Saturday, June 30, 2007

Today's News 06-30-07: Cheney - Thrown Overboard by Conservatives

Lonely Cheney - Thrown Overboard by Conservatives

Matthew Blake - DavidCorn - Jun 30th, 2007
The message seemed to be, Dick, you're on your own. Good thing he has an entire branch of government to himself ...more

Bush Lapdog, Tony Blair, as Mideast Envoy - ''It's Nuts''

Robert Parry - Consortium News - Jun 30th, 2007
A former senior Israeli intelligence official confided to an old colleague a two-word comment in English: "It's nuts." ...more

Bush Administration's Contempt of Congress

John Nichols - Common Dreams - Jun 30th, 2007
Bush cannot stonewall Congressional investigations by refusing to provide documents and witnesses, while claiming nothing improper occurred ...more

The Rich Have Priced the Outdoors out of Everyone Else's Hands

Barbara Ehrenreich - AlterNet - Jun 30th, 2007
As mansions increasingly eat up the coasts and hillsides, an old saying rings true: "If a place is truly beautiful, you can't afford to be ...more

FOX News' Rupert Murdoch - Misinformation and the Journal

Paul Krugman - Rune Sentinel - Jun 29th, 2007
If there were any justice, Murdoch, who did more than anyone to mislead this country into an unjustified war, would be a discredited outcast ...more

Making Talk Radio Fair and Balanced

Bill Press - Hill's Pundits Blog - Jun 29th, 2007
For conservatives, there's only one side to every issue - and only one point of view that should ever be heard on the airwaves ...more


  
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CBS Poll: Bush Presidency is essentially over

The results, obviously, are awful news for Bush -- NYU's Paul Light said, "I think his presidency is essentially over" -- and it's just as bad for a field of Republican presidential hopefuls who are offering voters more of the same.
 
 
If there's any good news for the White House or its allies in the latest CBS News poll, it's hiding under the same rock that Cheney is.
More Americans than ever before, 77 percent, say the war is going badly, up from 66 percent just two months ago. Nearly half, 47 percent, say it's going very badly.
While the springtime surge in U.S. troops to Iraq is now complete, more Americans than ever are calling for U.S. forces to withdraw. Sixty-six percent say the number of U.S. troops in Iraq should be decreased, including 40 percent who want all U.S. troops removed. That's a 7-point increase since April.
Fewer than one in five thinks that the troop increase is helping to improve the situation in Iraq, while about half think the war is actually creating more terrorists.
The poll has bad news for President Bush, too. His job approval rating slipped to 27 percent, his lowest number ever in a CBS News poll -- 3 points less than last month and 1 point below his previous low of 28 percent in January. His disapproval rating is also at an all-time high of 65 percent.
 
 
A stunning 75 percent of respondents believe the country is headed in the wrong direction, while 19 percent think the U.S. is on the right track. It's the most lopsided response since CBS News first started asking the question in 1983.


  
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Video: Debunking the London Bomb Threat

Olbermann: Debunking the London Bomb Threat

Friday, June 29, 2007

How A GOP Congress Caused 9/11

A GOP Congress blocked a Clinton push for anti-terror legislation
CNN, July 30, 1996
Sen. Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee, emerged from the meeting and said, "These are very controversial provisions that the [Clinton] White House wants. Some they're not going to get." ....[Hatch] also said he had some problems with the president's proposals to expand wiretapping.
So Bill Clinton, rather than just breaking the law as Bush did (then again, perhaps this is why Bush broke the law - he knew from history that the Republicans controlling the congress would oppose his efforts to expand wiretapping), decided to go to the Republican congress in 1996 and ask them for increased authority to do more eavesdropping in order to stop the terrorists - stop September 11. Senior Republican Senator Orrin Hatch, one of the GOP's top picks for the Supreme Court and a GOP committee chair, objected.

The Republicans stopped President Clinton from getting all the tools he needed to stop the next September 11 - well, no, actually they opposed giving President Clinton all the tools he needed to stop the actual September 11. Could September 11 have been stopped if the GOP had given President Clinton the tools he requested to stop Osama and Mohammad Atta from killing 3,000 people in New York, Pennsylvania and Washington?

Maybe we need to ask the Republicans up for re-election why they wanted to appease the terrorists?
President Clinton urged Congress Tuesday to act swiftly in developing anti-terrorism legislation before its August recess."
We need to keep this country together right now. We need to focus on this terrorism issue," Clinton said during a White House news conference.

But while the president pushed for quick legislation, Republican lawmakers hardened their stance against some of the proposed anti-terrorism measures.
There's even an audio clip of President Clinton practically begging the Republicans to give him the tools he needed to stop Osama and the terrorists. Trent Lott said no. Orrin Hatch said no. Do these men really deserve to run the Congress during a time of war?

