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Politics : How Quickly Can Obama Totally Destroy the US? -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: d[-_-]b who wrote (9928)4/27/2014 11:36:25 AM
From: joseffy2 Recommendations

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d[-_-]b
Woody_Nickels

  Respond to of 16547
 



To: d[-_-]b who wrote (9928)4/27/2014 11:37:19 AM
From: joseffy  Respond to of 16547
 
The media is turning on President Obama

With multiple crises spiraling out of control around the world, stories about the Obama presidency are taking on the air of postmortems. What went wrong, who’s to blame, what next — even The New York Times is starting to recognize that Dear Leader is a global flop.

“Obama Suffers Setbacks in Japan and the Mideast,” the paper declared on Friday’s front page. The double whammy of failure pushed the growing Russian menace in ­Europe to inside pages, but even they were chock-full of reports about utopia gone wrong.

One story detailed how the White House was facing the “consequences of underestimating” North Korea’s Kim Jong-un. Others recounted the continuing Syrian slaughter and the murder of three Americans in Afghanistan.

The accounts and others like them amount to an autopsy of a failed presidency, but the process won’t be complete unless it is completely honest. To meet that test, the Times, other liberal news organizations and leading Democrats, in and out of office, must come to grips with their own failures, as well.

Obama had a free hand to make a mess because they gave it to him. They cheered him on, supporting him with unprecedented gobs of money and near-unanimous votes. They said “aye” to any cockamamie concept he came up with, echoed his demonization of critics and helped steamroll unpopular and unworkable ideas into reality.

Some of his backers knew better, and said so privately, but publicly they were all in. Whether it was ObamaCare, his anti-Israel position or the soft-shoe shuffle around the Iranian nuke crisis, they lacked the courage to object.

They said nothing as Obama went on foreign apology tours and stood silent as our allies warned of disastrous consequences. Even now, despite protests from a succession of Pentagon leaders, former Democratic defense hawks are helping Obama hollow out our military as Russia and China expand theirs and al Qaeda extends its footprint.

A king is no king without a court, and Obama has not lacked for lackeys. The system of checks and balances is written into the Constitution, but it is the everyday behavior of Americans of good will that makes the system work.

That system broke down under Obama, and the blame starts with the media. By giving the president the benefit of the doubt at every turn, by making excuses to explain away fiascos, by ignoring corruption, by buying the White House line that his critics were motivated by pure politics or racism, the Times and other organizations played the role of bartender to a man on a bender.

Even worse, they joined the party, forgetting the lessons of history as well as their own responsibilities to put a check on power. A purpose of a free press is to hold government accountable, but there is no fallback when the watchdog voluntarily chooses to be a lapdog.

The sycophancy was not lost on other politicians and private citizens. Taking their cue from the media, they, too, bit their tongues and went along as the president led the nation astray and misread foreign threats.

From the start, support for Obama often had a cult-like atmosphere. He sensed it, began to believe it and became comfortable demanding total agreement as the price for the favor of his leadership.

That he is now the imperial president he used to bemoan is no long­er in dispute. The milking of perks, from golf trips to Florida to European vacations for the first lady, is shockingly vulgar, but not a peep of protest comes from his supporters.

The IRS becomes a political enforcer, but that, too, is accepted because nobody will risk their access by telling Obama no. You are either with him or you are his enemy.

The evidence is everywhere that his ideas are flawed, that his view of economics, diplomacy, the military, history, science and religion are warped by his own narcissism. He doesn’t even talk a good game anymore.

Yet it remains a fool’s errand to hope he will correct his ways. He is not capable; he looks in the mirror and sees only a savior.

It is equally clear that those who shielded him from facts and their own best judgment did him no ­favors. Out of fear and favor, they abdicated their duty to the nation, and they must share the burden of history’s verdict. After all, America’s decline happened on their watch, too.


nypost.com



To: d[-_-]b who wrote (9928)4/28/2014 3:48:29 PM
From: joseffy  Respond to of 16547
 
Arrested for quoting Winston Churchill: (EU)
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The Daily Mail ^ | 4-28-14 | Lizzie Parry


A candidate in the European elections was arrested on suspicion of racial harrassment after quoting a passage about Islam, written by Winston Churchill, during a campaign speech.

