Archive for the 'Joe Biden' Category

18
May
09

Biden Strikes Again…

We all know and love Joe Biden for being the kind of guy you could sit and watch a great game of football with or have a summer barbeque with, but these great types of people also have an unusual trait of often saying things that they just shouldn’t. Usually this happens after they’ve had a few drinks, but with Biden, it seems like he might not even have to get sauced to spill the beans.

At the Gridiron media event this past weekend, Biden attended to fill in for Obama. This seemed like a great idea, Biden being the social guy that he is. But things turned a little weird when he disclosed the location of a secret bunker under his home, the former US Naval Observatory, to his dinnermates. Speculators are guessing that this is precisely where Cheney hid after the 9/11 attacks and where Biden will never again be able to hide since now it is public, rather than classified, information. Ugh.

23
Apr
09

The Torture Memos

Cassie, Tim & Brent get into a heated discussion about the torture memos that were released on Tuesday. Listen to the show today to check it out….www.theblockfm.com.

A newly declassified Congressional report released Tuesday outlined the most detailed evidence yet that the military’s use of harsh interrogation methods on terrorism suspects was approved at high levels of the Bush administration.

The report focused solely on interrogations carried out by the military, not those conducted by the Central Intelligence Agency at its secret prisons overseas. It rejected claims by former Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld and others that Pentagon policies played no role in harsh treatment of prisoners at Abu Ghraib prison in Iraq or other military facilities.

Late last night, the Senate Armed Services Committee (SASC) released its full report on the Department of Defense’s (DOD) role in the treatment of detainees in U.S. custody (PDF). (A summary of the report was released last December, but it was only until last night that the full report was released after the government declassified it.)

This report makes frighteningly clear that some of the darkest moments in our country’s recent past were choreographed at the highest levels of government… The people who were at the very top of the Bush administration and those at the top of the chain of command must be held accountable. Just as any other American would be investigated by a prosecutor for crimes committed, so must our government officials. We must ensure that our laws are impartially enforced against everyone.

16
Apr
09

Alright Fine, We’ll Talk About the Tea Parties

I didn’t want to give these idiots any relevancy, but since the nutjobs are sprouting up all over the place, I guess I’ll take some time to respond, however inane their arguments are.

Ok so I think the best way to do this is to just rattle off some facts (and some opinions) in list format for ease of reading:

Here’s are 10 questions for all you people at these so-called T.E.A. (Taxed Enough Already…cute isn’t it?) Parties ranting and raving about wasteful spending and deficits–

  1. Why all of a sudden are  you upset about paying taxes?
  2. Why all of a sudden are you upset about government spending?
  3. Why all of a sudden are you upset about the bailout and the stimulus package?
  4. Where have you been over the past eight years?
  5. Where have you been while GWB and his Republican administration racked up the largest deficit in our country’s history?
  6. Where were you when GWB and his administration would not include Iraq in the normal budget and would only pay for it with “emergency spending money” so he could hide the billions that were being funneled to private contractors (aka his friends) over in the Gulf to rebuild and secure a nation that we had just irresponsibly attacked for no good reason?
  7. Where were  you when GWB passed the first stimulus package?
  8. Where were you when Ronald Reagan tripled the national debt (i.e. more than equaled the entire debt burden produced by the previous 200 years of American history?
  9. Where were you when GWB doubled it after Clinton eliminated it?
  10. Where were you when Reagan (because of his insane cut taxes/raise spending economics) was forced to raise taxes TWICE to avert a fiscal catastrophe?!

I don’t mind if  you are worried about government spending. I will respect your views as much as their are LOGICAL and VIABLE with facts, history, and reality. But you Republicans and Libertarians and Fox News nuts at these tea parties don’t have facts, history, or reality on your side.

You protest when there is a Democrat in the Oval Office and a Democratic Congress. But you’re silent when there is a Republican President and/or Congress. You are currently a party that is living in a heaping pile of lies, revisionist history, and alternate reality.

You’re not protesting spending. You have rallied behind deficit spending for the past 30 years. You are protesting the fact that you lost the election in embarassing form. You are protesting because you are sore losers and you’re not willing to allow the “other side” even 100 days to try to right this enormous ship that has been diverted off track by your leaders.

Rather than taking to the streets to allegedly protest wasteful spending (by, ironically, wastefully spending on millions of tea bags), why don’t you all take some time to READ FACTS and LEARN HISTORY and deal with REALITY. Just for a change. Just to see where it leads you. You might upset your other ignorant, fire-breathing friends and family members, but you might just feel a little better inside yourselves.

08
Apr
09

Biden News!

Biden: Cheney Is “Dead Wrong,” And He Made U.S. Weaker
Vice President Biden told CNN that Dick Cheney is “dead wrong” in his denouncements of the Obama White House’s national security policies: “This administration — the last administration left us in a weaker posture than we’ve been any time since World War II: less regarded in the world, stretched more thinly than we ever have been in the past, two wars under way, virtually no respect in entire parts of the world.”

WaPo: Biden To Lead Push In Senate For Nuclear Test Ban Treaty
The Washington Post reports that President Obama will be putting Vice President Biden in charge of shepherding the Comprehensive Nuclear Test Ban Treaty through the Senate. Biden led the previous push in the Senate for ratification in 1999, when he was the ranking minority member of the Foreign Relations Committee, coming up 19 votes short of the 67 needed in the then-Republican controlled chamber.

07
Apr
09

Joe Biden News!!!!

About an hour after throwing out the ceremonial first pitch at the Orioles-Yankees Opening Day game, Vice President Joseph Biden went up to the announcers booth and brought the house down, poking fun at the anonymity of his office, mocking his own baldness, and making a well-timed joke about former V.P. Dan Quayle’s failures as a speller.

