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Politics : President Barack Obama -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Dale Baker who wrote (29922)9/2/2008 1:18:15 PM
From: Skywatcher  Respond to of 149317
 
McCain doesn't know much about ANY OF HIS OWN POSITIONS...or NUMBER OF HOUSES...
I guess from his number of 'I'll get back to you" responses, the new moniker for the old fart should be McDUCK!
from the LATIMES today

Despite Palin's staunch record of opposing abortion, she had kept a relatively low profile on the issue, rebuffing calls from fellow Republicans to require parental consent for teenage abortions and to ban late-term procedures.

When Palin was running for governor in 2006, she said on a questionnaire for the conservative group Eagle Forum Alaska that she would support funding for abstinence-only education instead of explicit sex education programs, school-based clinics and distribution of condoms.

The pregnancy would be an unwelcome diversion for any candidate, but McCain has seemed particularly uncomfortable dealing with birth control issues. In 2007, the candidate stumbled when a reporter in Iowa asked his position on funding condoms to fight AIDS. He called on a member of his staff to "find out what my position is on contraception."

In July, McCain stammered when asked about an advisor's statement wondering why insurance plans cover Viagra but not women's contraception. The candidate paused and looked perturbed before saying he couldn't recall his position. When pressed, he replied: "I don't usually duck an issue, but I'll try to get back to you."



To: Dale Baker who wrote (29922)9/3/2008 8:02:06 AM
From: ChinuSFO  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 149317
 
Boyfriend will join Palins at speech

September 3, 2008

WASILLA, Alaska - The boyfriend of the pregnant teenage daughter of Governor Sarah Palin of Alaska will join John McCain's family at the GOP convention.

Sherry Johnston said her son, Levi Johnston, 18, left Alaska yesterday morning to join the Palin family at the convention, where Sarah Palin is scheduled to address the convention tonight. Traditionally, her family would join her on stage at the conclusion of her speech.

On Monday, Sarah and Todd Palin said their 17-year-old daughter, Bristol, planned to have the baby and wed a young man identified only as Levi. The family asked the media to respect the young couple's privacy.

Sherry Johnston said there had been no pressure on her son to marry Bristol Palin and the teens had made plans to wed before it was known she was pregnant

"This is just a bonus," Johnston said.

ASSOCIATED PRESS

Clinton's appeals for unity appear to boost Obama
Hillary Clinton's impassioned pleas at the Democratic convention for her supporters to unite behind Barack Obama appear to have worked.

A new Gallup poll out yesterday says that the percentage of Clinton loyalists planning to vote for Obama in November jumped from 70 percent before last week's convention to 81 percent after, and the percentage saying they are certain to back Obama increased from 47 percent to 65 percent.

The Gallup survey is among several suggesting that Obama did get a bump in support coming out of the convention, which received wall-to-wall media coverage, including his acceptance speech Thursday night that drew more than 40 million TV viewers.

A Hotline/Diageo poll out yesterday gave Obama a 48 percent to 39 percent national lead over his Republican rival John McCain, up from 44 percent to 40 percent in the previous poll. And a USA Today/Gallup survey released Monday gave Obama a 50 percent to 43 percent lead, up from a 4-percentage-point edge before the convention.

boston.com



To: Dale Baker who wrote (29922)9/3/2008 2:05:09 PM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 149317
 
The big question for US voters: to tax or not to tax

guardian.co.uk



To: Dale Baker who wrote (29922)9/4/2008 1:49:35 PM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 149317
 
This Destroys Palin: Her Handwriting ON Earmark!

dailykos.com



To: Dale Baker who wrote (29922)9/5/2008 1:30:03 AM
From: stockman_scott  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 149317
 
John McCain's Lousy Speech

boomantribune.com



To: Dale Baker who wrote (29922)9/10/2008 9:51:13 AM
From: ChinuSFO  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 149317
 
There are some talking heads out there who are starting to make sense.
=====================================

Mark Davis: Beyond the experience question

06:00 AM CDT on Wednesday, September 10, 2008

There are only two ways the ongoing war over experience can play out in this presidential campaign.

The Obama forces can continue to ridicule Sarah Palin's résumé, which only emboldens John McCain backers to remind Democrats that it is the top of their ticket that is challenged in that regard.

Or, we can stop wasting our time. Everybody get off Barack Obama and Sarah Palin's backs about experience and embrace the realization that experience is being redefined.