Paul Weston, chairman of the party Liberty GB, made the address on the steps of Winchester Guildhall, in Hampshire on Saturday.

A member of the public took offence at the quote, taken from Churchill's The River War and called police.

The passage from the book, written by the wartime Prime Minister and first published in 1899, focuses on Churchill's observations about Islam while serving during the Anglo-Egyptian reconquest of the Sudan.

Mr Weston told his audience: 'Improvident habits, slovenly systems of agriculture, sluggish methods of commerce, and insecurity of property exist wherever the followers of the Prophet rule or live.

'Thousands become the brave and loyal soldiers of the faith: all know how to die but the influence of the religion paralyses the social development of those who follow it.

'No stronger retrograde force exists in the world. Far from being moribund, Mohammedanism is a militant and proselytizing faith.'

Police officers arrested Mr Weston, mid-speech, for failing to comply with their request to move on under the powers of a dispersal order made against him.

He was further arrested on suspicion of religious or racial harrassment.

(Excerpt) Read more at dailymail.co.uk ...



To: d[-_-]b who wrote (9928)4/28/2014 7:05:07 PM
From: joseffy  Respond to of 16547
 
If you quote Winston Churchill on this topic, you could go to jail in modern-day Great Britain



To: d[-_-]b who wrote (9928)4/28/2014 7:27:09 PM
From: joseffy  Respond to of 16547
 
The Radical Left Rewrites the History of Civil Rights
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americanthinker.com
By Richard Winchester April 24, 2014


The general thrust of left-wing pundit Richard Cohen’s syndicated column of April 17, 2014 is an attack on Rand Paul’s (and other prospective GOP presidential candidates’) lack of experience. Given Barack Obama’s thin résumé before becoming president – which, to his credit, Cohen acknowledges -- assailing Rand Paul’s (or Ted Cruz’s, or anyone else’s) meager public record is ludicrous.

Bad as Cohen’s attack on Paul (and others) is, his sly effort to rewrite the history of the Republican Party’s (and by implication, the Democrat Party’s) role in the struggle for blacks’ civil rights is even worse. Unhappily, however, Cohen’s historical revisionism typifies the American left’s all-too-successful efforts to change Americans’ memories of the roles of the two major political parties on behalf of blacks’ civil rights.

Cohen’s ploy begins by noting that the late Lorraine Hansberry, who wrote the play A Raisin in the Sun – which is experiencing renewed performances on Broadway – grew up in a Republican household, due to Abraham Lincoln’s legacy.

He implies that, because of her growing radicalism and especially her lesbianism, she probably left the GOP. (Someone familiar with her life and views may wonder if as an adult she were ever a Republican.)

Cohen begins overt historical revisionism by declaring that FDR “wooed” African Americans – which would surely be news to Roosevelt who needed southern segregationists’ votes for his New Deal legislation – and that “overtime Republicans abandoned them.”

Oh really? Tell that to Dwight Eisenhower, Earl Warren, Everett McKinley Dirksen, and other Republicans who, each in his way, aided the civil rights cause. All the while, those efforts were resisted by southern Democrat segregationists, including Al Gore, Sr. and J. William Fulbright, Bill Clinton’s mentor. (Indeed, perhaps the most overtly racist to be president was Democrat Woodrow Wilson, who was born in Virginia, and praised D. W. Griffith’s The Birth of a Nation, a movie that glorified the Ku Klux Klan, after viewing it in the White House.) Leading segregationists in the 1960s, such as “Bull” Connor, George Wallace, and Lester Maddox, were Democrats. In the days when Jim Crow was practiced with a vengeance, Republicans inside the KKK were scarce as hen’s teeth.

Lyndon Baines Johnson is remembered for securing major civil rights legislation, such as the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and the Voting Rights Act of 1965, when he was president. Johnson’s record on blacks’ civil rights when he was in the Senate and especially the House of Representatives, however, was considerably less favorable.

