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Politics : The Lynching of Mr. Cain -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: HPilot who wrote (50)11/15/2011 5:00:14 PM
From: joseffy  Respond to of 130
 
You are right:

If you go to Google (which is lefty as you can get) you have to wade through a large number of 'articles' from Salon, Democratic Underground, etc etc. that repeat the falsehood at the start of the listing.

It is false because

1--Their divorce had already begun and was in progress well before that time

2--She had been in the hospital TWO YEARS EARLIER for cancer -- not at the time the POLITICO media claims.

Among other things.



To: HPilot who wrote (50)11/18/2011 10:21:15 AM
From: joseffy  Respond to of 130
 
No toaster for Herman Cain
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By Wesley Pruden November 11, 2011
prudenpolitics.com


The great media toaster isn’t broken, exactly, but it doesn’t work like it once did. By all accounts, Herman Cain should be toast now, served hot, a bit scorched around the edges and left unbuttered. But try as they might, his tormentors have not yet had him for breakfast.

The tormentors, journalists, lawyers and an assortment of ladies who appear to have been around the block a few times, have so far failed to destroy him and thus his candidacy. They still have to come up with lower-mileage ladies to make the accusations stick with the Republican base.

Mr. Cain’s remarkable—and unexpected—resilience has upset Democrats trying to find hope for change in their 2012 prospects in a reading of Tuesday’s off-year elections and referendums. The easily persuaded are even finding a little. Politico, the Capitol Hill tabloid that sometimes channels a Democratic party organ, concludes that “the Democrats are not dead yet.” But nothing has changed for President Obama. “For many Democratic candidates who will be sharing the ticket with Barack Obama in 2012,” quoth Politico, “the president is not going to be an asset. And in some states, it’s clear he is going to be a dead weight.”

These Democrats take comfort in two referendums, one in Ohio and another in Mississippi. In Ohio, a state with large and well-financed unions, voters repealed a reform law intended to curb unions’ abuse of workers, and in Mississippi voters overwhelmingly rejected the so-called “Personhood Amendment,” which would have effectively prohibited all abortions anywhere in the state. The amendment was supported, at least tacitly, by nearly every elected official in the state, Democrat and Republican, black and white.

However, Gov. John Kasich, who opposed repeal of the union-reform law in Ohio, remains popular with Republicans, and in Mississippi, Phil Bryant, the Republican, was elected governor in a landslide. Results were similarly mixed on election day across the nation.

The most telling phenomenon this year is the rise and improbable survival of Herman Cain, and what it says about the cheerful goodwill of an oft-maligned American public often accused by liberals of racism, bigotry, indifference, nativism and maybe even mopery. He has done almost everything wrong, as conventional politics is played. He offered conflicting details of his recollections of the allegations against him, and continued to rise in the public-opinion polls in the face of relentless mainstream-media coverage, which has taken everything said against him as gospel and treated his defense as improbable and even a little wicked. He blamed his Republican rivals for leaking misleading accounts of things that happened more than a decade ago. He blamed hacks of the press, who deserve it, but such criticism always sounds like whining. “I am not a creep,” even when true, sounds too much like “I am not a crook.” The checkered history and motives of the anonymous accusers were left unexamined by indifferent editors and lazy reporters posing as gallants and gentlemen.

Still, he has so far escaped the toaster, even when his Republican rivals began to think it was safe to start piling on. Mitt Romney, discreet at first, hinted that it was time for Mr. Cain to come clean. Newt Gingrich, ever the professor unable to stifle a runaway mouth, lectured his “good friend” that he has to “have an answer [to all the questions] and it better be accurate because if it’s not accurate it won’t stand.” You might think that the professor, with the history of emotional abuse of several wives, would have avoided the subject of the sins of others.

The real story here is that racial politics is dead, if the left will allow it. You might think that the prospect, unlikely as it still may be, of a black challenger, nominated by a white conservative party, against a black incumbent president, would be an occasion for cheers, or at least applause. Here’s evidence that the bad old days are swiftly fading into the past. But Mr. Cain is the wrong kind of black man. Some Democrats sneer that the Republicans only found a black man who “knows his place,” employing an insult from an earlier time and place.

The emergence of Mr. Cain as a credible conservative candidate undercuts the liberal canard that the Republican Party is a hopelessly racist party. That was the sub-text of the Democratic campaign four years ago and reprising that for 2012 was nearly all the hope Barack Obama had.

Herman Cain’s escape from the toaster, even if temporary, changed that



To: HPilot who wrote (50)11/19/2011 12:11:33 PM
From: joseffy  Respond to of 130
 
Newt and the “cancer bed divorce” myth
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November 19, 2011 by Jazz Shaw
hotair.com

With Newt Gingrich continuing to surge in the polls, plenty of stories are bubbling to the surface, including things from the distant past. And let’s face it… Newt has been knocking around US politics for an awfully long time, with tales of many of his exploits being told and retold until they pass into legend. Of course, you know what they say about legends.

