RKMBs
Posted By: Irwin Schwab Obama's Broken Promises - 2008-11-06 2:44 AM
In this thread we will track Obama's broken campaign promises.


First off will be the federal campaign contribution, he backed out of so he could buy the election.

Second would be his pledge not to hire any former lobbyists.

Feel free to continue to add as space and bandwidth allow.
Posted By: Irwin Schwab Re: Obama's Broken Promises - 2008-11-06 2:47 AM
Not so much a broken promise, but a noted hypocrisy:

http://omg.yahoo.com/blogs/a-line/michelle-obamas-election-night-dress/84

 Quote:
Barack looked sharp as can be in a dark navy suit, which was custom made by Hart Schaffner Marx,


He criticized Palin's prop wardrobe, yet he is wearing $2000 custom suits. That money could have well been spent on the poor. Not surprising the suit maker's name is Marx.....
Posted By: rex Re: Obama's Broken Promises - 2008-11-06 2:51 AM
I don't think rob has enough space on his server for a thread like this.
Posted By: Irwin Schwab Re: Obama's Broken Promises - 2008-11-06 2:54 AM
Rob, could you possibly set up a separate server for this thread?
Posted By: Matter-eater Man Re: Obama's Broken Promises - 2008-11-06 3:38 AM
 Originally Posted By: BASAMS The Plumber
In this thread we will track Obama's broken campaign promises.


First off will be the federal campaign contribution, he backed out of so he could buy the election.

Second would be his pledge not to hire any former lobbyists.

Feel free to continue to add as space and bandwidth allow.


Heh, I figured G-man would have been the one with this thread. Does G-man have some competition for the next 8 years?
Posted By: Irwin Schwab Re: Obama's Broken Promises - 2008-11-06 3:51 AM
Please try and stay on topic.
Posted By: Matter-eater Man BSAMS Broken - 2008-11-06 4:00 AM
 Originally Posted By: BASAMS The Plumber
Please try and stay on topic.


I'm just concerned BSAMS.
Posted By: Irwin Schwab Re: Obama's Broken Promises - 2008-11-06 4:01 AM
Let your hatred flow.
Posted By: Balloon Knot Re: Obama's Broken Promises - 2008-11-06 7:01 AM
I guess this is truly a case of something being Nigger rigged
Posted By: Franta Re: Obama's Broken Promises - 2008-11-06 9:07 AM
Heh How can you criticize someones wardrobe when you buy infomericals on seven networks?

Besides his wife should be doing something with her wardrobe instead of bitching how she has never been proud of America before!
Posted By: rex Re: Obama's Broken Promises - 2008-11-06 9:13 AM
The whole wardrobe thing was just silly. So they wanted her to look nice. Big fucking deal.
Posted By: Franta Re: Obama's Broken Promises - 2008-11-06 9:58 AM
Yeah but Michelle Obama....yeesh was she doing the classic Spiderwoman or what?!?!?!
Posted By: Steve T Re: Obama's Broken Promises - 2008-11-06 2:58 PM
I think the wardrobe thing was pretty silly, but you do leave yourself open when you run on the "small town values" ticket and then spend thousands on clothes.
On the other hand if she wore the same crappy cheap suit at every appearance.
Posted By: Franta Re: Obama's Broken Promises - 2008-11-08 11:44 AM
Shit if she would have worn her small time values clothes they would have ridiculed her


She was damned if she did and damned if she didnt.
Posted By: the G-man Re: Obama's Broken Promises - 2008-11-08 3:59 PM
 Originally Posted By: Steve T
I think the wardrobe thing was pretty silly, but you do leave yourself open when you run on the "small town values" ticket and then spend thousands on clothes.


As opposed to running on "protecting the working class" and spending thousands on a set with Greek columns to give a speech on?

The fact of the matter is that campaigns spend a shitload of money on image because that's how a modern campaign is run. Both sides need to do it.

The thing that burns so many of us on the GOP side is that only the republicans get shit for it from the center-left press, when in fact both sides do the same thing.
Posted By: Irwin Schwab Re: Obama's Broken Promises - 2008-11-08 9:32 PM
http://elections.foxnews.com/2008/11/08/...rtual-fortress/

 Quote:
President-elect Barack Obama's Chicago neighborhood has become a very different place to live now that Secret Service agents have turned the once easy-going area into a virtual fortress to protect the next president, The Times of London reported.




Assassination fears surrounding Obama, codenamed "Renegade" by his security on the campaign trail, mean that he may become the most heavily guarded president in history. After months of shaking hands with strangers, the President-elect delivered his victory speech from behind bulletproof glass in Chicago's Grant Park.




Streets around his mock-Georgian mansion in enclave by the University of Chicago have been closed. The main thoroughfare has been shut down because it passes his yard.