Sources:
CNN
1. http://www.cnn.com/US/9607/30/clinton.terrorism/
2. http://www.cnn.com/US/9607/30/clinton.terrorism/clinton.terror.wav

  
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Today's News 06-29-07: Centrists Finally Giving Up on Iraq

FOX News' Rupert Murdoch - Misinformation and the Journal

Paul Krugman - Rune Sentinel - Jun 29th, 2007
If there were any justice, Murdoch, who did more than anyone to mislead this country into an unjustified war, would be a discredited outcast ...more

Making Talk Radio Fair and Balanced

Bill Press - Hill's Pundits Blog - Jun 29th, 2007
For conservatives, there's only one side to every issue - and only one point of view that should ever be heard on the airwaves ...more

Supreme Court's Conservative Ideologues

Erwin Chemerinsky - LA Times - Jun 29th, 2007
This Supreme Court term confirmed exactly what many people had feared: testimony given by Roberts and Alito at their confirmation hearings was a lie ...more

SiCKO is Serious

Arthur Caplan, Ph.D. - MSNBC - Jun 29th, 2007
Hospitals have literally tossed patients onto the street. "Sicko" tells these stories irrefutably and grimly ...more

All al Qaedas Are Not Equal

Gal Beckerman - Columbia Journalism Review - Jun 29th, 2007
A group claiming to be part of al Qaeda doesn't mean that it is receiving marching orders from Osama. But that fact is easily forgotten ...more

Centrists Finally Giving Up on Iraq

Joe Conason - NY Obeserver - Jun 29th, 2007
Centrists in both parties have enabled the neocons in the White House by repeatedly failing to speak out about their destructive fantasies ...more


  
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Mika Brzezinski: I Will Not Do A Paris Hilton Story

Brzezinski is the daughter of former National Security Adviser Zbigniew Brzezinski, and was previously best known for her live broadcast from the collapse of the World Trade Center. Her episode with the Paris Hilton script is already featured at Wikipedia.
The following video is from MSNBC's Morning Joe.
 
Posted from Raystory.com


  
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Thursday, June 28, 2007

Today's News 06-28-07: How to End a Disastrous War

How to End a Disastrous War

EJ Dionne - Seattle Times - Jun 28th, 2007
Time is running out because most no longer believe Bush's promises that the commitment in Iraq will turn out well if only we are patient ...more

'Withdrawal of Forces from Iraq': Another Year, Another Lie

Michael Gordon - Alaska Report - Jun 28th, 2007
Don't think it's been promised before? How about June 2006, July 2005, and April of 2004. Always the same - every year, new lies ...more

Red State Welfare

Timothy Egan - Rune Sentinel - Jun 28th, 2007
Red State welfare, also known as the farm subsidy system, showers its tax dollars on the richest farmers, people with no dirt under their fingernails ...more

Michael Moore Pushes Dems On Health Care

John Nichols - Capital Times - Jun 28th, 2007
Former newspaper and magazine editor Michael Moore's "SiCKO" is a staggeringly powerful piece of journalism -- yes, journalism ...more

Next Generation of CIA Crimes Against Americans

Robert Parry - Consortium News - Jun 28th, 2007
CIA crimes committed after the period covered by the "family jewels" are worse. What has changed is that the cover-ups got more effective ...more

Why Young People Join the Military

Jorge Mariscal - Alternet - Jun 28th, 2007
The majority of young people wind up in the military for reasons ranging from economic pressure to the desire to escape a dead-end situa


  
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News and Video's That did not make our Daily Post

  • GOP presidential candidate Mitt Romney could be in trouble with the law.  It turns out that it is against Massachusetts state law to strap a dog to the roof of your car.  The crime is punishable by up to five years in prison.  (This will add to the perception by some that Romney is heartless, artificial and without conviction.)
  • There is a notable increase in the number of Iraqi lobbyists on Capitol Hill trying to impact US policy.
  • The House of Representatives has voted to give itself a $4,000 raise.
  • By a 5-4 vote, the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals ruled against reinstating conspiracy charges against Tom DeLay.  However, DeLay does still face two money-laundering charges.
  • West Coast Democrats want to investigate Dick Cheney's involvement in a 2002 water policy that lead to the deaths of more than 70,000 salmon along the Oregon-California border.  A court later ruled that the policy violated the Endangered Species Act.
  • While issuing subpoenas to uncover the Administration's warrantless wiretap program, Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman said this presidency was worse than Nixon's.  "I've never known an administration so willing to operate outside the law, even to operate against the law, in violation of the law, as this administration," Leahy added.
  • The state of Louisiana will ban cockfighting next year, due to a bill passed on Wednesday.
  • Speech writer Theodore Sorensen has published what he wants the presidential nominee to say at the Democratic Convention next summer.
  • New Hampshire Democrats (Suffolk University Poll): Clinton - 37%, Obama - 19%, John Edwards - 9%, Richardson - 9%.  The poll also finds that if Al Gore was in the race, he would beat Hillary Clinton.

John Edwards on Hardball -- one day after Elizabeth confronted Coulter.