Many people have fond memories of North Carolina’s Democrat Senator Sam Ervin for his role on the special Senate Watergate investigating committee which played a major role leading to Richard Nixon’s resignation in 1974. If one looks at Ervin’s votes on civil rights legislation in the 1950s and 1960s, however, pleasant memories quickly fade.

His admirers want us to forget that the late Robert Byrd had been an Exalted Cyclops in West Virginia’s KKK. We also forget that in the presidential election of 1960, 32% of blacks voted for Richard Nixon, that JFK was a “Johnny-come-lately” to the cause of civil rights, and that Martin Luther King, Jr.was a Republican.

None of this history turns up in Cohen’s column. Instead, he writes “[t]he Republican Party has done for homosexual rights what it did to civil rights [for blacks]. It has become the voice of recalcitrance, smoothly transitioning from opposing one form of civil rights for another.”

There’s more of this tripe, but I’ll spare readers of the American Thinker further assaults on their blood pressure.

If Cohen’s diatribe against the GOP’s civil rights record were atypical, one might be inclined to dismiss it. Sadly, it’s not. One comes across instances of historical revisionism on this topic on a depressingly regular basis, whether the revisionism occurs in the popular culture, or more scholarly writing and speaking.

An example from popular culture is the comment by baseball great, Hank Aaron, on the day the Atlanta Braves honored him for breaking Babe Ruth’s home run record forty years ago. Speaking to the crowd, Aaron was quoted as saying “back then [1974] racists “had hoods. Now they wear neckties and starched shirts.” He proceeded to make it clear that he was referring to Republicans.

One encounters essentially the same meme -- “Republicans are racists” -- larded throughout popular entertainment fare. This sentiment is especially widespread among Hollywood personalities.

One could dismiss comments like these as meaningless ruminations coming from people out of their depth.

The recently published book, Dog Whistle Politics, by University of California, Berkeley law professor Ian Haney López, cannot be so readily discounted. Allegedly an “expert” on American race relations, López contends that politicians, especially Republicans and the Tea Party, and “plutocrats” employ coded words -- that are understood to mean blacks -- to induce whites, especially those in the middle classes, to vote against their own self-interests. López traces the origins of “dog whistle politics” back to George Wallace (a Democrat), Richard Nixon, and Ronald Reagan (Republicans, naturally).

It’s difficult to comprehend why Republicans and/or their supporters seem so disinclined to respond forcefully to these charges. There are two lessons that GOPers and their backers do not seem to been learned about matters like these.

First, as Hitler’s propaganda minister, Joseph Goebbels, knew back in the early decades of the 20th century, “tell a lie often enough and people will believe it.” I’m not equating Democrats with Nazis. Nevertheless, Goebbels’ observation still applies. The lie that “Republicans are racists” has been told so often that many Americans have come to believe it.

Second, as Michael Dukakis’ experience during the 1988 presidential election campaign showed, failure to respond to what may seem -- to the Dukakis camp -- outrageous charges, such as the “Willie Horton” ad, because your side thinks they’re so ridiculous no one will believe them, makes it harder to counter them once you’ve realized their impact.

As the experiences of candidate Bill Clinton in 1992, with his “war room,” and especially candidate Barack Obama and his well-honed propaganda machine in 2008 prove: as soon as a charge is made, counter it.


Full Story



To: d[-_-]b who wrote (9928)4/29/2014 9:40:23 PM
From: joseffy1 Recommendation

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slowmo

  Respond to of 16547
 
White House Directed Incorrect Benghazi Narrative

by Sharyl Attkisson
Facebook ^ | 4-29-14 | Sharyl Attkisson

Newly-released documents reveal direct White House involvement in steering the public narrative about the September 11, 2012 terrorist attacks in Benghazi, Libya, toward that of a spontaneous protest that never happened.

One of the operative documents, which the government had withheld from Congress and reporters for a year and a half, is an internal September 14, 2012 email to White House press officials from Ben Rhodes, President Obama’s Assistant and Deputy National Security Advisor. (Disclosure: Ben Rhodes is the brother of David Rhodes, the President of CBS News, where I was employed until March.)