Visitors to the synagogue that faces his house must put their names on a list 24 hours before they attend so that their identities can be checked.



The hypocrisy of this man never ends. He is anti-gun, yet he doesn't mind his neighborhood being flooded with automatic weapons when they are for HIS protection.
Posted By: Irwin Schwab Re: Obama's Broken Promises - 2008-11-08 9:33 PM
100 bucks says that even though visitors to the synagogue have to register, visitors to his neighbor Louis Farrakhan do not.
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20081111/ap_o...eKxRiyJSxKpg9IF

 Quote:
WASHINGTON – Aides to President-elect Obama, who said lobbyists would not work in his White House, said Tuesday that lobbyists could serve in his transition so long as their activities do not involve areas of policy they have tried to influence in the past year.

John Podesta, a top transition aide, said federal lobbyists will be prohibited from any lobbying while they are at work on the transition.

The transition office said in a statement, "if someone has lobbied in the last 12 months, they are prohibited from working in the fields of policy on which they lobbied."

Podesta called the guidelines the toughest ever imposed by a presidential transition. But they seem to give lobbyists more leeway than Obama suggested they would have when he campaigned for the presidency.

"I have done more to take on lobbyists than any other candidate in this race," Obama said in speech last November in Spartanburg, S.C. "I don't take a dime of their money, and when I am president, they won't find a job in my White House."




whoopsy!
Best thread ever!
Posted By: Wonder Boy Re: Obama's Broken Promises - 2008-11-12 10:47 PM
 Originally Posted By: Matter-eater Man
 Originally Posted By: BASAMS The Plumber
In this thread we will track Obama's broken campaign promises.


First off will be the federal campaign contribution, he backed out of so he could buy the election.

Second would be his pledge not to hire any former lobbyists.

Feel free to continue to add as space and bandwidth allow.


Heh, I figured G-man would have been the one with this thread. Does G-man have some competition for the next 8 years?



I guess I'm behind the times, because last I looked, you were disgusted that Hillary was passed over for Obama, and planned to vote for McCain. I didn't see thew point where you moved to the Obama bandwagon.

I wonder what made you switch?

On topic, for openers, Obama promised to "govern from the middle", and then picked ultra-partisan Rham Emmanuel, who is both a partisan S.O.B. leftie, as well as being a former staffer of the Clinton administration. Obama said (back on April 1st in a YouTubed stump speech) that Hillary was "too tainted" to have a place in his white house, but now appoints one of the most vicious Clinton infighters as his chief of staff.

Obama also criticised the distance Bush kept from the media, and then at Obama's first press conference after the election on November 5th, he refused to take any questions from Fox News or the Washington Times, taking questions only from the softball glowingly pro-Obama media.

More hypocrisy to come, I'm sure. And plenty to cite still from the previous 21 months of his campaign.
Posted By: rex Re: Obama's Broken Promises - 2008-11-12 10:48 PM
 Originally Posted By: Wonder Boy

More hypocrisy to come,



Don't threaten us with more posts.
Posted By: Irwin Schwab Ayers and Obama were friends - 2008-11-14 4:45 AM
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20081114/ap_on_el_pr/obama_ayers_4;_ylt=AvaolRCzwPKL_nN.IbEh68gb.3QA

 Quote:
Bill Ayers, the Vietnam War-era radical who was a campaign headache for Barack Obama, says in a new afterword to his memoir that the two were neighbors and family friends. Ayers' reflections appear in a new paperback release of his 2001 memoir, "Fugitive Days." The Associated Press obtained a copy of the new afterword Thursday.

"In 2008 there was a lot of chatter on the blogosphere about my relationship with Barack Obama: we had served together on the board of a foundation, knew one another as neighbors and family friends" Ayers writes.



whoopsy!
http://elections.foxnews.com/2008/11/14/obama-names-valerie-jarrett-white-house-senior-adviser/

 Quote:
President-elect Barack Obama is naming his longtime friend and supporter Valerie Jarrett to be his White House senior adviser.

Jarrett, who hired Michelle Obama for a job in the Chicago mayor's office years ago, is one of the president-elect's closest friends and advisers. Her name has been floated for several top administration jobs. But Obama settled on the senior adviser role, said a person close to the president-elect and willing to speak only on background because the decision has not been officially announced.

A White House senior adviser can handle a range of duties. President George W. Bush's top political aide Karl Rove held the title in the current administration.

Jarrett has a background in real estate and politics in Chicago.


Change we can believe in!
Posted By: the G-man Obama: Change Takes a Lot Time - 2008-11-15 6:01 PM
Obama's new slogan?
  • "I'm going to be really patient with him. Change takes a lot of time," said Hannah Gold, 21, a junior studying political science at Hunter College.