Biden, appearing in a baseball cap and casual attire, was in the booth alongside Hall of Fame pitcher Jim Palmer, who is known, alternatively, for his great and colorful head of hair. After a bit of banter about the state of sports and the economy, the subject moved to politics. Pointing to Palmer’s scalp, the V.P. blurted out: “If I had this guy’s hair, I might have had a shot in the primaries.” Removing his cap, Biden added: “You know… Look, there ain’t a whole lot there.”

Palmer and fellow announcer Gary Thorne loved it. Telling Biden he was handling the responsibilities of his job well, the Delaware Democrat said of the gig: “No one ever remembers your name. It’s okay.”

When Palmer told Biden that they were going to have him do some of the game’s play-by-play announcing but had decided against it, the vice president replied: “Good. Good.”

Told that Dan Quayle had done as much and asked by Thorne if he would reconsider his decision, Biden chimed in: “Hell no. And I can’t spell potato either.”

Earlier in the day, Biden had thrown out the ceremonial first pitch at Camden Yards. And while the toss was a bit high for the traditional strike zone, it did make it into the catcher’s mitt. “I’m so happy it got across the plate,” Biden said of his toss. “I was more worried about that than the debate.”

“Everyone knows you can talk,” said Palmer, in reference to the vice president’s gift (or curse) for gab.

“The question is, could I throw?” replied Biden.

From there, the booth got into a conversation that veered between the worlds of sports and politics. Biden talked about how he gave up dreams of a future in athletics relatively early in life. “I couldn’t make it in pro sports so I figure: ‘what the hell, I might as well be a vice president.’” Later, he quipped of his career choice: “It’s a lot easier, especially the ‘vice’ part.”

It wouldn’t be the last time he was self-deprecating when it came to his job. Told that it had been 76 days since the administration came into office, he replied: “Seems longer, doesn’t it?”

18
Mar
09

BIDEN’S MOM HAS A SENSE OF HUMOR

Vice President Joe Biden’s ailing mother is feeling well enough to give him grief for not wearing green on St. Patrick’s Day.
Biden told a White House crowd Tuesday night that he got up at 2:30 in the morning to get to the Philadelphia hospital where his 92-year-old mother, Catherine Eugenia “Jean” Biden, is recovering from surgery for a broken hip.

Biden laughed as he noted that he hadn’t given much thought about colors while dressing at that early hour.

When he greeted Irish and Irish-American guests at the White House, Biden pointed out his green necktie and said, “Mom, I got my green on tonight.”

Jean Biden was admitted to the hospital Sunday after a fall at Biden’s home in Greenville, Del.

Huffington Post

16
Mar
09

Joe Biden and Britney have something in common

Joe Biden dropped a big F-bomb into a live mic at an event on Friday afternoon.

“Gimme a f–ing break,” the vice president said after a former Senate colleague referred to him as “Mr. Vice President.”

Biden was at Union Station in Washington, D.C. to announce $1.3 billion in stimulus money to expand passenger rail capacity.

Source

30
Oct
08

Don’t Vote???

15
Oct
08

Colin Powell to Announce Presidential Endorsement Tomorrow…This Should Be Fun

When Colin Powell turns off his TV after the final presidential debate, he will have learned everything he is going to learn about the candidates vying to succeed his former boss, George W. Bush. Powell has made it clear that he has been thinking about an endorsement for a long time but wanted to hear more from the candidates before making his choice. It now seems beyond doubt that Colin Powell will endorse Barack Obama and thereby hammer the final nail in the coffin of the Republican campaign to hold onto the White House.

The recent ugliness of the McCain-Palin rally audiences cannot be lost on Colin Powell. And Powell is not one to ignore a 14 point lead in a New York Times poll. But most important for Powell and the press will be his explicit rejection of the Bush-McCain approach to Iraq, Iran and the rest of the world.

Powell’s endorsement will be perfectly timed to dominate a news cycle or two. It will give Obama the one thing he still needs more of–credibility as Commander-In-Chief. And Sarah Palin’s speechwriters will be hard pressed to come up with a condescending quip about it.

14
Oct
08

An Open Letter to John McCain and Sarah Palin

Dear Senator McCain and Governor Palin,

Time and again in America, people of all races and backgrounds have overcome division and fear, and come together to uplift the country and create a more equal and just society. It’s part of what makes this country great.

With an African-American nominee running on a major party ticket and a woman on the Republican ticket for the first time in history, this campaign has seen Americans–men and women of all races–inspired to continue that great tradition, coming together to bridge the gaps that history has set between us in service of our national progress.

But let us be clear: while we have made great strides in this country when it comes to racial equality, we are not finished. Now, more than ever, we need leadership that understands that we live in complex times where too many are quick to judge another by the complexion of their skin or the sound of their name.

In the last few weeks, Senator McCain and Governor Palin, rhetoric at your campaign events has taken an increasingly dangerous tone that seems to ignore the precarious state of our progress when it comes to race and ethnicity.

Supporters at your rallies and other events have used hateful language and called for violence against Sen. Obama yelling “kill him!” “off with his head!” and “bomb Obama.”

For the most part, you have stood by in silence. In addition, you have also repeatedly made statements that somehow connect Senator Obama with terrorism. Your surrogates have emphasized his middle name. This is problematic and dangerous, and we believe helps create the conditions that have given rise to these incidents of violent rhetoric from some of your supporters.

Today, we’re standing together as Americans of all political persuasions to express our deep concern that the decisions of your campaign are contributing to a dangerous atmosphere of paranoia, division, and hate that, as we have already seen, has the potential to seriously harm our country and its progress.

Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. said, “The ultimate measure of a man is not where he stands in moments of comfort and convenience, but where he stands at times of challenge and controversy.”

In these trying times, candidates seeking the highest offices in the land must call on the best in each of us, and call off the worst.

We urge you to join people of conscience from all races and backgrounds to reject the politics of division and fear, and come together to uplift the country and create a more equal and just society.