In the email, Ben Rhodes lists as a “goal” the White House desire “To underscore that these protests are rooted in an Internet video, and not a broader failure or policy.”

The email is entitled, “RE: PREP CALL with Susan, Saturday at 4:00 pm ET” and refers to White House involvement in preparing then-U.S. Ambassador to the U.N. Susan Rice for her upcoming appearance on Sunday television network political talk shows.

The Rhodes email states that another “goal” is “To reinforce the President and Administration’s strength and steadiness in dealing with difficult challenges.”

A court compelled the release of the documents, which were heavily-redacted, to the conservative watchdog group JudicialWatch, which has sued the government over its failed Freedom of Information responses. I have also requested Benghazi-related documents under Freedom of Information law, but the government has only produced a few pages to date.

Today, Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-SC) called the Rhodes email the “smoking gun” showing the “political manipulation by the White House” after the attacks.

“The political shop at the White House took over early on,” Graham told me. “They understood it was a terrorist attack, that they had a political problem, and were going to handle it politically. They weren’t going to entertain anything other than what they wanted the public to hear.”

USA Today quotes a spokesman for the White House National Security Council reacting to the Rhodes’ email by stating that it contains general talking points on unrest spreading throughout the region in response to an offensive video, and also made clear that “our primary goals” included the safety of U.S. personnel in the field and bringing those responsible for the attacks to justice.

Since the deadly attacks on the U.S. missions in Benghazi, there have been persistent allegations that the Obama administration developed a false political narrative to downplay or hide the fact that terrorists had struck. The President had campaigned by stating that al Qaeda was “on the run,” and Republicans have argued that news of a terrorist attack eight weeks before the election could have decimated his re-election campaign. Four Americans were killed in the assaults, including U.S. Ambassador Christopher Stevens.

White House officials copied on the Rhodes “goal” email include Press Secretary Jay Carney, then-Communications Director Dan Pfeiffer, then-White House Senior Advisor David Plouffe, then-White House Deputy Communications Director Jennifer Palmieri and Deputy Press Secretary Josh Earnest. Earnest has failed to respond to more than a year’s worth of my emails and phone calls in my effort to obtain official White House photographs taken the night of the Benghazi attacks. The White House photo office had told me that Earnest’s personal approval was needed for the photos to be released.

Rhodes has emerged as a key figure in the controversy but hasn’t yet been asked to provide testimony to Congress.

Changed classification?

Rep. Jason Chaffetz (R-Utah) told me today that the government apparently tried to keep the Rhodes email out of Congress and the public’s hands by classifying it after-the-fact.

“They retroactively changed the classification,” Chaffetz says. “That was an unclassified document and they changed it to classified.”

In the past month, the government has supplied 3,200 new Benghazi-related documents under Congressional subpoena. In some instances, Congressional members and their staff are only permitted to see the documents during certain time periods in a review room, and cannot remove them or make copies.

Chaffetz says that the State Department redacted more material on the copies provided to Congress than on those that it was forced to provide to JudicialWatch.

One of the most heavily-redacted email exchanges is entitled, “FOX News: US officials knew Libya attack was terrorism within 24 hours, sources confirm.” The Fox News article was circulated among dozens of officials including Rhodes and then-Deputy National Security Advisor Denis McDonough but the content of their email discussion is hidden.

“Topline Points”

An internal document provided by the State Department dated Sept. 14, 2012 is titled, “Topline Points” and poses answers to a series of questions apparently in preparation for the briefing to be provided to Ambassador Rice prior to her talk show appearances. The document fails to mention terrorism, although it had been repeated throughout the early versions of the talking points, and many government officials have said that they had already concluded by that time that terrorism was to blame.

“What’s your response to the Independent story that says we have intelligence 48 hours in advance of the Benghazi attack that was ignored?” is one question posed in the briefing memo. The suggested answer: “This story is absolutely wrong. We are not aware of any actionable intelligence indicating that an attack on the U.S. mission was planned or imminent. We also see indications that this action was related to the video that has sparked protests in other countries.”