The McCain camp defends the Palin pick by saying it is revamping the usual job requirements for the vice presidency.

But it is, in fact, the phenomenon of Barack Obama that has rendered obsolete the old definitions of fitness for the Oval Office. Voters no longer require extensive foreign policy credentials or even a Washington pedigree.

This is not so new. Four of our last five presidents were governors with no foreign policy stripes. With admittedly varying results, Presidents Reagan, Carter, Clinton and George W. Bush came into office with blank international affairs slates and wrote on those slates with their actions and reactions to world events.

As well it should be. A candidate's head and heart portend performance far more than a list of past jobs.

As such, it is of little use for Mr. Obama's critics to hammer him for his short political life. And his supporters are the last people who should suggest Ms. Palin is too thinly accomplished.

Aren't we the country that has long complained about entrenched politicians who make real reform impossible? Well, here come two noteworthy, compelling candidates who have sparked great adulation in their respective parties – and with them a whole new debate over how seasoned one must be to lead the free world.

Quality means more than quantity. Mr. Obama's doubters are on solid ground when they say that he has not exactly brought about large volumes of the change that is his campaign's byword. While Ms. Palin has more of a track record of actually shaking up the establishments, her critics can fairly ask whether her decade at Wasilla City Hall and not quite two years as Alaska governor add up to curriculum vitae for America's second-highest elected office.

Mr. Obama's supporters are well aware that he has not walked the halls of the U.S. Senate for decades, and that is part of why they like him. A newly riveted GOP is gobbling up every crumb of the Sarah Palin story, charmed even more that she is an outsider to the stodgy marble halls of power.

As part of the community of voters thrilled to have Ms. Palin as Mr. McCain's running mate, I have never focused the brunt of my objections on Mr. Obama's newness to national office. In 1996, I was an enthusiastic supporter of Steve Forbes, who had not a shred of elected experience.

I find it far more useful to dwell on the undesirable policies that would accompany an Obama presidency. But for his rapid ascent from state senator to Democratic presidential nominee, I can only say congratulations.

So now let's see Ms. Palin's detractors show her the same respect. I know she has not weathered the months of bare-knuckle campaigning that Mr. Obama has. She's also not at the top of her ticket.

She is the deserving running mate of the Republican nominee in an era when one of the meanings of "change" involves the kind of candidates we welcome into the fold. Good for Barack Obama and Sarah Palin for making the cut in their respective ways.

Let's give them credit for that, shelve the counterproductive "experience" issues and get on with examining what each would do if sworn in next January.

dallasnews.com



To: Dale Baker who wrote (29922)9/12/2008 11:27:36 AM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 149317
 
John Stewart on Sarah Palin And Republican Hypocrisy

youtube.com



To: Dale Baker who wrote (29922)9/14/2008 3:09:19 PM
From: stockman_scott  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 149317
 
Neoconservatives plan Project Sarah Palin to shape future American foreign policy

telegraph.co.uk



To: Dale Baker who wrote (29922)9/22/2008 11:25:08 AM
From: stockman_scott  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 149317
 
Obama, Not McCain, Shows Steady Hand in Crisis:

by Albert R. Hunt

Sept. 22 (Bloomberg) -- For the first time since 1932 a presidential election is taking place in the midst of a genuine financial crisis. The reaction of the candidates was revealing.

John McCain, railing against the ``greed and corruption'' of Wall Street, won the first round of the sound-bite war. He came out with a television commercial on the ``crisis'' early on Monday of last week, and over the next three days gave more than a dozen broadcast interviews. He and running mate Sarah Palin would reform Wall Street and regulate the nefarious fat cats that caused this fiasco.

It was a great start. It then went downhill as he stumbled over his record of championing deregulation, claimed the economy was fundamentally strong, and flip-flopped over the government takeover of American International Group Inc.

For his part, Barack Obama didn't come across as passionately outraged and wasn't as omnipresent or as specific.

More revealing, though, was to whom both candidates turned on that panic-ridden morning of Sept. 15, and how the messages evolved before and after that day.

McCain called Martin Feldstein, the well-known Republican economist and Reagan administration adviser, John Taylor of Stanford University, who served in President George W. Bush's Treasury and Carly Fiorina, once the chief executive officer of Hewlett-Packard Co.