13
Oct
08

3 Questions Scheiffer Should Ask McCain

  1. “Senator McCain, you used to say that the main thing you were looking for in a running mate was the ability to take over as president, if necessary, on Day One. Given how many people there are in government that clearly meet that criterion, how do you justify picking someone who so many of the most intelligent and respected members of your own party believe clearly does not? Your campaign slogan is Country First, sir. Can you tell the American people exactly how you were putting Country First when you chose a congenitally dishonest, proudly ignorant, cold-blooded demagogue with no presidential qualifications whatsoever to sit just one of your 72-year-old cancer-ridden heartbeats away from running the country in these spectacularly perilous times of almost unprecedented economic and international crises?”
  2. “Senator McCain, your campaign has spent the last ten days impugning your opponent’s character. We’ve seen Sarah Palin doing it, we’ve seen your wife Cindy doing it, and we’ve even seen you doing it yourself. Well, there he is right across the table from you. Is there anything you want to say to Senator Obama about Bill Ayers or Reverend Wright or Tony Rezko? Because it would be nice if he could respond to these allegations and insinuations and put this utter bullshit behind us so you could spend the next twenty days explaining to the American people why they should vote for you instead of scaring them about why they shouldn’t vote for him.”
  3. “Senator McCain, your campaign rallies lately have become forums for foaming-at-the-mouth cretins who are so certain that your opponent is a terrorist that some have actually shouted out, “Kill him!” and “Off with his head!” Given the nation’s history of intolerance against those perceived to be somehow different – be it by virtue of sexual orientation, religion, or race – can you tell the American people how you’re putting Country First by fanning the fires of hatred and why they shouldn’t hold you and your rabid running mate personally responsible if those fires explode into violence?”
13
Oct
08

The Low-Road to the White House…McCain has Veered Severely Off-Course

Walter Shapiro writes….

“I’ve had my fill of partisan excesses, and I don’t intend to disgrace myself by indulging in them.” — “Worth the Fighting For,” by John McCain with Mark Salter (2002)

The driving narrative of John McCain’s political career is not enduring five and a half years in a POW camp, but suffering through four years in the cross hairs of a late 1980s congressional scandal known as the Keating Five. As McCain tells it (and he has discussed it in almost every medium aside from Japanese manga comics), this was a classic tale of sin and salvation as an erring senator makes a grievous mistake in judgment, is hauled before the Senate Ethics Committee and, as a result, is forever changed by the public humiliation.

“I would very much like to think that I have never been a man whose favor could be bought. From my earliest youth, I would have considered such a reputation to be the most shameful ignominy imaginable,” McCain writes in his 2002 memoir. “Yet that is exactly how millions of Americans viewed me for a time, a time that I will forever consider one of the worst experiences of my life.” (For those who lack an encyclopedic memory of 1988 news headlines, McCain, along with four other Democratic senators, improperly intervened with federal regulators in an effort to save the crumbling savings-and-loan empire of Charles Keating, an Arizona friend and campaign contributor of McCain’s.)

The Keating Five have long hovered on the periphery of the 2008 campaign as a blast-from-the-past partisan talking point — a bit like Joe Biden’s 1987 burst of plagiarism when he lifted the hardscrabble family history of British politician Neil Kinnock and passed it off as his own. Twenty years is a long time for penance, and most voters seemed willing to abide by a statute of limitations about scandals that date back to the era of phone booths and boom boxes.

But all that changed on Ski-Slope Monday when the minute-by-minute chart of the Dow Jones Average looked like a plunge off a mountain. (When everyone is breathing a sigh of relief because the Dow rallied near the close to only be down 370 points, you get a sense of how brutal the fiscal carnage was.) Confronted with America’s incredible shrinking stock portfolio, both the McCain and Obama campaigns reacted with the maturity that the financial crisis deserves. McCain and Sarah Palin tried to foster the impression that, if elected, Obama would name 1960s radical Bill Ayers to head the newly created Department of Molotov Cocktails. And the Obama campaign countered by releasing a searing video titled “Keating Economics.”

This was, in short, a day in which it seemed like both campaigns were conspiring to prove to a skeptical world that America is not ready for self-government. Instead of retreating to their respective debate camps to practice their spontaneous one-liners and empathetic gestures (Tuesday night’s Nashville Knockdown will employ a town-meeting format moderated by Tom Brokaw), McCain and Obama were mired in the politics of irrelevancy. The political strategies on both sides are nakedly apparent — McCain desperately needs to discredit Obama, since he cannot survive an election where the dominant topics are recession, Wall Street and George W. Bush. And Obama — chastened by Democratic docility in the face of GOP attacks — has vowed from the outset to run an Old Testament campaign based on the uplifting principle of “an eye for an eye.”

Ayers, to be sure, was always a peripheral figure in Obama’s universe. As the New York Times pointed out in a detailed look at the Ayers-Obama question, “Since 2002, there is little public evidence of their relationship.” But Obama clearly exaggerated during the primaries when he dismissed Ayers as merely “a guy who lives in my neighborhood,” since the two men served together on the seven-member board of the Woods Fund, a Chicago charity, for two years.

[A point of personal indulgence: I, too, can claim knowing Ayers as a guy from the neighborhood, since we overlapped on the University of Michigan campus in the late 1960s. I recall running into Ayers — who was in the midst of helping form the violent wing of SDS known as the “Weathermen” — in Ann Arbor, a few days before the 1968 Democratic convention. “Hey, man, are you going to Chicago for the convention?” he asked. “No,” I replied, “they’re going to nominate [Hubert] Humphrey, so why bother?” Then Ayers offered me a news tip that I foolishly ignored: “There’s going to be great shit happening in the streets. You’ve got to go.”]

On this day of tit-for-tat politics, the Obama campaign missed the real reason why the Keating Five remain relevant 20 years later. The point lies not in the details of the bygone scandal (trust me, they are complex and murky), but in the way that McCain has abandoned in this presidential campaign all the good-government habits that he adopted after he was chastised by the Ethics Committee. As he recounted in his memoir, “I decided right then that not talking to reporters or sharply denying even the appearance of a problem wasn’t going to do me any good. I would henceforth accept every single request for an interview … and answer every question as completely and straightforwardly as I could.”