And:
  • Those of us who have lived a few years know that real change takes a lot of time to effect in a massive nation the size of the USA. And even longer to manifest itself.

I have a feeling that that "Change takes a lot of time" is going to be a common expression over the next four years...especially among the people who mocked President Bush for failing to turn Iraq into a modern democracy overnight.

 Originally Posted By: the G-man of Zur-En-Arrh
I went out tonight and ran into a group of friends who are Obama supporters and, sure enough, the hive mind was already droning on about how "Bush made things so bad it will take Obama eight years at least to fix it."

The guy hasn't been sworn in yet and they are already making excuses for him.


Maybe instead of "Change You Can believe in" his slogan should be "change you can only imagine...because of BUSH"
http://edition.cnn.com/2008/POLITICS/11/19/transition.wrap/

 Quote:
President-elect Barack Obama has chosen former Sen. Tom Daschle to be Secretary of Health and Human Services, and the former Senate majority leader has indicated he wants the job, three sources close to the transition told CNN Wednesday.

The sources said that Daschle negotiated that he will also serve as the White House health "czar," or point person, so that he will report directly to the incoming president.

By wearing two hats, Daschle -- not White House staffers -- will be writing the health care plan that Obama submits to Congress next year.

The sources said the precise timing of the announcement has not been worked out, but Daschle is likely to officially join the Obama transition team as the lead adviser on health issues in the next few weeks. VideoWatch: Ed Henry discusses the Daschle pick »

An Obama transition official would not comment.

Daschle is currently billed as a "special public policy adviser" in the Washington office of the lobbying firm Alston Bird, though he is technically not a federally registered lobbyist.

But his wife, Linda Daschle, is a registered lobbyist at the powerful firm Baker Donelson, which does have some clients in health-related fields.


Change we can believe in!
http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20081123/pl_nm/us_usa_obama_taxes

 Quote:
WASHINGTON (Reuters) – President-elect Barack Obama may consider delaying a campaign promise - to roll back tax cuts on high-income Americans - as part of his economic recovery strategy, two aides said on Sunday.

David Axelrod, the Obama campaign strategist who was chosen to be a senior White House adviser, was asked if the tax cuts could be allowed to expire on schedule after tax year 2010 rather than being rolled back by legislation earlier. "Those considerations will be made," he said on "Fox News Sunday."

Bill Daley, an adviser to Obama and commerce secretary under former President Bill Clinton, said on NBC's "Meet the Press" that the 2010 scenario "looks more likely than not."

President George W. Bush's tax cuts are set to expire at the end of 2010. After that they would revert to 2001 levels, when the top individual tax rate was 39.6 percent.

Obama has called for reducing taxes for the middle class, but requiring the wealthiest Americans to pay more than the current top rate of 35 percent.

His aides' comments suggest Obama may be wary of imposing any additional tax burden at a time of deep crisis, despite the outlook for record budget deficits and mounting national debt.


I like this Obama guys thinking. If we increase taxes on our companies it will slow economic growth. We need economic growth, not increasing taxes on business which will decrease their spending. Why could John McCain, and George Bush not understand this? This trickle down idea of Obama's is just the change we need!
Interesting. Obama has "refined" his original promise to "create" 2.5 million jobs and now promises to create "or save" them.

This is, of course, an important distinction. Whether or not his plan created jobs is a much more measurable goal than saving them. In fact, except for government positions, there's really no way to show that any economic plan "saved" even a single job.
His people are political geniuses. They'll take the worst case estimates for job losses during this recession and when it is over deduct the difference from worst case to what was actually lost and claim they saved x-amount of jobs. It's brilliant in that they know the press will not challenge the idiocy of the claim.
Posted By: Irwin Schwab Latinos unhappy with Obama picks - 2008-12-01 1:47 AM
http://news.yahoo.com/s/politico/20081130/pl_politico/15967;_ylt=AsF3CA.7LtqjMmOYr182mZes0NUE

 Quote:
If there is one message President-elect Barack Obama’s transition team has broadcast about Cabinet picks, it is that ethnicity and gender will not be the first considerations when filling the slots.

Credentials over tokenism, after all, was a fundamental principle of Obama’s presidential campaign that highlighted his ideas and community values over his African-American background. Still, if all goes as planned, Cabinet members with hefty résumés will present a picture of diversity.

Hispanic political leaders agree. Their expectations for seats at the president’s top policy table are not about meeting quotas but about advancing the reality that within this fastest-growing ethnic group are seasoned policy experts who understand the economic, foreign and domestic policy concerns shared by everyone.

Obama promised hope and change, and Hispanics hoped for the usual two Latinos in the Cabinet. And heck, why not three or four? Now that would be a change.

