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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 (126548)3/15/2012 6:06:29 PM
From: locogringo3 Recommendations  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 224744
 
how much longer will the US reserves last.......

Who cares? I just bought 2 tickets (one way) for the 1st 747/380 flight powered with Obama_Algae.

It was a deal, but they made me buy travel insurance. Can't figure that one out.

That's gotta make you feel pretty safe flying over the mountains to visit your Lib buddies in Sacramento.

Algae has tremendous emergency airlift potential.............if you eat it..................

You green Libs are so far out of touch, it's comical already................



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (126548)3/15/2012 6:13:16 PM
From: locogringo5 Recommendations  Respond to of 224744
 
kenny_troll, is this KLOWN a LIAR, a LIAR, a LIAR, or a LIAR?

'Do Not Tell Me We're Not Drilling. We're Drilling All Over This Country'...

Energy production on federal land drops under Obama...

9-year low...



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (126548)3/15/2012 6:24:01 PM
From: Hope Praytochange3 Recommendations  Respond to of 224744
 
f Obama's Past Isn't A Concern, Why Cover It Up?

Posted 03/14/2012 06:13 PM ET

Public Trust: The Beltway elite mock critics who say the president's hiding his radical past from voters. They say there's nothing there, move along. But if there's nothing to hide, why is so much hidden?

And if the White House isn't worried about the public seeing another side of President Obama, why is it trying to reinforce the image of him as a post-racial, pro-American moderate with a slick new Hollywood-produced 17-minute documentary?

The answer, of course, is that it is very much concerned.

The Obama campaign knows its carefully manicured narrative is wearing thin against the drip-drip-drip of revelations about his extremism. And it can't risk the incumbent being reintroduced to voters this election as an untrustworthy imposter who's hiding things about himself and his agenda.

Indeed, these are things that must be hidden from the average voter. They are unpatriotic and unelectable things. Things that would concern any red-blooded American, if not the parlor Bolsheviks inside the Beltway media and the Ivory Tower.

The videotape of Obama praising and hugging his America-bashing, Constitution-trashing law professor Derrick Bell isn't the only evidence that's been hidden from the public. A 1998 video of Obama praising the late Marxist agitator Saul "The Red" Alinsky alongside a panel of hard-core Chicago communists also exists. Yet it, too, has been withheld.

So has a 2003 video of Obama speaking at a Chicago dinner held in honor of former PLO spokesman Rashid Khalidi. Anger at Israel and U.S. foreign policy were expressed during the private banquet.

Why have Obama's remarks and actions during the controversial event been suppressed? Perhaps it's because the radical Khalidi — a close friend and neighbor of Obama, who held a 2000 political fundraiser in his home for him — has strongly defended the use of violence by Palestinians against Israel, while expressing clearly anti-American views.

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If there's nothing to hide, why keep these tapes under wraps? Why not release them?

Obama's supporters pretend there's nothing all that radioactive about Khalidi or Alinsky, who authored the Left's bible, "Rules for Radicals."

But if Alinsky is not a problem, why did Obama disguise the name of his radical Alinsky trainer Jerry Kellman in his memoir? And why did he also try to shield from readers the identity of his Alinsky mentor John McKnight, who wrote him a letter of recommendation to Harvard?

If his Alinskyite indoctrination is of no concern, why did Obama leave out his weeks-long training at Alinsky's Industrial Areas Foundation in Los Angeles? This station of the cross for Alinsky acolytes is strangely missing from all 500 pages of his tediously detailed memoir.

For that matter, the late Alinsky is not cited by name in either of the president's autobiographies, even though leftist activists confess this father of community organizing had a powerful influence on Obama.

Moreover, if communist Frank Marshall Davis wasn't a controversial factor in Obama's life, why did Obama also mask his identity in his first memoir? If listening, spellbound, at the feet of a known subversive isn't a red flag, why keep his real profile a secret?

Obama also couldn't find room in "Dreams From My Father" to mention the most striking thing about his father's politics. Obama Sr. was a pro-Soviet socialist, who as a government economist wrote a communist tract for Kenya in 1965.

If this published paper wasn't a big deal, as Obama apologists have suggested, why is it conveniently missing from the 143-page section Obama devoted to boast about his father's career in Kenya?

Likewise, if the papers Obama Jr. himself wrote at Occidental College, Columbia University and Harvard Law School are not just as radical and offensive to average Americans, why not release them, along with the transcripts (or at least the titles) of the courses he took at these schools? Why the massive gap in disclosure concerning his academic years?

Harvard professor Bell had a huge influence on Obama, who in turn taught his own law students the radical theories he learned from Bell. Yet he never mentioned Bell or the Harvard strike he led on his beloved professor's behalf in either autobiography. If he wasn't trying to fool people, why leave this seminal event out?