McCain, who until the spring was indeed the most accessible major politician in America, has veered completely in the other direction, avoiding reporters at one point for more than a month. As the decider on the Republican ticket, McCain is also responsible for the Arctic-chill media strategy that has almost completely muzzled Sarah Palin since her selection as his running mate.

Far more disturbing is that it has become difficult to believe that John McCain recalls the larger lessons about personal honor that he supposedly carried away from his Keating Five disgrace. As the campaign to tarnish Obama grows brutish and ugly (and there are still four weeks left for subterranean tactics), it seems apparent that McCain has made a Faustian bargain to try to win the White House. If successful, McCain, of course, will have power. But if he fails, he will only have his regrets and his late-in-life reputation for low-road tactics.

13
Oct
08

Cindy McCain’s Attack On Obama’s Record Offends Military Spouses

Diane Tucker writes…

At a rally in Bethlehem, Pa. last week, Cindy McCain spoke about having two sons serving on active duty: “I’m proud of my sons, but let me tell you, the day that Senator Obama cast a vote not to fund my son when he was serving sent a cold chill through my body. I would suggest that Senator Obama change shoes with me for just one day, and see what it means.”

Never mind how many drinks are needed to erase the mental image of Barack Obama wearing Cindy McCain’s stiletto heels. The fact is — many military spouses support Obama-Biden, and they were deeply offended by Mrs. McCain’s outburst.

Let’s fact-check her remark, shall we?

Cindy McCain was referring to a single 2007 Senate vote: Obama voted for a war-spending bill that included language calling for withdrawing troops from Iraq; but later he voted against a version of the same bill because it no longer included the withdrawal language. “We must fund our troops, but we owe them something more,” Obama said at the time. “We owe them a clear, prudent plan to relieve them of the burden of policing someone else’s civil war.”

In other words, Sen. Obama wanted to fund the troops, he just didn’t support the flawed military strategy this particular bill would enable. (Previously, Obama had voted YES on at least 10 other war funding bills. For a lengthy list of John McCain’s NO votes on military funding, click here.)

“It ruffles our feathers when someone claims that Barack Obama doesn’t support the troops, because the Obamas have gone out of their way to understand the military, its families, and its veterans,” Stephanie Himel-Nelson, deputy director of outreach for Blue Star Families for Obama, told OffTheBus. “In fact, Michelle Obama has adopted military families as one of her causes.”

Would Cindy McCain “Change Shoes” With These Military Wives?

“When millionaires such as Cindy McCain act as if they understand our lives, and the lives of everyday military families and veterans, we get upset,” said Himel-Nelson.

Today the number of service men and women forced to deploy over and over again is unprecedented. Loneliness is leading to frayed marriages. Toddlers are just getting to know their parents when — poof! — mommy and daddy disappear to serve overseas again. Career paths are falling off track. Household budgets are in disarray.

Imagine what parenting must be like when one spouse keeps bouncing in and out of the picture. “It’s a delicate dance,” Heidi Goeman, Beaufort, SC told OffTheBus. “Kids change, rules change, and perspectives change while my husband is away. When he returns home, the lay of the land isn’t the same.” Goeman and her husband have endured four deployments together.

Many children are too young to articulate their response to repeated separations. “Our seven-year-old thought he was at fault for his dad’s going away, despite our best efforts to prepare him,” said Goeman.

Deployments Are Lasting Longer, Coming Closer Together

Casey Spurr’s husband has been deployed three times. “Mostly I find myself saying ‘I wish your daddy was here’ when I really, really need to take a break, or when our son lets out a big belly laugh — he has the best laugh,” said the Virginia Beach, Va. resident. Spurr told OffTheBus, “Obama proposes a Military Family Advisory Board, which I think is long overdue.”

The number of Navy and Air Force vets re-deployed to fill gaps in Army units on a one-off basis — with just a few weeks of combat training — continues to grow. “The Navy is providing manpower because the Army doesn’t have enough troop strength for our front lines,” said Vivian Walker, a Navy veteran and military spouse who is using her GI Bill benefits to earn a Ph.D. in public administration and urban policy.

Walker confesses she forgot her wedding anniversary amid the chaos of managing work and family by herself. “A big paper was due, I was trying to find a Halloween costume for our four-year old, my mother was visiting…the list goes on, but I’m not complaining. The only time I get upset is when I feel I have to defend my patriotism if I vote for Obama. I live this war daily. My support for the troops is all-consuming.”

Maria Arwitz’s husband is a Navy dentist who was onboard the USS Comstock when it delivered a marine corps unit to Afghanistan in 2002. Three years later he was sent to Iceland for 11 months, something that “probably would not have happened if Navy Medicine wasn’t stretched so thin,” Arwitz told OffTheBus. “He deployed right after one of our 10-month-old twins underwent heart surgery. It taught me a lot about how strong a military mom has to be with no family around.”

Arwitz likes that Obama believes all Americans are entitled to quality health care. “The conditions at Walter Reed Hospital really infuriate me. I feel connected to these troops when they return home — I shop with their wives at the commissary, my kids play with their kids on the playground. You wouldn’t believe what some families are going through,” said the Beaufort, SC resident.

The Rub: A Lack Of Honesty From The Bush Administration

Obviously there is a need for some level of military secrecy. But to what degree should families allow themselves to be kept in the dark?

“We want to know that the sacrifices we make are for a reason. That when our family members are in harm’s way, they are protected as much as possible. That the leaders who deploy them will bring them home as soon as possible,” said Bella Harris, Chesapeake, Va. She is married to a nuclear power officer on board the USS George Washington, an aircraft carrier based in Japan. Harris told OffTheBus she admires McCain, but is voting for Obama because “he has a better plan for health care reform, and a more experienced running mate.”

