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


To: i-node who wrote (642929)1/20/2012 6:39:19 PM
From: Brumar89  Respond to of 1579697
 
twt



To: i-node who wrote (642929)1/20/2012 7:17:12 PM
From: bentway1 Recommendation  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1579697
 
Bush's CIA Chief: We Ruled Out Iran Strike

MICHAEL HAYDEN SAYS IT WOULD HAVE BACKFIRED THEN, AND WOULD NOW, TOO

By Dustin Lushing, Newser Staff
newser.com
Posted Jan 20, 2012 5:32 PM CST

(NEWSER) – George W. Bush's administration pondered an attack on Iran's nuclear facilities and ultimately rejected it, says former CIA and NSA chief Gen. Michael Hayden. He and others concluded that an attack on Iran's nuke factories "would guarantee that which we are trying to prevent—an Iran that will spare nothing to build a nuclear weapon and that would build it in secret," Hayden said, according to Foreign Policy. The same rationale holds true today, he warned: Go with diplomacy and back channels or risk pushing Tehran into speeding things up.

Hayden doesn't think the Israelis will launch a strike because "it's beyond their capacity," he said. And the US could do so, but shouldn't. "It's not so much that we don't want Iran to have a nuclear capacity, it's that we don't want this Iran to have it," he said. "Slow it down long enough and maybe the character (of the government) changes."



To: i-node who wrote (642929)1/20/2012 7:18:46 PM
From: bentway  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1579697
 
Hey GOP, You're Re-Electing Obama

CANDIDATES HAVE GIVEN LIFE TO HIS CLASS WARFARE SPIEL: CHARLES KRAUTHAMMER

By John Johnson, Newser Staff
newser.com
Posted Jan 20, 2012 1:29 PM CST

(NEWSER) – President Obama just may find himself chuckling all the way to re-election, all because Republicans borrowed one of his weapons and turned it against themselves, writes Charles Krauthammer in the Washington Post. Obama and the Democrats had been trying without much luck to make a "class-war narrative" stick. Then came what Krauthammer—in a column headlined "The GOP's suicide march"—calls "the most remarkable surprise since the 2010 midterm": Republicans, specifically, Newt Gingrich and Rick Perry, gave the Democratic narrative new life with their attacks on Mitt Romney and Bain Capital.

"Now, economic inequality is an important issue, but the idea that it is the cause of America’s current economic troubles is absurd," writes Krauthammer. "Yet, in a stroke, the Republicans have succeeded in turning a Democratic talking point—a last-ditch attempt to salvage reelection by distracting from their record—into a central focus of the nation’s political discourse." If Obama wins, it won't be because of a liberal media bias, but, rather, sheer luck: "He could not have chosen more self-destructive adversaries." Full column here.



To: i-node who wrote (642929)1/20/2012 8:20:52 PM
From: bentway  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 1579697
 
Colbert and Cain: a little silly, a little serious

By Melinda Henneberger
washingtonpost.com

CHARLESTON, S.C. – Not everyone hooting Herman Cain at the Stephen Colbert rally here Friday was laughing with him, but he didn’t mind being the butt of jokes, he said, if only Americans could learn how to take one. His message? “As I said in one of the debates, America needs to lighten up.”

Colbert’s message, on the other hand, was as serious as its delivery was light-hearted. Politicians in both parties promise to bring Americans together, but Colbert actually does, through comedy, and this rally on the campus of the College of Charleston the day before the state’s presidential primary was an extended riff on the serious subject of money in politics.

With Spanish moss framing the backdrop of a campus that not only looks like an Old South movie set but has served as one many times, the Comedy Central host bounded up on stage, sang “This Little Light of Mine,’’ with a Gospel choir as backup, then gave a history lesson of his own.

Calling himself the “Martin Luther King of corporation civil rights,’’ Colbert said that in a time maybe not everyone in the audience could remember -- two years ago – corporations were sadly limited in the amount of money they could pour into political campaigns.

But that changed, he said, when “five courageous justices” on the Supreme Court ruled in the 2008 Citizens United decision that “corporations are people,” that people are entitled to free speech, that free speech equals money, and that corporations should thus be entitled to dump as much of it as they like into the political water table, provided they don’t coordinate with the campaigns they’re funding.

It's the Super PACS that are funding the flood of negative ads that the candidates all say they hate, even though the Citizens United decision was widely praised by Republicans.

Then Colbert asked the crowd, which included people of all ages and political persuasions, to send a message about super PACS by voting for Herman Cain, who is still on the ballot here. And, somehow, both Republicans and Democrats were charmed.