Even more radical — and influential — than Bell was Harvard law professor Robert Unger, who taught Obama a couple of courses, including one called "Reinventing Democracy." Like Bell, Unger called U.S. jurisprudence a sham system designed to protect the rich at the expense of the poor. But Unger also taught Obama how to dismantle it. He argued for seizing all private capital and redistributing it.

Obama kept up communications with Unger long after he graduated, but those contacts stopped in 2008. "I am a leftist, and by conviction as well as by temperament, a revolutionary," Unger explains. "Any association of mine with Barack Obama in the course of the campaign could do only harm."

There you have it.

If Obama thought he could disclose all these radical associations to the American people and still get re-elected, he probably would, proud man that he is. But he wisely, if cynically, stays mum.

Some argue that linking him to this vast underground network of radicals is "guilt by association." Actually, it's guilt by participation.

Obama at one point was an employee of the radical shakedown group Acorn, and later trained its goons in Alinsky agitation tactics. He also worked with Pentagon-bombing Marxist Bill Ayers on the board of the Woods Fund, where the two comrades doled out cash to other radical groups.

In other words, Obama didn't just rub elbows with radicals, he operated as a one. It's now plain he and his fellow travelers are intentionally suppressing information that could provide the voting public a clearer link between the incumbent and radicalism.

Obama's new campaign infomercial, ironically titled "The Road We've Traveled," is just another attempt to suspend disbelief before the election.



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (126548)3/15/2012 6:24:40 PM
From: Hope Praytochange3 Recommendations  Respond to of 224744
 



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (126548)3/15/2012 6:25:11 PM
From: Hope Praytochange4 Recommendations  Respond to of 224744
 



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (126548)3/15/2012 7:03:32 PM
From: Farmboy3 Recommendations  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 224744
 
According to what I can find, we have a recoverable reserve of approximately 1445 billion barrels in the US reserves.

I'm thinking we have been very neglectful of our national welfare, by not working on tapping some of this. Could the vanity of a few be worth overlooking this oil, in order to raise gas prices and promote electric cars? Well, not 'worth it' ..... to anyone but the few who hold this twisted notion. Very harmful to the other 98% of the US.



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (126548)3/16/2012 7:34:59 AM
From: lorne3 Recommendations  Respond to of 224744
 
Carbonite crashing after Limbaugh trashing

Stock now sits at 60% off its 2011 high mark – company CEO big liberal donor
Friday, March 16, 2012
wnd.com


Carbonite, the Internet backup/security company, may be a good place to securely store irreplaceable computer data, but it’s not proving to be a good place to invest irreplaceable dollars.

The company, which went public last August, has seen its stock dive 20 percent after Carbonite CEO David Friend criticized Rush Limbaugh in the wake of the Sandra Fluke flap. Limbaugh’s dismissal of Fluke as a “slut,” in the wake of her call for the federal government to pay for her contraceptives, resulted in Carbonite withdrawing its advertising from Limbaugh’s highly successful show.

The plunge caused MarketWatch’s Chuck Jaffe to call Carbonite “the Stupid Investment of the Week.”

Whether due to a backlash or boycott by Limbaugh’s supporters or loss of access to Limbaugh’s large national audience, Carbonite has paid a price in the marketplace.

The company’s initial IPO price of $10 per share soared to $21.10 before beginning its steady decline. Before the Fluke flap, it had pulled back to less than it’s initial IPO price, but post-Fluke, it took a rapid 20 percent drop, settling this week at nearly 60 percent off its 2011 peak.

Friend’s venture into the political arena cost his shareholders dearly.

The Washington Times noted Friend has a long history of contributing to left-leaning candidates and causes. Citing Accuracy in Media, the Times reports Friend donated generously to the Howard Dean, John Kerry, and Barack Obama presidential campaigns, as well as several 527 groups such as “America Coming Together,” moveon.org, and “Texans for Truth.”

The latter organization, funded by George Soros through Moveon.org, released an ad accusing George W. Bush of evading his National Guard Service. A day latter, “Dan Rather and CBS’ 60 Minutes did their program based on the bogus National Guard documents.”