[countable] an old story about famous people and events in the past. Legends are not usually true

One of the more nasty ones is the persistent tale of how Newt went to see his wife as she lay dying of cancer in her hospital bed and presented her with divorce papers. Ouch. That’s a pretty unpleasant story to float about anyone, and apparently it’s so temptingly salacious that it keeps getting hinted at in the media and I’ve seen it cropping up again on Twitter as recently as last night. Unfortunately for the gossip minded, nearly every aspect of the story is false and has been roundly debunked by what should be considered a pretty reliable source – his own daughter who was in the hospital room at the time. (Hat tip to OTB.)

So, to correct the record, here is what happened: My mother, Jackie Battley Gingrich, is very much alive, and often spends time with my family. I am lucky to have such a “Miracle Mom,” as I titled her in a column this week.

As for my parents’ divorce, I can remember when they told me.

It was the spring of 1980.

I was 13 years old, and we were about to leave Fairfax, Va., and drive to Carrollton, Ga., for the summer. My parents told my sister and me that they were getting a divorce as our family of four sat around the kitchen table of our ranch home.

Soon afterward, my mom, sister and I got into our light-blue Chevrolet Impala and drove back to Carrollton.

Later that summer, Mom went to Emory University Hospital in Atlanta for surgery to remove a tumor. While she was there, Dad took my sister and me to see her.

It is this visit that has turned into the infamous hospital visit about which many untruths have been told. I won’t repeat them. You can look them up online if you are interested in untruths. But here’s what happened:

My mother and father were already in the process of getting a divorce, which she requested.

Dad took my sister and me to the hospital to see our mother.

She had undergone surgery the day before to remove a tumor.

The tumor was benign.

As with many divorces, it was hard and painful for all involved, but life continued.

Yes, Newt is on his third marriage and some conservatives will raise questions about his marital track record, as they are entitled to do. But repeating this old chestnut is hurtful and slanderous. (For the record, I actually believed this story myself for quite a while and I know I made reference to it, so I’d like to apologize once again as well.)

There will be more than enough real material for critics to debate coming from Gingrich’s decades of public (and private) life, but we should focus on what is accurate and verifiable. So if you see anyone repeating this myth, do everyone a favor and point them to his daughter’s account of the story.

UPDATE: From the Credit Where Credit Is Due department. The Washington Post also douses the myth with cold water.



To: HPilot who wrote (50)12/5/2011 9:57:07 PM
From: joseffy2 Recommendations  Respond to of 130
 
Media Caining Sends Chilling Message To Blacks
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12/5/2011 Investors Business Daily Editorial......
news.investors.com

Herman Cain's withdrawal concludes a media hit job that sends out two chilling warnings. To conservative businessmen: Don't dare run for high office. To black candidates: Don't stray off the liberal plantation.

There's no denying that Cain, who on Saturday succumbed to weeks of media-driven pressure and suspended his campaign, was an imperfect presidential candidate.

Beyond the series of far-from-proven allegations of sexual improprieties, his performance in answering foreign policy questions disappointed even his staunchest supporters.

Cain's demise illustrates the hazards of placing faith in an unvetted presidential hopeful who has never held public office.

But what if the suffering, thoroughly disgusted American public believes only a nonpolitician and private-sector leader can rein in Washington, D.C.?

The voters have put plenty of imperfect men in the presidency. We might well today pose the same question that one Gov. Bill Clinton asked regarding his own sexual improprieties during a January 1992 interview on "60 Minutes," his wife by his side:

"Are we going to take the ... position now that if people have problems in their marriage, and there are things in their past which they don't want to discuss which are painful to them, that they can't run?"

Our current secretary of state hastily added: "It's real dangerous in this country if we don't have some zone of privacy for everybody."

Why is it that Bill Clinton's "bimbo eruptions" ended up being, to the mainstream media, just marital "problems" whose investigation would invade the Clintons' privacy, while Cain's troubles have been judged mortal wounds to his unconventional and exciting candidacy?

Slick Willie's wandering eye, far from being irrelevant, resulted in a president lying to a grand jury and the second presidential impeachment in U.S. history.

As the Media Research Center points out, "George Stephanopoulos, who as a Democratic operative in the '90s coordinated with ABC to save Bill Clinton from scandal, last Wednesday teased an exclusive with Cain's accuser, openly gloating, 'Will our interview spell the end of the one-time front-runner's presidential bid?'"

At a crucial time in the 1992 Democratic primaries, ABC' "World News Tonight" producers and host Peter Jennings were apparently convinced by Stephanopoulos that revealing a letter to their viewers in which Clinton thanked an ROTC officer "for saving me from the draft" would be "manipulating the process."

Every successful entrepreneur considering entering politics with a vision of economic freedom is now on notice: newspapers, magazines and the TV news will gleefully ruin your "zone of privacy" if you run for president. So if you care for your spouse, your children and your good name, stay out of the national political limelight.

And potential black candidates who recognize free-market reform as the key to improving the lives of their long-suffering people? They can see the media double standard.

If instead of Cain you're Jesse Jackson or Al Sharpton, or for that matter Barack Obama, you won't have to worry about your life or career being investigated too thoroughly.

The major media dutifully have treated all three as esteemed community leaders unworthy of being subject to heavy-duty dirt-digging.

Add a new verb to the language of politics, alongside Borking for Supreme Court nominees: the media Caining of black capitalists who offer voters their unique wisdom.