Kathy Roth-Douquet, Beaufort, S.C. has lived in six places on three continents since she married a marine corps officer 11 years ago. “Our fourth-grader has attended six schools because of all the moves, but it’s a source of pride that we were asked to do something difficult and found the resources to do it,” she told OffTheBus. Roth-Douquet is the author of AWOL, a book about the unexcused absence of America’s upper classes from military service and how it hurts the country. Recently she co-produced a video featuring military wives for Obama, after co-founding (with Laura Dempsey) a grassroots organization of military families called Blue Star Families for Obama.

All of these women respect McCain for his Vietnam-era service, but they believe Obama has the temperament to safely lead the United States out of the quagmire in the Middle East. “One doesn’t have to join the military to serve their country — nor does serving in the military necessarily qualify one to be president,” said Walker. They trust Obama to use diplomacy, not just military might.

For The Record, Mrs. McCain…

The non-partisan group Disabled American Veterans gives John McCain a 20 percent rating for his voting record on veterans’ issues. (It gives Barack Obama an 80 percent rating.)

The non-partisan group Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans of America gives McCain a “D” grade for his voting record on issues such as additional funding for combat body armor, and additional funding for post-traumatic stress disorder and other medical treatment. (Obama earned a B +.)

09
Oct
08

Oliver Clark Speaks Out! (PS – He’s the Dude Who Asked the Question About Fannie Mae at the Presidential Debate on October 7, 2008)

Ok I usually do not participate in blogs, but I have been receiving a lot of questions so here’s what happened:

1. How did I get to participate in the debate?
Well, as many of you know I went to undergrad at Tennessee State University. (Go Tigers) I have a Nashville area code for my cell phone. So the Sunday before last, I received a call from the Gallop Poll. They asked a few questions regarding my choice in the Presidential election. They asked who I would vote for. I said most likely I would be voting for Barack Obama. They followed with, “is there any chance that you would change your mind“? I said “Of course anything is possible.” They then asked me as an uncommitted voter would I like to participate in the Town hall debate. I said “Of course!”

They told me the selection process was totally random, and I was called. I think about a 120 people were chosen to be apart of the town hall, but only 80 would be on stage. Out of the eighty people chosen to sit on stage I was number 78!

2. How did I get to sit so close to Sen. Obama?
Well, they seated us according to our numbers, they started with number one on the side closest to Sen. McCain and ended on the side with Sen. Obama.

3. How did I get to ask a question?
I had no idea they would choose me to ask a question. They told us to think of one or two questions we would like to ask the candidates if we had the opportunity. I asked a lot of friends and family what I should ask and the consensus was a question on the economy. Tom Brokaw came the morning of the debate and collected our questions and said he along with his team would review all the questions and decide which ones would be asked. About 3 minutes before the debate a fellow town hall participant sitting behind Brokaw looked over his shoulder and saw that 78 had the second question to ask. He mouthed over to me that I would have the second question. I did not believe him, but I still looked back over my question to make sure I would not look stupid! (Whether I did or not that for you to decide) Brokaw asked the first question then came to me. I stood up and asked and my question was in essence how was the bailout package going to help the average American?

4. Was I nervous?
No. I was cool as a polar bear’s toe nails. Yes, of course I was nervous, they said the show was going to be seen by tens of millions of people, but hey I am son of Blood and Thunder so I held it down! Shout out to the Ques Roo!

5. How did I feel about Sen. McCain’s response?
Sen. McCain. Well, Sen. McCain answered the questions with attacks on Barack and did not address how this package was actually going to help out the average American. Not to mention attacks on myself, but that question is to follow. He did say he warned the public of the forthcoming crisis, which I guess was a good thing????

6. How did I feel about Sen. Obama’s response?
I felt Sen. Obama addressed the issue more directly then Sen. McCain did. Obama actually stated that the bailout package was going to help Americans buy homes and stay in their homes.

7. How did I feel about Sen. McCain stating “You probably never heard of Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac before this.”
Well Senator, I actually did. I like to think of myself as a fairly intelligent person. I have a bachelor degree in Political Science from Tennessee State, so I try to keep myself up to date with current affairs. I have a Master degree in Legal Studies from Southern Illinois University, a few years in law school, and I am currently pursuing a Master in Public Administration from the University of Memphis. In defense of the Senator from Arizona I would say he is an older guy, and may have made an underestimation of my age. Honest mistake. However, it could be because I am a young African-American male. Whatever the case may be it was somewhat condescending regardless of my age to make an assumption regarding whether I was knowledgeable about Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.

8. Why did I have a disposable camera?
I do have a digital camera! The people at the debate actually provided the disposable cameras for us and stated we would not be able to take our digital cameras on stage, but we could take the cameras provided for us.

Well, that’s all of the questions I can think of. Let me know what you think, and feel free to ask any questions you have.

Peace and Love,
Oliver

07
Oct
08

Arianna Huffington – McCain is Desperate and has No Vision

The McCain campaign is all set to roll out its message for the last 30 days of the campaign: “We may not be good for your bank account, your mortgage, your health care, or your job security — but none of that will matter if you are dead. John McCain: If You Want to Live.”

It’s coming a little earlier than expected, but with an imploding economy and no solutions from the McCain camp other than yet another round of tax cuts, Team McCain is hitting the GOP’s default key: Be Very Afraid!

The title of McCain’s latest TV ad says it all: “Dangerous.” The ad brands Obama as “dishonorable,” “dangerous,” and “too risky for America.” That’s right, folks, it time to appeal to the voters’ Lizard Brains.

For the moment, McCain is allowing his high-sticking hockey mom to lead the fear-mongering parade, accusing Obama of “palling around with terrorists” and not seeing America “like you and I see America.” For bad measure, Palin also teamed up with her mentor Bill “Henry Higgins” Kristol to re-pry the manhole cover off the Jeremiah Wright sewer.