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (126548)3/16/2012 8:33:15 AM
From: TideGlider3 Recommendations  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 224744
 
DATA SNAP:US Feb Consumer Prices Rise 0.4%; Core CPI +0.1%
Last update: 3/16/2012 8:30:00 AM
========================================================   Feb Consumer Price Index          ! Consensus          !    Key Numbers:     Feb       Jan   !   Overall:   +0.5% !      CPI Index:     +0.4%     +0.2% !   Core:      +0.2% !      Core Index:    +0.1%     +0.2% ! Actual:            !      Energy:        +3.2%     +0.2% !   Overall:   +0.4% !                                     !   Core:      +0.1% !   ========================================================         By Josh Mitchell and Eric Morath      Of DOW JONES NEWSWIRES    

WASHINGTON (Dow Jones)--U.S. consumer prices leapt in February due almost entirely to a surge in gasoline costs, showing growing inflation pressures.
The consumer-price index, which measures how much Americans pay for everything from cereal to medical care, increased a seasonally adjusted 0.4% in February from the prior month, the Labor Department said Friday. That marked the biggest spike since April 2011.
Consumer prices were up 2.9% from a year ago. The report showed that energy costs rose at the fastest pace in nearly a year, rising 3.2%, as gasoline prices rose 6.0%. Food costs were flat, the first time since July 2010 that food prices haven't risen. The "core" price index, which removes food and energy costs, rose 0.1% in February from the prior month.
Economists surveyed by Dow Jones Newswires had forecast overall consumer prices to rise 0.5% and core prices to rise 0.2%.
The report could have implications for the Federal Reserve as it ponders whether to take additional measures to stimulate the economy, which has shown signs of strength amid big job gains in recent months. In the Fed's latest policy meeting, this week, officials stood pat.
Fed officials said increasing oil and gasoline prices "will push up inflation temporarily" but that they expect annual inflation will stay at or below the central bank's 2.0% target after gas prices ease. The Fed struck a similar tone a year ago when oil and food were getting more expensive, and indeed prices moderated in the second half of 2011.
More inflation or faster growth than projected could persuade officials they have already done enough.
Friday's report showed Americans' real average hourly earnings declined 0.3%, as increasing prices offset a small rise in wages. It was the biggest drop in real earnings since August 2011, a development that economists say could hurt consumer spending.
Prices declined in several categories, including fruits and vegetables, meats, apparel, natural gas and airfare.
Housing costs, which include rent, rose a slight 0.1%.
Without rounding, the CPI report showed that consumer prices rose 0.408% in January from December. Excluding food and energy items, prices rose 0.098% without rounding.
The Labor Department's report on consumer prices can be found at: bls.gov .
   -By Josh Mitchell and Eric Morath, Dow Jones Newswires; 202-862-6637; joshua.mitchell@dowjones.com       

(END) Dow Jones Newswires
March 16, 2012 08:30 ET (12:30 GMT)



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (126548)3/16/2012 9:17:02 AM
From: TideGlider2 Recommendations  Respond to of 224744
 
US Feb Industrial Production Flat Amid Drop In Mining Output
Last update: 3/16/2012 9:15:00 AM
   ===========================================================   Industrial Production                   ! Consensus:      !                             Feb     Jan   ! Ind Prod: +0.4% !     Industrial Production:  Unch   +0.4%r ! Capacity: 78.8% !     Capacity Utilization   +78.7%  78.8%r ! Actual:         !                                           ! Ind Prod: Unch  !                                           ! Capacity: 78.7% !   ===========================================================         By Tom Barkley and Jeffrey Sparshott      Of DOW JONES NEWSWIRES    

WASHINGTON (Dow Jones)--U.S. industrial output remained sluggish in February, as an ongoing slump in mining activity offset a modest expansion in manufacturing.
Industrial production was unchanged last month, the Federal Reserve said Friday. January's output figures were revised up to a 0.4% gain, from an initial estimate of no change.
Capacity utilization eased slightly, slipping to 78.7% from a revised 78.8% the previous month. Operating rates remain a bit below the 1972-2011 average of just above 80%.
The report was worse than expected, with economists surveyed by Dow Jones Newswires forecasting a 0.4% rise in output and capacity utilization of 78.8%.
Manufacturing has been a key driver of the economic recovery, but many economists expect production to moderate along with the overall economy during the first part of the year. Year over year, industrial production is up 4.0%.
The latest Institute for Supply Management report showed that manufacturing activity is slowing. The ISM's manufacturing index eased to 52.4 last month, from 54.1 in January. Any readings above 50 signal an expansion in activity.

The Fed report on Friday showed most sectors posted gains last month, with manufacturing up 0.3% following a 1.1% jump in January.
However, output in the mining sector slid 1.2% in February, "as the extraction of natural gas declined for a second consecutive month and coal production fell," the Fed said in the report.
Utilities production was unchanged following a 2.2% drop in January, still constrained by mild winter weather.
Production of motor vehicles and parts also retreated 1.1% in February, after a 8.6% jump the previous month. Excluding autos, manufacturing registered a 0.4% gain.
Output by the service sector, which makes up most of the U.S. economy, isn't reflected in the industrial production data.
The Fed report can be found at federalreserve.gov.
-By Tom Barkley and Jeffrey Sparshott, Dow Jones Newswires; 202-862-9275, tom.barkley@dowjones.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
March 16, 2012 09:15 ET (13:15 GMT)