Obama called former Federal Reserve Chairman Paul Volcker, and former Treasury Secretaries Robert Rubin and Larry Summers.

It was a mismatch.

Towering Volcker

Feldstein, for all his intellect, was ineffective in the Reagan administration; then-White House deputy chief of staff Dick Darman cut him out of important action. Volcker, first at the Treasury and then as chairman of the Federal Reserve, was a towering figure in every way.

Taylor is a well-regarded academic. In four years as undersecretary of the Treasury, he left few footprints. Summers, as both deputy secretary and secretary, left a lot.

Fiorina is smart and quick; to put it charitably, Rubin will forget more about financial markets than she'll ever know.

When it comes to governance, and either Democrat Obama or Republican McCain will inherit this miserable financial mess, the best guide is who they talked to, what they said, where they've been, and how knowledgeable they are.

Obama's record and earlier speeches belie some of his more populist rhetoric. Yet they also suggest, as do his advisers, a much more activist government role than is likely under a McCain- Palin administration.

Comfortable With Subject

Obama called for the overhaul of the financial-regulatory system and tougher enforcement well before this past week's traumas.

Detached observers who watched him last week, especially in a Bloomberg Television interview, were taken by how conversant and comfortable he was on the subject, despite his thin record. Few detached observers came away with that impression watching the Arizona senator.

Much of the re-regulatory fever focuses on the Federal Reserve and any new agencies created to clean up the fiasco. Central, however, will be a more vigorous Securities and Exchange Commission, or whatever holds that investor-protection function.

McCain displayed a sudden interest in the SEC last week when he demanded that Chairman Chris Cox be fired. When his campaign was asked if the senator had ever criticized the current commission's performance before, they failed to respond.

All For Obama

Tellingly, three former SEC chairmen, a Democrat, Arthur Levitt, and two Republicans, David Ruder and Bill Donaldson, have endorsed Obama. Levitt is a board member of Bloomberg LP, the parent company of Bloomberg News.

Donaldson, who was tapped by Bush to head the SEC, says Obama called him last year about the financial-regulatory problems. He has never heard from McCain.

``Obama has been talking about the need for better financial regulation well before this crisis hit and has done some real thinking about it,'' says Donaldson, a lifelong Republican. ``McCain comes across as someone who suddenly realized changes have to be made.''

There is a case for McCain: it's if you believe in less regulation, that the government should get out of the way and let the markets work their will.

No `Real Understanding'

``I don't think anyone who wants to increase the burden of government regulation and high taxes has any real understanding of economics,'' McCain said this spring at an Inez, Kentucky, town hall meeting, where he also declared ``the fundamentals of our economy are good.''

Until recently, he repeatedly invoked Ronald Reagan's calls for less regulation. He voted for the 2002 Sarbanes-Oxley corporate-governance regulations -- then last year said he regretted that vote.

McCain isn't averse to some regulations. He has strongly championed a greater federal role in campaign finance, tobacco and boxing. In each case, he saw a clear villain -- special- interest money, a tobacco product that puts profits ahead of lives, and unscrupulous boxing promoters.

There has been little evidence that prior to last week he ever put financial firms in this category. Although he assailed excessive corporate compensation last week, McCain has opposed a tepid House-passed bill that would give corporate shareholders the right to cast a non-binding vote on compensation of top executives.

Turning to Gramm

The person he has turned to most for counsel on such matters is his ex-Senate colleague Phil Gramm. Gramm is a political Gordon Gekko, a brainy economist with a Darwinian view of markets and public policy.

It's not easy to remember what the financial world looked like 10 days ago much less 10 months ago. Decisions that will be reached after this election will be the most important since the 1930s.

Obama, as more than a few Democrats are complaining, hasn't been as quick, sharp -- or demagogic -- as they would like. McCain has been beset by deeper difficulties: an inchoate and inconsistent message that seems to reflect political exigencies more than principled convictions.

On the financial crisis, last week belonged to Obama.

(Albert R. Hunt is the executive editor for Washington at Bloomberg News. The opinions expressed are his own.)

Last Updated: September 22, 2008 09:04 EDT



To: Dale Baker who wrote (29922)9/25/2008 8:08:51 AM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 149317
 
Foreign Policy Discussion with Richard Clarke and Major General Scott Gration (ret'd) - Sarasota

mydd.com