But Palin’s Alaska crude will soon be mixed with McCain’s own Maverick mud. At a Colorado town hall last Thursday, McCain was asked, “When are you going to take the gloves off?” His grinning reply: “How about Tuesday night?” So how long into Debate II do you think it will be before McCain brings up Bill Ayers, Jeremiah Wright, or Tony Rezko?

Clearly, McCain has concluded that the only way he can get enough votes is to pay for them with his once-valued dignity and honor. And it appears he’s not planning to leave any of that precious personal capital in the bank by the time election day rolls around.

So here it comes. One last desperate, pathetic, sordid attempt to distract the country from anything resembling a real debate about a real issue. Don’t have health care? Rezko, Rezko, Rezko. Wonder why our financial system is on the brink of collapse? Ayers, Ayers, Ayers. Worried about whether we’ll ever get out of Iraq? Wright, Wright, Wright.

Much to Karl Rove’s chagrin, those around McCain have been very upfront about the campaign’s intentions. “There’s no question that we have to change the subject here,” a senior Republican operative told the Washington Post. McCain adviser Greg Strimple cut to the chase, saying the campaign is “looking forward to turning a page on this financial crisis.” Yeah, who wants to read any more of those boring old stories about foreclosures, job losses, and the market losing another 500 points, especially when there are so many more urgent things to talk about — like why Barack Obama wants to let his terrorist pals blow us all up?

McCain and his hatchet mom VP nominee are hoping to expose the “real” Barack Obama to the people of America; but what they are really exposing is how morally corrupt McCain has become. And how complete has been his transformation from a noble reformer, willing to stand up to his own party when it failed to meet his moral code, into an ignoble hack, willing to abandon his most deeply held values in his lust for the presidency.

“Sooner or later people are going to figure out that if all you run is negative attack ads you don’t have much of a vision for the future, or you’re not ready to articulate it.”

That was John McCain in 2000, commenting on the disgusting attacks against him by Karl Rove, George Bush, and a few of the people now doing their very dirty work for him.

Wise words from a man who doesn’t exist anymore. To paraphrase the classic Hughes Mearns’ poem:

“As I was walking up the stair/I met a maverick who wasn’t there/He wasn’t there again today/I wish, I wish he’d go away.”

Making his disappearing act all the more tragic is the fact that the noble McCain is still around, lurking inside the corrupted candidate, occasionally bubbling to the surface before being shoved back into hiding by his baser instincts.

For instance, it was just this past April when McCain took a principled stand against the muck being flung at Obama over his association with Rev. Wright, saying “there’s no place for that kind of campaigning, and the American people don’t want it.”

A little over five months, and an increasingly blue electoral map later, McCain now stands on the sidelines while Palin unabashedly gives the American people what McCain knew they don’t want.

Despite its best efforts, the McCain camp’s sneering attacks are not proving that Barack Obama is not like the rest of us. They are proving that John McCain is not like the rest of us. Americans are hungry for a serious conversation about the multiple crises we are facing. And by ignoring that conversation in favor of yet another round of fear-mongering, McCain is showing himself to be the candidate who is “not a man who sees America like you and I see America.”

The most revealing thing about the nature of McCain’s attacks isn’t the contempt he has for Obama (that’s been on display for a while now) — it’s the contempt he has for the country he claims to be putting first.

07
Oct
08

Sarah Palin Owes $25,000 in Back Taxes…WTF People!

Several tax experts said they believe Republican vice-presidential nominee Sarah Palin is required to pay federal taxes on $25,000 in reimbursements from the state of Alaska for her children’s travel expenses.

The Alaska governor released her 2006 and 2007 tax returns on Friday, sparking a lively debate on tax blogs and among tax professionals over whether reimbursements and per-diem meal payments from the state should be subject to federal taxes. Since taking office in December 2006, Gov. Palin, whose state salary is $125,000 a year, received reimbursements totaling $43,500 for travel and lodging for her family in connection with state business. Of that total, $25,000 was for her children’s travel and the rest was for her husband, Todd, the Washington Post reported.

While several tax experts have raised serious questions about whether the payments to Gov. Palin are taxable income, they said the case was clearer cut for treating the reimbursements for the children’s expenses as taxable income. “The kids are a slam dunk problem,” said Robert Spierer, a partner with the accounting firm Perelson Weiner LLP in New York City. “The husband you could make an argument that he had to be there because it was required for spouses to be there.”

But not the children, he said. “I don’t think I would ever claim that on my clients’ returns. I can’t think of a real strong argument for it.”

Gov. Palin also accepted $17,000 in per-diem meal payments for nights spent at her home in Wasilla, 40 miles from the governor’s office she used in Anchorage, Alaska’s largest city. Gov. Palin often used that office rather than traveling to the state capital of Juneau, more than 800 miles away. Several tax experts have argued this should be counted as taxable income.

The McCain-Palin campaign released an opinion letter from Washington, D.C., criminal tax lawyer Roger M. Olsen, concluding that Gov. Palin complied with Alaska law in not reporting the reimbursements and meal payments as income.

A spokesman for the McCain campaign said Gov. Palin relied on the W2 wages form from the state of Alaska in filing her tax return, which was prepared by H&R Block. The W2 did not include the travel reimbursements as income.

“The state believes it is interpreting IRS policy correctly. It has no indication to believe that it is misinterpreting that policy,” said Brian Jones, a McCain campaign spokesman.

Gov. Palin “has every right to assume the state of Alaska knows how to handle her W2,” said Alan D. Westheimer, a certified public accountant in Houston. “These people [the Palins] are not tax lawyers. They went to H&R Block” to prepare their taxes.

Mr. Westheimer said this shows a good-faith attempt on the part of the Palins to comply with the law. Of the travel reimbursements for her children, “it may not be the letter of the law,” he said, “but it’s arguably within the spirit of the law because it’s related to her job.”