But the final sentence to the answer is expanded and developed in the “PREP CALL with Susan” email from Rhodes at 8:09pm on Friday, September 14, 2012. It adds the phrase “spontaneously inspired” and also refers to the attack as “demonstrations” that “evolved.”

“The currently available information suggests that the demonstrations in Benghazi were spontaneously inspired by the protests at the US Embassy in Cairo and evolved into a direct assault against the U.S. Consulate and subsequently its annex,” reads the Friday night email from Rhodes to White House press officials.

Obama administration officials have insisted they were acting on “the best intelligence available at the time” and that they clarified the story as they got more information.

But taken as a whole, the documents and testimony revealed since the attacks support the idea that the administration’s avoidance of the word “terrorism” was a strategy rather than an accident or mistake.

White House Involvement

Relatively few documents have been provided that shed light on White House involvement in the post-Benghazi narrative. Previously, emails showed that then-deputy national security adviser Denis McDonough, on Rhodes’ behalf, assigned Hillary Clinton-aide Jake Sullivan to work with Deputy Director of the C.I.A. Mike Morell to edit the talking points on Benghazi.

As the various agencies worked to edit and approve the talking points on Sept. 14, Rhodes emailed that there would be a Deputies meeting the next morning to work out the issues. “That’s polite code for let’s not debate this on e-mail for 18 hours,” one official involved told me last year.

Multiple government officials including those in the military, State Department and C.I.A. have stated in documents or under questioning that they immediately believed the attacks, using heavy weaponry and mortar shells, were the work of terrorists. Prior to the attacks, there had been multiple warnings of al Qaeda threats in Libya and, specifically, in Benghazi.

In fact, in an early version of the government’s “talking points,” the C.I.A. stated that it had “produced numerous pieces on the threat of extremists linked to al-Qa’ida in Benghazi and eastern Libya,” and that “These noted that, since April, there have been at least five other attacks against foreign interests in Benghazi by unidentified assailants, including the June attack against the British Ambassador’s convoy. We cannot rule out the individuals has previously surveilled the U.S. facilities, also contributing to the efficacy of the attacks.” The administration later removed these C.I.A. disclosures about the advance warning of a threat.

Morell testified to Congress earlier this month that he, and not the White House, was responsible for making some of the most controversial revisions to the talking points, including removing the language about the advance warnings. Morell has since gone to work as counsel for Beacon Global Strategies, a strategic relations PR firm dominated by former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and Obama administration officials. (Disclosure: In January, Morell was hired as an analyst for CBS News where I was previously employed.)

An administration official who asked not to be identified previously told me that “spontaneous” protests was probably not the right word to use in the talking points, but that there was no intent to deceive.

Sen. Graham has a different view.

“They understood it was a terrorist attack, that they had a political problem and they were going to handle it politically. They saw it as a chink in the President’s armor and they tried to repair it,” says Graham.



To: d[-_-]b who wrote (9928)4/30/2014 9:30:04 AM
From: joseffy  Respond to of 16547
 
BENGHAZI--The political shop at the White House took over early on. They understood it was a terrorist attack, that they had a political problem, and were going to handle it politically. They weren’t going to entertain anything other than what they wanted the public to hear.




To: d[-_-]b who wrote (9928)4/30/2014 2:07:17 PM
From: joseffy  Respond to of 16547
 
CO HS students say Pledge in Arabic: 'One nation under Allah'...
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HS Students Say Pledge In Arabic: ‘One Nation Under Allah’
Posted on 28 April, 2014 by Rick Wells


The principal at Rocky Mountain High School in Fort Collins, Colorado, is facing a hailstorm of criticism from some very angry parents and residents.

The school recites the Pledge of Allegiance weekly, on Mondays. Last Monday, a member of their “Cultural Arms Club” led the student body in an Arabic version of the pledge, replacing the words “under God” with “under Allah.”

Principal Tom Lopez denies any attempt to push an Islamic agenda, saying, “These students love this country. They were not being un-American in trying to do this. They believed they were accentuating the meaning of the words as spoken regularly in English.”