  1. Giuliani vs The Clintons.
  2. Michael Moore discusses internet leaking of SICKO.
  3. General Batiste on the surge.  


  
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Matthews vs Coulter vs Elizabeth Edwards

 
 
Why did Matthews have Ann Coulter on just after she wished that a terrorist would kill John Edwards? Because Matthews is running a freak show disguised as a pundit program. Coulter's violent shock statements seemingly boost his ratings, or so he and his producers must think.

But Elizabeth Edwards showed grace and courage in calling into the Matthews program to politely and firmly ask Coulter to stop her vile personal attacks on Democratic political figures and their families. It's well worth watching the dignity of Elizabeth Edwards, the defensive counterattacks by Coulter, and the circus ring leader comments by Matthews.


  
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Wednesday, June 27, 2007

Today's News 06-27-07: The Enduring Lies of Ronald Reagan

Righ-Wingers Denounce 'Tin-Foil Hat' Liberals While Embracing Paranoid Conspiracy Theories

Marc McDonald - Beggars-Choosers - Jun 27th, 2007
Global warming is a liberal conspiracy. The media is a part of a liberal conspiracy. Iraq War opponents are part of a liberal conspiracy ...more

Cheney and the Constitution

Aziz Huq - The Nation - Jun 27th, 2007
If you think his abuse of power is scary now, consider what might happen when he counts Electoral College votes in a divisive 2008 election ...more

Cheney Hiding Government from the People

Bill Moyers - Jun 27th, 2007
It's not just historians and journalists Cheney wants locked out; it's Congress... and it's you, the public and your representatives ...more

The Enduring Lies of Ronald Reagan

Susan J. Douglas - In These Times - Jun 27th, 2007
While much of the neocon agenda is in tatters, certainly one of its most successful achievements has been the canonization of Reagan ...more

Poll Analysis: Bloomberg Draws Support Equally from Both Parties

Steve Kornacki - NY Observer - Jun 27th, 2007
That Michael Bloomberg is a much saner and steadier version of Ross Perot should terrify both parties, not just one of them ...more

Gitmos Across America

Editorial - New York Times - Jun 27th, 2007
Sixty-two immigrants have died since 2004 while being held in a secretive detention system, a patchwork of private prisons and local jails ...more


Elizabeth Edwards Makes Live Call To Ann Coulter: "I'm Asking You To Stop These Attacks



Tuesday, June 26, 2007

Today's Video 06-06-07: Students To Bush: STOP THE TORTURE

Students To Bush: STOP THE TORTURE

Today's News 06-26-07: Cheney's Latest Assault on Democracy

The 41 Percent Dilemma

Scott Horton - Harpers - Jun 26th, 2007
When the party line dictates the truth, we have taken a great step towards a totalitarian society. It would appear, we have taken that step ...more

Bureaucrats Saving America From Tyranny

Christopher Hayes - The Nation - Jun 26th, 2007
When lawmakers and the media failed to hold the Bush Administration to account, it fell to bureaucrats to defend the integrity of government ...more

Closing Guantanamo Prison an Easy Call

John Mashek - US News - Jun 26th, 2007
Why is this so difficult for Bush? I think we all know the answer: He defers to Cheney, the real decider ...more

Three Bad Court Rulings

Editorial - NY Times via IHT - Jun 26th, 2007
The Supreme Court hit the trifecta Monday: Three dismaying decisions by Chief Justice John Roberts' new conservative majority ...more

Cheney's Latest Assault on Democracy

Editorial - Minneapolis Star-Trib - Jun 26th, 2007
Cheney claims that he doesn't have to comply with the law because his office is not an "entity within the executive branch" ...more

Democrats Step Up .. Baby Steps

Editorial - Los Angeles Times - Jun 26th, 2007
First on gun control, now on energy, the Democrats are pushing Congress in a new direction ...more


PBS Debate Thursday - The Luntz/Giuliani Conflict

Republican pollster Frank Luntz, who PBS has announced will provide "public feedback" following coverage of the June 28 Democratic presidential forum, has shown open disdain for Democratic priorities and candidates and has reportedly been reprimanded and censured by his peers for withholding and misrepresenting polling data and methodology. In addition to leaving out these facts from its press release announcing Luntz's participation, PBS, which referred to Luntz only as a "noted pollster," made no mention of the fact that Luntz has worked for former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani, a potential general election opponent of one of the forum's participants, and has heaped praise on Giuliani this year.
 
Yesterday Media Matters for America called on PBS and the Tavis Smiley program to reconsider their decision to have the discredited Republican pollster participate in coverage of Thursday's Democratic presidential candidates' forum. With his well-documented Republican ties, history of being criticized and reprimanded by his peers and close relationship to one of the Democrats' potential general election rivals it's clear that Luntz cannot be trusted to provide objective analysis. Short of his removal he should be identified, at the very least, as a Republican pollster with close ties to Republican Presidential candidate Rudy Giuliani.
 