Joe Wright, a college sophomore and a Republican who said he was torn over whether to support Newt Gingrich or Mitt Romney, said that while Super PACS “are not a good thing,” the main point of the rally, for him anyway, was that “Colbert makes the campaign a little lighter” and less nasty.

“I love that he’s making such a mockery of Republican politics and the Super PACS,’’ said Democrat Cookie Washington, who grew up in Washington and has lived here for 25 years. “But this is South Carolina, so I’m not 100 percent sure people know it’s satire.’’

Eleven-year-old Avi Goldschmidt, whose mother had driven him here from their home in Myrtle Beach, was not in that camp: “I like the way he’s pretending to be a Republican and is really a Democrat,’’ he said of Colbert. (“He’s in the gifted and talented” program at school, said his mother Natasha, who said she saw her son’s day off from class as a “social studies field trip.’’)

The event -- dubbed the “Rock Me Like a Herman Cain South Cain-Olina Primary” -- began with a Gospel rendition of “The Star-Spangled Banner,” with Colbert harmonizing, followed by the Pledge of Allegiance and the crowd shouting, “USA! USA!”

“It’s good to be home,” yelled Colbert, who grew up in South Carolina. “Whoever said you can’t go home again didn’t have a friend with a private jet…And I don’t need to pander to the most beautiful people in the world!’’

Among those he thanked, as he mocked one after another of the conventions of politicians, was the media – “You gotta thank the bloggers just for coming outside!”-- and the state’s Republican governor, Nikki Haley, who wasn’t there. “Thank you for cheering!” for her, he said in answer to the booing that followed the mention of her name.

To those who had skipped school to be there – he was talking to you, Avi – he offered to write a doctor’s excuse. “And most of all,’’ he said, poking fun at the self-admiration of candidates, “I want to thank Stephen Colbert.’’

He promised not to make nasty remarks about any of Cain’s former rivals for the GOP presidential nomination – for instance, that “the only difference between Mitt Romney and a statue of Mitt Romney is the statue never changes its position.” Nor would he dream of suggesting, he said, that “Ron Paul’s real name” is the same as that of the guy who “turns straw into gold.” And under no circumstance would he respond to a “gotcha question like am I interested in open marriage, though I am flattered Newt Gingrich asked me.”

Then “the Her-man with a plan, the Mad Max of the flat tax, my brother from another mother, Herman Cain” appeared in his signature black hat. Not to let Colbert outdo him, Cain said, he sang a tune from “The Wiz,’’ revealed that the first of his four grandchildren had been born in the year “1-9-9-9’’ – yes, just like his famous 9-9-9 tax plan! And once again, as he had during his speech when withdrawing from the campaign, he quoted from the Pokemon movie.

“Mr. Colbert cannot get on the ballot, and I can’t get off of it,” joked the former Godfather’s Pizza CEO, who withdrew from the primary race after facing a series of allegations about sexual harassment and infidelity and making foreign policy gaffes that included not seeming to know what actions President Obama had taken on the Libyan uprising.

One thing Cain has that Colbert doesn’t, according to Cain, is “complexion perfection.” When even a crowd primed to laugh had no reaction, he added, “That was a joke, y’all.’’

Throughout Cain’s remarks, protesters from the Occupy movement interrupted Cain with shouts of “Occupy!” and “We are the 99 percent!” On Friday the movement’s participants were occupying courthouses across the country to mark Saturday’s second anniversary of the Supreme Court decision that made Super PACS possible.

In Cain’s telling, it was his challenge to the status quo that caused the media to run him out of the race: “Someone called me David going up against Goliath, and that’s what happened.’’

Though Colbert had asked the crowd to vote for Cain, Cain asked them not to follow Colbert’s advice: “I’m going to ask you not to vote for Herman Cain,’’ said Herman Cain, fond as ever of referring to himself in the third person. “Because every vote counts.”

Near the end of the event, Colbert noted that “pundits keep asking me if this is a joke,’’ but if that’s the case, of course, “then they are saying our entire campaign finance system is a joke!” (Nah, couldn’t be.) As Abraham Lincoln said at Gettysburg, Colbert added, “Give me some money!”

We must stand for corporations, he said, mock solemnly, “because they have no legs.”

In his final message to the crowd, he urged those attending to fulfill their civic duty. Whether they voted for Cain, as Colbert had asked them to do, or against Cain, as Cain had asked them to do, the most important thing was that they do vote.

Afterward, Amanda Brueser, a Republican and a freshman at the college who grew up here, said she might end up voting for Cain if she couldn’t decide among the candidates.

“When he broke it down, it made more sense,’’ she said of his pitch against Super PACs. “And, of course, it was just funny.”