Tax experts said a good case could be made that Mr. Palin, as the spouse of the governor, was required to attend official functions and was thus eligible for the travel and lodging reimbursements, even though he is not an Alaska state employee. Many of them said it is less clear why Gov. Palin’s children would be required at official state functions.

Bryan Camp, a tax professor at Texas Tech University School of Law and a former Internal Revenue Service lawyer in Washington, said the IRS would ask several questions to determine whether the travel reimbursements were reported properly.

Those questions include whether Mr. Palin and the children were employees of the state of Alaska, whether they traveling for bona fide business purposes, and whether they would have been able to deduct those travel expenses on their own tax returns for business purposes.

Because the answer to at least one and possibly more of those questions is no, “The Palins should have reported the $43,000 in family travel allowances received in 2007 as income,” Mr. Camp wrote in an analysis.

07
Oct
08

Sarah Palin on SNL?

What a joke. Less than 30 days until the election and the McCain campaign is trying to get Palin on SNL to parody Tina Fey. Gee, thanks McCain…way to be serious and focus on the issues that are facing this country. We have the highest unemployment rate in almost 10 years, our financial markets are collapsing all around us, people are losing their homes left and right, and your campaign is thinking about putting the Vice Presidential candidate on SNL. Excellent.

John McCain, your campaign from start to finish has been an embarrassment of drastic proportions. You have lied to us, you have smeared Barack Obama when you promised you wouldn’t, you have stooped to the lowest levels of indecency with your choice for a running mate, and you have shamed your entire party.

Everything about the McCain campaign is disgusting and I see people and talk to people every day who feel the same and who are ashamed that we even have this type of candidate running for the highest office in our land.

Republicans and Independents are shifting their loyalties. Every swing state is turning to support Obama – Virginia, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Michigan, and Florida…all Obama states now. The McCain campaign has lost the trust and the affection of this nation. On November 4, 2008, we need to send a clear message to our politicians. No more stupidity, no more blatant lying, no more smearing, no more below the belt politics, no more idiocy, no more ignorance. We know better. We are more informed. We are more active. We communicate with each other more. We are a nation unified by our desire to make America BETTER. And we know that we cannot accomplish that with the likes of John McCain and Sarah Palin.

Barack Obama and Joe Biden ’08

06
Oct
08

Empty Campaign Rhetoric From McCain

He said he wouldn’t touch the Rev. Wright card. Why? Because both he and his running mate have pastor-problems of their own. But in a move of sheer desperation, McCain’s campaign has indeed pulled the Rev. Wright card.

This, in my eyes, made clear the fact that the McCain campaign is through. It has NOTHING of substance to offer, so in the most crucial time leading up to the election, it cannot garner votes or sway voters based on policy matters…so it turns to smear tactics.

Obama has taken the high road throughout the campaign. He hasn’t taken the bait that he so easily could have throughout this election season regarding McCain and Palin’s personal issues. He hasn’t allowed Palin’s family matters to become a staple of his speeches or his ads. He hasn’t harped on McCain’s personal lack of family values. Joe Biden took the high road, even in the debate last week by not correcting Sarah Palin when she butchered the name of the commanding officer in Afghanistan (calling him McClellan). But the McCain camp continues to be snarky and immature…when Sarah Palin corrected Joe Biden by sarcastically saying “The phrase is DRILL-BABY-DRILL” I literally wanted to throw up at how middle-school she was.

I am so sick of this immaturity, this below-the-belt crap that the McCain campaign is willing to dish out. It’s sick, it’s unpresidential, and you and I deserve more. Every day that goes by makes me more and more proud to be an Obama supporter.

06
Oct
08

Jared Bernstein Doesn’t Get McCain….Neither Do I

About a year ago, I had a memorable chat with a high-ranking Republican operative. The presidential primaries were revving up, and he asked me which Republican candidate I feared the most. Without hesitating, I answered McCain.

My rationale was simple. While he was increasingly out-of-step with the public on the war, so were all the other Republican candidates. But unlike them, McCain had repeatedly stood up to his party on matters economic, especially the Bush tax cuts, and he did so with resonant language.

In 2001, when the richest one percent of households held 18% of all income, he said he could not “in good conscience support a tax cut in which so many of the benefits go to the most fortunate among us, at the expense of middle-class Americans.”

In 2003, when we had gone through a recession, were waging an expensive war, and the federal budget had flipped from surplus to deficit, he voted against another round of tax cuts for the wealthiest, this time arguing that “At a time of war, at a time of economic stagnation, at a time of rising national debt…one might expect our national leaders to pursue policies calling for shared sacrifice to achieve shared benefits. Regrettably, that is not the case.”

The most recent data show that in 2006, 23% of all income is held by the richest 1%, the highest level on record but for one year: 1928. Spending on the war has not abated, and the budget deficit is on the rise. Middle-class Americans, who allegedly weighed so heavily on McCain’s conscience circa 2001, are much more squeezed now than they were then.

The economy is surely in recession. Financial markets are deeply screwed up, and on Friday we learned that the job market contracted by another 159,000 last month, the ninth month of consecutive job losses.

In other words, if the Bush tax cuts didn’t make sense in 2001 and 2003, they make a whole lot less sense now.

Yet McCain doesn’t merely want to extend these cuts forever. He wants to expand them dramatically, by cutting the corporate tax rate by about a third, at the cost of $735 billion over 10 years, according to the non-partisan Tax Policy Center (TPC). As Biden effectively emphasized in last week’s debate, that move delivers $4 billion in annual tax cuts to the Exxon-Mobil’s of the world.

What happened? How does McCain’s erstwhile good conscience countenance this policy? The answer, or at least the spin, was revealed to me a few weeks ago in a debate I had with his top economist, Doug Holtz-Eakin. When I pointed out that these cuts do nothing to help the middle class, while needlessly raining more wealth on the “haves,” Doug disagreed. Based on the fairy dust of supply-side, trickle-down economics, he asserted that these cuts would lead to more jobs and income for middle-class families. Contrary to McCain’s position a few years back, the campaign now frames a cut in corporate taxation as their middle-class tax cut.