If you need more information please don't hesitate to contact me at your convenience.
 
Karl Frisch
Director of Media Relations
Media Matters for America
202-772-8156
 
 
Luntz -- PBS' pick to survey public response after Democratic forum -- was longtime Giuliani pollster
Summary: As Media Matters for America has noted, Republican pollster Frank Luntz, who the Public Broadcasting Service has announced will provide "public feedback" following PBS' coverage of the June 28 Democratic presidential forum, has shown open disdain for Democratic priorities and candidates and has reportedly been reprimanded and censured by his peers for withholding and misrepresenting polling data and methodology. But, in addition to leaving out these facts from its press release announcing Luntz's participation, PBS, which referred to Luntz only as a "noted pollster," made no mention of the fact that Luntz has worked for former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani, a potential general election opponent of one of the forum's participants, and has heaped praise on Giuliani this year. On the February 7 edition of PBS' Tavis Smiley, after referring to Sen. Barack Obama (D-IL) as the "[b]est communicator out there," Luntz said: "Giuliani, it's about results and success. ... [T]his is a guy who took a city that was on its knees and brought it back to its feet. You can now take your kids there. You can hang out on Times Square at 11 p.m. on a Friday night and not be afraid." Luntz concluded: "Imagine if you could do that for New York , what he could do for America "
Luntz worked for Giuliani during each of Giuliani's three previous political campaigns: his campaign for New York City mayor in 1993, re-election bid in 1997, and aborted campaign for U.S. Senate in 2000. On the second page of the introduction to his book, Words That Work: It's Not What You Say, It's What People Hear (Hyperion, January 2007), Luntz describes himself as "[t]he man who worked for Rudy Giuliani, two-time Republican mayor of a city where Democratic voters outnumbered Republicans 5-to-1 (xii)."
In his book, Luntz repeated phrases he had poll-tested in praising Giuliani. For instance, on Page 90, Luntz wrote that the polling he conducted in 2000 during Giuliani's bid for a Senate seat indicated that Giuliani's "personal story and record of accomplishment trumped his political philosophy and where he stood on the issues." Luntz then provided a "capsule biography of Rudy," which he claimed "poll-tested through the political stratosphere." After providing Giuliani's biographical information and accomplishments as mayor, the capsule read: "Today, Rudy is motivated by the same things he learned as a child ... hard work, telling it like it is, a sense of responsibility to community and country, his belief in people, and the power of faith."
During his televised guest appearances, Luntz has repeatedly described Giuliani as "someone who means what he says and says what he means" and criticized Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton (D-NY) and other Democrats:
  • On the June 20 edition of Fox News' Hannity & Colmes, Luntz said of Clinton : "[I]f she is shown to be a flip-flopper ... [t]hat will undercut her credibility immediately." He went on to say that "[w]hat the Democrats want ... is somebody who says what they mean and means what they say." Luntz predicted Clinton is "going to have a problem later on in her campaign." On the same program, Luntz falsely claimed that "[t]here's data out there that shows that the Democrats have a significant lead over the Republicans in who people want for president. But when you compare Giuliani and Hillary Clinton ... she runs behind." Co-host Alan Colmes corrected Luntz, saying: "It depends on the poll. She runs ahead in some." Indeed, several of the recent polls available at the time of Luntz's comments had Clinton either ahead or tied with Giuliani in a possible general election match-up. A June 15-17 Cook Political Report/RT Strategies poll had Clinton and Giuliani tied at 42 percent, but in a June 11-14 Gallup poll, Clinton led Giuliani 50-46 percent. In a June 8-11 NBC News/Wall Street Journal poll, Clinton was ahead of Giuliani 48-43.
  • On the June 14 edition of Hannity & Colmes, Luntz repeated the phrase, saying that "the reason why [Giuliani is] still leading right now is because the number-two attribute after someone who says what they mean and means what they say -- the number-two attribute that the American people want in a president is a leader in times of crisis." Luntz then asked: "Does that not define Rudy Giuliani?"
  • In an April 25 article, Variety reported that "Luntz predicted that [former Sen. John] Edwards [D-NC] will win Iowa but said the next president will be whoever shows authenticity, a person 'who says what he means and means what he says.' " Luntz was quoted as saying: "I pray that it is Rudy Giuliani vs. Hillary Clinton for one reason: It will be the biggest brawl in modern political history. Every guy will be rooting for Rudy. Every woman will be rooting for Hillary. Divorce lawyers will make a mint off this election. And it will be fun to watch."
  • As Media Matters noted, on the March 13 edition of Hannity & Colmes, Luntz described Giuliani as "someone who defines the phrase 'Says what he means, means what he says.' "
  • Again, on the March 2 edition of Hannity & Colmes, Luntz criticized Sen. Clinton and said that Americans "want to look you straight in the eye and they want you to say what you mean and mean what you say and not hide anything."