Principal Lopez doesn’t make any sense. Speaking unintelligible words in Arabic in some way accentuates their meaning? That is an extremely weak argument in defense of an ill-advised decision.

He said the cultural clubs seeks to “destroy the barriers, embrace the cultures” that exist within the high school.

That would translate into “destroy the barriers to Islam and embrace it,” correct, Mr. Lopez?

The Poudre School District communications director, Danielle Clark, said they understand why parents are upset. She told Fox News, “We understand not everybody would agree with the students’ choice. We’ve heard there are some who are upset.”

Let’s put his into perspective for the feeble-minded Clark and Lopez. It is not the student’s choice. They do not control the public address system. It was a school choice.

Her simplistic defense included a reference to “one” supportive email and a reference to a similar mistake last year which drew controversy when the pledge was recited in Spanish. Somehow not learning from and expanding upon your previous mistakes is perceived as a viable defense for these educators.

An abdication of responsibility is also part of their defense. Clark attempted to pass the buck of responsibility to the students, saying, “This is a student-initiated and student-led club. There is no school sponsor or advisor. It doesn’t come under the umbrella of the district.”

Actually, the activity of reciting the pledge does come under the district. Choosing to put it into the hands of a group not regulated by their administrators does not provide absolution.

“We deferred to the students because it’s their deal,” she said.

One cultural club member, professing to not understand the controversy is Skyler Bowden. Bowden simplistically told The Coloradoan, “No matter what language it’s said in, pledging your allegiance to the United States is the same in every language.”

Given their youth, the high school students might understandably not recognize the problems with proclaiming America as “one nation under Allah.” The grownups should and they ought to be controlling the activity.

The Muslim Brotherhood front group CAIR chimed in saying, “Obviously in Arabic, you would use the word Allah, but Christian Arabs would use the word Allah.” Their spokesperson, Ibrahim Hooper, claimed use of the word Allah is “not necessarily specific to Islam and Muslims.” From an American point of view, it is, whether he is technically correct or not, to Americans, in America, it’s a specific Muslim and Islamic reference.

As if to reinforce the idiocy of reciting the pledge in another language, Clark said she did not hear the pledge and does not speak Arabic so she could not confirm exactly what words were used.

Lopez said he has been getting a variety of accusations leveled at him, including being called a traitor. He said, “They claim they are outraged, that this is blaspheming a real major tenet of our patriotism – which in their mind the Pledge of Allegiance is only in English.”

He said he’s also been accused of “pushing a Muslim Brotherhood agenda – to push Islam into the school.” He denies that was behind the decision.

CAIR representative Hooper told Fox News he was dumbfounded by complaints about the Arabic version of the pledge.

“How on earth is it un-American to recite the Pledge of Allegiance in another language,” Hooper asked. “It doesn’t make sense unless the people complaining are anti-Muslim or anti-middle eastern bigots.”

It just might be that Americans recognize the Islamic agenda, Mr. Hooper, and are tired of having it forced upon them. Maybe we know what you are up to and people are pushing back.

Principal Lopez said all of the criticism and complaints had him “worn down.”

Playing the tolerance card, Lopez labeled himself as the victim, stating, “I’ve been shocked with prejudicial statements that have been made. I’ve been shocked with the lack of seeking understanding. There’s definitely suspicion and fear expressed in these people’s minds. There’s some hate.”

One resident, Chris Wells put it in terms even educator Lopez could understand. Writing in The Daily Coloradoan, he said, “As a veteran and a friend of a man killed defending these children in their little games they like to play with our pledge, I’m offended. There are things that we don’t mess with – among them are the pledge and our anthem.”



To: d[-_-]b who wrote (9928)5/1/2014 9:53:30 PM
From: joseffy  Respond to of 16547
 
Shocking Benghazi E-Mails Between AP Reporter, Obama Flack; Bozell Denounces on Fox

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Newsbusters ^ | 5/1/14



To: d[-_-]b who wrote (9928)5/3/2014 3:44:59 PM
From: joseffy  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 16547
 
State Dept. Immediately Attributed Benghazi Attacks to Terrorist Group