(Fact check: Data from the non-partisan Congressional Budget Office show that middle class people get a mere 3% of their income from corporate sources, compared to 88% for the top fifth, and about 60% for the top 1%. In our new State of Working America, we show that an important factor driving the almost unprecedented level of inequality right now is the double whammy of a) the growth of corporate income, like dividends and capital gains, versus labor market income, i.e., earnings, and b) the increased concentration of corporate income among the richest households.)

The only way McCain can implement this fiscal policy without generating unsustainable debt levels is to cut deeply into government spending. His and Palin’s hated earmarks won’t get you there (in Palin’s case, of course, the hatred is newly founded). His promise to freeze certain aspects of discretionary government spending gets you even less savings than the earmarks. They’ll have to go after the entitlements, and since Social Security is actually a relatively small problem in this regard, for their plan to work, they have to cut the heck out of Medicare and Medicaid.

This brings you to their truly unfortunate health care plan, which I wrote about last week in this space.

So, my first point is that McCain and his team have crafted an economic plan that contradicts the candidate’s recently held fundamental views and is far out-of-touch with the needs of the country. That might not have posed a big problem except for the fact that a series of events, including the middle-class squeeze generated by stagnant incomes and rising prices, recession, and financial meltdown, have made the economy front and center in this campaign.

How did McCain end up with an economic platform, especially on taxes, that is so out of sync with his past views as expressed in the above quotes, an agenda that is anything but “mavericky.”

The answer comes from the Palin debate last week. Since Ms. Palin is a newcomer on the national scene with scant governing experience, little knowledge of the major issues, and few deeply held views, she serves as a talking head for the people behind the curtains, the staff and advisors running the campaign. When McCain spouts this stuff, he’s filtering it through years of intense experiences, as a veteran, a former POW, and member of the Senate for 26 years. With Palin, it’s unfettered, thin, talking points.

What we learn–and yes, I fully grant you that we knew this well already, but the debate was a strong reminder–is that the same neocons that wrote the Bush agenda wrote McCain’s. Despite the fact that the electorate has moved on, they can’t help themselves.

For example, they briefed Palin to spout the supply-side, anti-government, Reaganisms that are so deeply out of sync with where things are at right now. As we speak, the economy is reeling from market excesses and lax oversight, driven by an ideology that guaranteed us that unchained from its government overseers, the invisible hand would guide us to the economic promise land. Instead, it’s guided us over a cliff.

Yet, here’s how Palin reminded the audience about the true meaning of patriotism: “Patriotic is saying, government, you know, you’re not always the solution. In fact, too often you’re the problem so, government, lessen the tax burden and on our families and get out of the way and let the private sector and our families grow and thrive and prosper.”

That recipe has certainly worked wonders over the past eight years.

Palin channeled the other great neocon tactic: talk it, don’t walk it. I don’t think she mentioned “Wall St.” without the preface of “greed and corruption,” but she failed to offer one concrete proposal to address that. To the contrary, she and McCain still want to turn part of the dollars flowing into Social Security over to the stock market.

Obama, on the other hand, back in March articulated a six point plan that had it been in place, would arguably have prevented much of what’s going wrong in markets today.

The campaign’s fondest hope is, of course, that the economy would just go away so they could get back to arguing foreign policy, where polls are more favorable toward their guy. But it’s too late for that, and anyway, most people scored the first presidential debate a draw in matters of foreign affairs, as Obama effectively tied McCain to Bush’s failed Iraqi policy.

More importantly, as the election nears, the undecided voters who will decide this thing seem to be recognizing the importance of the Obama “change” mantra. Unlike myself, most people don’t have the time and interest to track the income shares of the top 1%, but for a while now, vast majorities have recognized that the country is on the wrong track, and for all its verbiage, the Obama campaign is really quite simply about getting it back of the right one.

We can have great arguments about whether his plan to end the war, his tax policies to favor the middle class while raising taxes on, and only on, the very high end, or his health care plan are, in fact, the right ones. But at this point, one of their key selling points is that they take us on a different path than the one we’re on.

That’s largely policy wonkery, I grant you, but let’s close out with some reflections on character. Lo those many months ago, when I chatted with my conservative counterpart, I feared McCain because I viewed him as having the character to stick to his convictions, many of which I disagreed with, but that’s not something you see enough of in politics these days.

He’s lost that. It started with the policy reversals discussed above, was amplified by the outright lies of the campaign, and culminated in the cynical, reckless, and politics-over-country choice of a running mate who is dangerously unprepared to step into the presidency.

At this point I really wonder: what’s in it for him? Why does McCain want to be president? Those who have followed him for years don’t recognize his agenda, his tactics, his positions (e.g., the great populist regulator!). How could a man of seemingly deep conviction morph into this caricature? His campaign is empty, with no spiritual or intellectual core; its tactics have devolved into a series of crass surprises and Hail Mary passes.

I get Obama in this regard. To get the country back on track, to reconnect middle-class living standards and growth, to rein in market fundamentalism, to rectify a series of unjust and even fatal policy choices, to restore America’s standing in the world, he seeks to implement his change agenda.

But I don’t get McCain. I hope the country doesn’t get him either.

03
Oct
08

Hillary Weighs In

Hillary Clinton issued a statement shortly after the debate praising Joe Biden’s performance:

“Tonight’s debate underscored the stark choice American families face in this election,” she said. “I’ve known Senator Biden a long time – as Americans saw tonight, he is a strong, passionate and experienced leader. Like Barack Obama, Joe Biden understands both the economic stresses here at home and the strategic challenges in Iraq, Afghanistan, and around the world.

“We saw yet again that Senator McCain and Sarah Palin will offer only more of the same failed policies of the Bush Administration. America’s hardworking Middle Class families deserve better.”




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