  • On the February 10 edition of CNBC's The Tim Russert Show, when asked to explain how "[c]redibility is as important as philosophy," Luntz said: "It means that you have to genuinely say what you mean and mean what you say." Later in the show, after suggesting Sen. John Kerry (D-MA) is a "flip-flop[per]," Luntz stated: "You want [politicians] to look you straight in the eye and absolutely say what you mean and mean what you say. It's why [Sen.] John McCain [R-AZ] is popular, it's why Rudy Giuliani is popular, and it's why Barack Obama is popular.
  • In a February 4 New York Times article, in which Luntz was identified as "Mr. Giuliani's second mayoral campaign pollster," he was quoted as saying, "No one in New York, not even Ed Koch, could equal Rudy in the phrase, 'He says what he means and means what he says.' "
  • And on the January 19 edition of MSNBC's Tucker, Luntz was asked by host Tucker Carlson, "What kind of language should Giuliani use?" Luntz replied: "First off, I'm not advising him. I worked with him in his mayoral races, but I'm not involved in the presidential." Luntz went on to say: "Rudy doesn't use sound bites. He's the only politician in America that speaks in entire thoughts. And if you look at the transcript of what he says, it's not beautiful. But if you listen to it, he moves people."
Further, in his book, Luntz wrote that "in 1993, when I was working for Rudy Giuliani in his first successful campaign for mayor of New York , I pressed for him to talk about 'public safety' rather than 'crime' and 'criminals.' " Luntz added, "[I]n the polling I did with the voters of New York , I discovered that the public placed a higher priority on 'personal and public safety' than on 'fighting crime' or even 'getting tough on criminals' " (Page 178). During interviews this year, Luntz pushed this notion of "public safety." In his February 7 interview on Tavis Smiley, speaking about what he characterized as Giuliani's accomplishments in New York City , Luntz said: "You can hang out on Times Square at 11:00 PM on a Friday night and not be afraid. New York 's a different place." Similarly, in his January 19 appearance on Tucker, in his praise for Giuliani, Luntz said: "And I've got to tell you, it's not just 9-11 that has an impact. It's what happened in Times Square ; what happened in 42nd Street ."
In a September 24, 2000, article about the 2000 New York U.S. Senate race, The New York Observer reported that while working for Giuliani, Luntz "convened focus groups in part to gauge how these various political personas were received in Mrs. Clinton's new home state." From the article:
Mayor Rudolph Giuliani, for one, was fully aware of the perils of running against Hillary the Martyr. When Mr. Giuliani was gearing up to run against Mrs. Clinton in 1999, his top advisers -- including Adam Goodman, his media adviser, and Rick Wilson, his chief strategist -- spent a year studying the First Lady's career and compiled a detailed analysis of the roles she had played in politics through the years. Frank Luntz, Mr. Giuliani's pollster, convened focus groups in part to gauge how these various political personas were received in Mrs. Clinton's new home state.
From the June 20 edition of Fox News' Hannity & Colmes:
SEAN HANNITY (co-host): Here's my question to you, though.
LUNTZ: Yeah.
HANNITY: Now, we've got -- one year ago, she said no timetables before the same group she spoke to today. Then she goes to timetables, to cutting off funding for the troops.
LUNTZ: Good points.
HANNITY: The ads that can be built around her position seem to me ideal for a Republican candidate.
LUNTZ: And for her, if she's shown to be a flip-flopper -- Hillary Clinton, a flip-flopper --
HANNITY: Hillary Clinton -- big time.
LUNTZ: -- that will undercut her credibility immediately.
COLMES: Frank --
LUNTZ: What Democrats want from somebody is somebody who says what they mean and means what they say.
HANNITY: Right.
LUNTZ: She's going to have a problem later on in her campaign.
COLMES: I keep hearing people like you come on and talk about how big her negatives are and the flip-flopping and --
LUNTZ: It's not people like me. You see it in the polling.
COLMES: -- and yet -- but time -- but her ratings keep increasing. She keeps getting a bigger lead over Barack Obama.
LUNTZ: Among the leftists --
COLMES: She keeps doing better and better as time goes on, not worse and worse.
LUNTZ: Because it's the Democratic Party. But here's what's interesting: There's data out there that shows that the Democrats have a significant lead over the Republicans in who people want for president. But when you compare Giuliani and Hillary Clinton -- actual names --
COLMES: All right, let's hear something about Giuliani.
LUNTZ: -- she runs behind.
COLMES: It depends on the poll. She runs ahead in some.
From the June 14 edition of Hannity & Colmes:
LUNTZ: I'm a language guy. I'm not going to let you drag me into that kind of policy, but I will say this again: I know something about that period. [President] Clinton had plenty of opportunities to get rid of [Osama] bin Laden, and he didn't do it.
COLMES: Well, he had [inaudible]. He didn't do it, because he couldn't do it. We've argued this many times on this show; he didn't have the opportunity to do it. Let me show you --
