, the definition of a recession seems immaterial and insignificant. True.

But during an election year, the media's constant use or expectation of "recession" does matter. Sen. Barack Obama, the Democratic Party's likely nominee, already considers the U.S. economy "in a recession."

So are we — at least as economists commonly define the term? No, not even close.

A recent newswire story, however, went like this: "Bush's news conference . . . appeared to be a pre-emptive measure of sorts, as it came a day before the release of statistics on the nation's gross domestic product for January through March. The common definition of a recession is two consecutive quarters of declining GDP, and many expect Wednesday's report to provide the first official confirmation of a slide."

Well, case closed.

Yes, economists generally define a recession as two or more consecutive quarters of negative economic growth. The National Bureau of Economic Research, the nonpartisan organization the government uses to determine economic cycles, defines a recession as a period of sustained negative economic growth — with GDP its most important variable.

Have we had a period of "sustained negative economic growth" since the end of the 2001 recession? No.

Last week, the government released two important figures: GDP growth (or lack thereof) for the first quarter, and the number of jobs created (or lack thereof) for April. Let's examine the reporting the day before and the day of the released figures.

The day before the released GDP report, a headline in USA Today read, "USA Today survey: We're in a recession, economists say." The first two sentences read as follows: "The U.S. economy is in recession, or soon to be in one. . . . Two-thirds of the 52 economists polled said the U.S. economy is in recession."

This USA Today we're-in-a-recession story showed a graph with the 52 economists' predictions. They (incorrectly) predicted 0.1% economic growth for the first quarter, 0.5% negative growth for the second, with positive growth for the next four quarters at 2.3%, 2.0%, 2.2% and 2.6%.

But they never showed that growth in the last quarter of 2007, while anemic, was still a positive 0.6%. In other words, assuming the traditional definition of recession — back-to-back quarters of negative economic growth — even USA Today's economic experts were not truly predicting a recession.

The next day, the actual number for this year's first quarter came out. Oops: USA Today's Web site headline for an Associated Press story read: "Weak 0.6% economic growth in Q1 is better than forecast." In English, this means that since the recovery began in Bush's first year in office, we have had zero quarters of negative economic growth, let alone consecutive ones.

Now, on to last week's jobs numbers.

The day before the Labor Department released them, the Associated Press warily wrote: "Investors are predicting another gloomy reading on U.S. employment on Friday. The Labor Department's report is expected to show a 75,000 net loss in jobs for April . . . and a rise in unemployment to 5.2% from 5.1% in March." So, what happened?

Oops. In April, the economy lost 20,000 jobs. Nothing to throw a parade about, but far fewer than the economic "experts" predicted. And of unemployment? Well, the rate fell from 5.1% to 5.0%.

This forced the Associated Press to grudgingly concede that, well, maybe things aren't quite as bad as we thought:

"The latest snapshot of the nationwide employment conditions — while clearly still weak — was better than many economists were anticipating. They were bracing for job cuts of 75,000 and for the unemployment rate to climb to 5.2%. The unemployment rate . . . fell to 5% from 5.1% in March. That survey showed more people finding employment than those who didn't."

But now, here comes a knuckleball. Since the economic news failed to match the predicted gloominess, The Associated Press moved the goal post. "Under one rough rule," the AP wrote, "if the economy contracts for six straight months it is considered to be in a recession. That didn't happen in the last recession — in 2001 — though."

It didn't? No, the 2001 recession, according to the NBER, did not show two consecutive quarters of negative economic growth — it had three.

By October 1992, when President George Herbert Walker Bush ran for re-election against Bill Clinton, the economy was 18 months into a recovery. But as Investor's Business Daily noted, 90% of the newspaper stories on the economy were negative. Yet the following month, when Clinton defeated Bush 41, suddenly only 14% of economic news stories were negative!

But only a cynic would suggest a liberal media bias.



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (28006)5/15/2008 7:49:57 AM
From: Brumar89  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 224755
 
WV 5th graders know Afghanistan isn't an Arab nation. Dumbass Obama doesn't.

I'm sorry. I should have just called Obama uninformed.