LUNTZ: But what did Rudy Giuliani do? He talked about leadership. The reason why he's still leading right now is because the number-two attribute after somebody who says what they mean and means what they say -- the number-two attribute that the American people want in a president is a leader in times of crisis. Does that not define Rudy Giuliani?
COLMES: No, not to me -- but now -- but some people, maybe it does. But let me show you what Fred Thompson --
LUNTZ: Most people it does.
From the March 2 edition of Hannity & Colmes:
COLMES: Where's the problem for Hillary here?
LUNTZ: The problem is that the American people want you -- as I am with you right now -- they want to look you straight in the eye and they want you to say what you mean and mean what you say and not hide anything.
This is someone who consistently -- you heard me in the program earlier this week -- praised John Edwards' language --
COLMES: Yep.
LUNTZ: -- praised Barack Obama's language.
COLMES: Yep. Hey Frank --
LUNTZ: But Hillary Clinton -- her language is inconsistent. It has always been because she's not honest with the American people about where she stands.
From the February 10 edition of CNBC's The Tim Russert Show:
TIM RUSSERT (host): Short words, short sentences: Credibility is as important as philosophy. Explain.
LUNTZ: It means that you have to genuinely say what you mean and mean what you say. Words don't work -- despite the title -- words don't work if they don't seem to reflect what people can see, what they can feel. And if you've got a politician or a CEO who's making claims that things are really good when they're not, the public will reject them.
Give you an example on the Republican side: The Republicans in 2004 tried so hard to convince the American people that the tax cuts, if they passed, were responsible for the economy -- things would have been a lot worse. The American people felt the tax cuts were justified to end wasteful Washington spending, but they did not give credit to the tax cuts for where the economy was at. And every time a Republican said it, people didn't believe it.
[...]
RUSSERT: Number 4: Consistency matters.
LUNTZ: Oh, flip-flop. This is -- just ask John Kerry what it is. The joke was: He was for and against Leave No Child Behind, for and against tax cuts, for and against the war in Iraq . If he'd been elected president, he would've been the first individual ever to be able to deliver the State of the Union address and the rebuttal the same night.
We want people who will look you straight in the eye -- and I watch politicians -- how much -- when you're interviewing them -- how much they look down, whether they have notes in front of them. You want them to look you straight in the eye and absolutely say what you mean and mean what you say. It's why John McCain is popular, it's why Rudy Giuliani is popular, and it's why Barack Obama is popular.
From the February 7 edition of PBS' Tavis Smiley:
TAVIS SMILEY (host): Right quick, gotta get some Republicans in: Giuliani.
LUNTZ: Rudy Giuliani -- it's about results and success. All you have to do with him is -- forget 9-11, that's obvious -- 42nd Street , Times Square . This is a guy who took a city that was on its knees and brought it back to its feet. You can now take your kids there. You can hang out on Times Square at 11 p.m. on a Friday night and not be afraid. New York 's a different place. Imagine if you could do that for New York , what he could do for America .
SMILEY: The new book by Dr. Frank Luntz is Words That Work. He's right about this subtitle: It's Not What You Say, It's What People Hear. Frank Luntz, as always, nice to have you here.
From the January 19 edition of MSNBC's Tucker:
CARLSON: I've been really interested to watch Rudy Giuliani's poll numbers over the past couple of months. You were the first person I ever heard say that Giuliani could be president, and it looks like you were right.
He's pretty liberal, obviously. At least his history suggests he's more liberal than your average Republican primary voter.
What kind of language should Giuliani use? What have you told him to say to primary voters in Iowa and South Carolina to convince them that he's, you know, not an abortion-loving, left-wing, Jane Fonda-protégé type?
LUNTZ: Oh, well, we -- I can tell where you stand on this issue just by the language you use. Giuliani --
CARLSON: Oh, really? Were there hints of my position in that?
LUNTZ: Who would have guessed?
First off, I'm not advising him. I worked with him in his mayoral races, but I'm not involved in the presidential.
Second is that Giuliani himself. He's one of those rare politicians where you -- when you say "Rudy," you know who he is. You don't even have to use his last name. And he's got a story that doesn't have sentences and doesn't have paragraphs, or even pages.
Rudy doesn't use sound bites. He's the only politician in America that speaks in entire thoughts. And if you look at the transcript of what he says, it's not beautiful. But if you listen to it, he moves people.
And I've got to tell you, it's not just 9-11 that has an impact. It's what happened in Times Square ; what happened in 42nd Street -- the idea that you've got the "Taxi Driver," the movie with Robert De Niro --
CARLSON: Yeah.
LUNTZ: People still have that visual of New York in mind, and when they see the way it looks like today, they're blown away.
CARLSON: The New York where you could smoke in bars and they still had big taxis?
LUNTZ: Again, we know where you stand on Rudy Giuliani.
CARLSON: I'm just kidding. Frank Luntz, thank you very much.
— R.D. & M.G.
Posted to the web on Monday June 25, 2007 at 8:06 PM EST
 
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For Updates On The Debate Visit ELECTION GEEK '08
 
Media Matters for America is a not-for-profit, 501(c)(3) progressive research and information center dedicated to comprehensively monitoring, analyzing, and correcting conservative misinformation in the U.S. media.


Monday, June 25, 2007

The Progressive Majority: Why a Conservative America Is a Myth

For anyone interested in where the American public really stands on the big issues that distinguish progressives from conservatives -- including the issues at the forefront of today's political debates -- "The Progressive Majority: Why a Conservative America Is a Myth" offers hard facts and analysis based on decades of data from some of the nation's most respected and nonpartisan public opinion researchers. This is the evidence that political leaders have a mandate to pursue bold, progressive policies.
This report by the Campaign for America's Future and Media Matters for America shows that in study after study, solid majorities of Americans take progressive stands on a full spectrum of issues, from bread-and-butter economics to the so-called "values" issues where conservatives claim preeminence.
 


Today's News 06-25-07: America isn't Conservative...We've Been Bamboozled

Progressives Have the Mojo Now

Robert L. Borosage - America's Future - Jun 25th, 2007
Progressives gathered confident that they were driving the political agenda and that they were on the verge, in fact, of taking back America ...more

Cheney: Neither Fish Nor Foul, But Galling

Editorial - Sacramento Bee - Jun 25th, 2007
It has long seemed that Vice President Dick Cheney believes that laws don't apply to him, but now it's official ...more

America's Left Moves Front and Center

EJ Dionne JR - Washington Post - Jun 25th, 2007
It's time to update our sense of where the political center lies and to adjust our view of "the left" accordingly ...more

Why Michael Moore Is Good for Your Health

Ezra Klein - American Prospect - Jun 25th, 2007
Sicko, takes aim at our broken health care system and argues that it represents a failing of America's own best principles and promise ...more

America isn't Conservative...We've Been Bamboozled

Leonard Pitts JR - Seattle Times - Jun 25th, 2007
By what con job does a nation that supports gun control, abortion rights and stem-cell research believe itself to be conservative ...more

Finally, The Neocons Are Sinking

Khody Akhavi - AlterNet - Jun 25th, 2007
As Bush flounders, the agenda of neoconservative ideologues has lost its appeal among strategic parts of the U.S. foreign policy apparatus ...more


Toon Of The Day: Civil Rights Lite

Saturday, June 23, 2007

Thursday, June 21, 2007

LIL' BUSH UNSENSORED

 





LIL' Bush Being Censored

{This video is no longer available due to a copyright claim by Viacom International Inc.}
This is the message you will get if you try to go to LIL' Bush on youtube.com.
 
Is Sumner Redstone helping Bush, from being ridiculed? 
 
Well not sooooo fast, Comedy Central has some clips on the web:
 
 
VIDEOS


Wednesday, June 20, 2007

Lil' Bush A Huge Success

To Celebrate The Huge Success of Lil' Bush, We Will Be Posting Episode Clips Every Day, Titled "Lil' Bush"
 
  Makes a Successful Leap from Amp'd Mobile to YouTube to Comedy Central

Will approval ratings for Lil' George Bush continue to climb this week?
The first real surprise of this already crowded summer television season was the success last week of Comedy Central's new animated property Lil' Bush. It turned out to be the network's highest rated series launch in three years and was second only to The Sarah Silverman Program in the 18-49 demographic. I'm guessing the primary strength of Lil' Bush was in the lower end of that demo, because it was also the most watched program on all of television among men 18-24 during primetime on Wednesday.
I mean, healthy ratings for TNT's The Closer (it's best ever), ABC Family's Kyle XY and USA Network's The 4400 and The Dead Zone were to be expected, as these are all fine shows with very loyal audiences. The success of USA's limited series Starter Wife and Lifetime's new Army Wives also comes as no surprise, given the effectiveness with which these well-produced shows were marketed to female viewers. But Lil' Bush is a cheap, crudely animated, frequently offensive little show that has been tucked away behind South Park reruns on Wednesday at 10:30 p.m. ET -- and it's looking like a contender for the summer hit list.
Lil' Bush actually began life as a series of mobisodes from Amp'd Mobile and has the distinction of being the first series to move from mobile platform to television. (The original cartoons can be seen on YouTube and elsewhere.) In addition to the title tyke, the other primary characters in the show are Lil' Condi, Lil' Rummy and Lil' Cheney, all children with the look (and, some will say, the mannerisms) of their real-life adult selves. A grown-up George H.W. Bush is also on hand (as the current president on the show) along with First Lady Barbara Bush, Lil' Jeb Bush (presented here as a total dimwit), Lil' Bill Clinton, Lil' Hillary Clinton and other characters based on familiar political leaders.
In the opening credits, which set the tone of the show, the four lil' monsters -- Bush, Condi, Rummy and Cheney -- laugh as Lil' Bush crumples up the Bill of Rights. I guess we need some scrappy political controversy somewhere on television this summer, with Rosie O'Donnell off the scene and all. The creators of Lil' Bush seem more than up to that challenge.
Comedy Central has been down this road before. Back in the early, pre-9/11 period of George Bush's presidency, the network ran a live-action misfire created by the masterminds behind its signature smash South Park titled That's My Bush, which featured a skilled star turn by Timothy Bottoms as Bush 43. And, of course, South Park has over its 10 years on the network created all kinds of controversy and made much news with some of its colorful content.
This time things are very different. President Bush's approval ratings are in the toilet, which might explain the instant popularity of Lil' Bush. But we are also at war in two countries, which makes a program that savagely mocks the commander in chief a risky move for Comedy Central or any other network at this particular juncture -- or so one might think.
How far does Lil' Bush go? Consider the two stories in tonight's show. In the first, Lil' Bush and Lil' Kim Jong-il engage in a schoolyard rivalry that could lead to nuclear annihilation. In the second, Lil' Bush and his gang are at summer camp when they discover a rival camp run by Al-Qaeda. Will they be laugh-out-loud funny? You decide.
If you missed last week's premiere, you didn't see George Bush, the president in this series, grab the television remote from Lil' Bush and Lil' Rummy after their channel surfing revealed that every network was reporting on the war in Iraq. "You kids know you aren't supposed to watch anything except Fox News," the elder Bush steamed. The rest of the press "refuse to report on any of the good stories in Iraq," he grumbled. "They focus on all of the terrible bad stuff that we're doing -- butchering people, killing civilians and funneling billions of taxpayer dollars into our friends' corporations!"
Lil' Bush and his friends then traveled to Iraq to search for good news to bring the elder Bush for Father's Day. They concluded that Iraq was "a hell hole," but were happy to stumble upon Halliburton Land, where grown men played in piles of cash and Winnie the Pooh held a pot of "munny."
"This place is fun!" Lil' Bush said to his friends. "Are you guys thinking what I'm thinking?"
"Torture!" cried a smiling Lil' Condi, Lil' Rummy and Lil' Cheney in happy unison.
At the commercial break between the two tales, Lil' Bush spoke to the audience. "Hey young viewers age 18-24. Do your part in the war on terror and watch these commercials!"
In the second story Lil' Bush and the gang saw Lil' Bill Clinton "trying to eat the Lewinsky twins" in the school lunchroom. (He was actually trying to kiss them.) Later, a sexually frustrated Barbara Bush seduced Lil' Cheney with such vigor that he disappeared deep inside her. Cheney made quite a ruckus in there, prompting Bush 41 to say to Barbara, Lil' Bush and the rest, "I never thought I'd say this, but, let's go get an abortion, gang!" Off they went to an abortion clinic, the scene of a pro-life rally at the time.
Lil' Cheney (who growls, hisses and drinks the blood of freshly killed birds) was extracted from Barbara while clinic volunteer Lil' Hillary Clinton and Lil' Condi enjoyed a tender kiss. "I'm glad everything is back to normal," a relieved George Bush sighed after the procedure. "Now let's save face with the voters and burn this place down!"
Will Lil' Bush fade away in the weeks to come, or will it continue to build an audience throughout the summer months? All that can be said at this time is that if its popularity grows controversy will surely follow. The outcry will likely be music to the ears of Comedy Central executives who, thankfully, have never been eager to play it safe.

Today's News 06-20-07

Bush Badly Botches the Mideast Conflict

John Nichols - Capital Times - Jun 20th, 2007
Bush's mishandling of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict has done more than money or guns to advance the cause of Islamic fundamentalists ...more

Republican Party's Identity Crisis

EJ Dionne - Seattle Times - Jun 20th, 2007
The new Republican Party: a disappointed, dissatisfied and inward-looking coalition that tries to hang on by playing on fears and anger ...more

Iraq Woes - Ignoring History, Risking Lives

Gregory Stanford - Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel - Jun 20th, 2007
Bush, an inattentive student, is proving the maxim that, if you don't know history, you are doomed to repeat it ...more

In Iraq, It's Game Over

John Crace - The Guardian-UK - Jun 20th, 2007
History has repeated itself, the first time as farce, the second time as tragedy, as the US has lost the Iraq war twice ...more

The Stupid Party

Kara Hopkins - American Conservative - Jun 20th, 2007
Ron Paul had committed the sin of truth—and the reaction revealed much about the party that shunned him ...more

Palestinian Incompetence, Western Hypocrisy

Rami G Khouri - International Herald Tribune - Jun 20th, 2007
Fatah's own incompetence and corruption have turned the movement into an embarrassment that is a pathetic errand boy for the U.S. ...more



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"The Playa" said he wouldn't resign as head of the RNC ("Not me Baby! Nuh-uh. Not happening. No way, no how.")

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