But at this early stage in the appointments process, there is a trickle of disappointment running through the Latino community.

First, the most prominent Hispanic leader, New Mexico Gov. Bill Richardson, lost the plum secretary of state assignment to New York Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton. Last spring, Richardson angered the Clintonistas by backing Obama over Clinton during the heated Democratic Primary contest, only to now see her being offered the top diplomatic post.

“There’s nobody more prepared and experienced” for the job than Richardson, said Arturo Vargas, executive director of the National Association of Latino Elected and Appointed Officials. Richardson was energy secretary and ambassador to the United Nations during the Clinton administration, and he helped free hostages in North Korea, Iraq and Cuba.

Second, grass-roots immigrant rights activists have mixed feelings about Arizona Gov. Janet Napolitano being the likely nominee to head the Department of Homeland Security.

Arizona is the epicenter of the national immigration crisis, and Napolitano, the popular border state governor, has navigated through turbulent rhetoric on all sides to calm the debate.

Napolitano signed into law last year the nation’s harshest penalties against employers who hire undocumented workers. While the law is being challenged in court, Napolitano has signed revisions that include protections for businesses that show good-faith efforts to follow the rules.

Some immigration advocates think she went too far to the right because of her political need to placate Arizona’s conservative voters.

“Several of us have not forgotten that she was the first to call for the National Guard along the border and called it ‘an emergency,’ and was sending the message that she might be appealing to the more conservative element who wanted to shut down the border,” said Jose Rodriguez, the county attorney in El Paso, Texas.

At the same time, Napolitano is lauded for opposing construction of a border fence and blocking bills that would require local police to arrest illegal immigrants. In an Obama administration, she would have the credibility to negotiate an immigration bill that is tough on employers, enforces border security and includes a compassionate legalization program of those now in the country illegally.

“She’s been very effective at balancing between toughness and fairness,” said Ali Noorani, executive director of the National Immigration Forum. “She thinks about her decisions, but then she does not leave them aside. She does not forget about them.”

Generally, Latinos would have been ecstatic if Obama had included a Hispanic in the early top-level announcements that have included African-Americans and women along with white men.

The first major Hispanic appointment finally emerged on Wednesday, when Cecilia Muñoz, senior vice president of National Council of La Raza, was picked to be the new administration’s Intergovernmental Affairs director. Muñoz is a national Hispanic leader who in recent years has been a driving force in the push for comprehensive immigration reform.

And what might have seemed like bad news is not so bad after all.

Though Richardson did not get the position at State, he is set to be nominated as commerce secretary, a post that will be vital to the growth of Latino political empowerment. The Commerce Department will oversee the 2010 Census, which will be used to draw government districts from the federal to local levels. The Census also determines the distribution of about $300 billion in federal funds each year.

At Commerce, Richardson would be at the forefront of economic issues including international trade and business development and would have a hand in immigration discussions.

Business, civil rights and immigrants rights leaders are urging the incoming Obama administration to include an overhaul of the immigration system as part of the economic recovery strategy.

An aggressive economic development program along the U.S.-Mexico border would offer a “long-term solution to migratory pressures,” according to a recent study by the U.S.-Mexico Border and Immigration Task Force made up of religious, community and law enforcement leaders in Arizona, New Mexico and Texas.

With several more Cabinet-level seats still to be filled, Latinos see Obama’s team seriously considering long lists of Hispanics.

At the Department of Housing and Urban Development, which will be neck deep in fixing the housing financial meltdown, numerous Hispanics are being considered, including Miami Mayor Manny Diaz; Adolfo Carrion Jr., the Bronx Borough president who also leads NALEO; and Saul N. Ramirez Jr., a former deputy housing secretary during the Clinton years and a former mayor of Laredo, Texas.

The Obama transition team also has been searching for a Hispanic to head any of three departments: Interior, Agriculture and Transportation. Rep. Raul M. Grijalva (D-Ariz.), the chairman of the House National Parks, Forests and Public Lands Subcommittee, has been being mentioned as candidate for Interior.

Post-election talk had mentioned a couple of Latinas to head the Labor or Education departments. Though it now seems less likely, NALEO’s Vargas encouraged their consideration. “It would be an important symbol to name a Latina to the Cabinet,” he said. There are Latinas “who are fully capable of running the Department of Education, for example.”

Besides being a growing segment of the population. Election Day exit polls showed that 67 percent of Hispanics voted for Obama and were the deciding factor for his wins in at least two battleground states.

Hispanics belong at Obama’s policy table.

Appointment to the highest levels of government “does not have to be about minority representation. It’s what you expect because of the way that [Obama] won and because of the way he wants to govern the country,” said Janet Murguia, president of the National Council of La Raza.


¡Cambíenos puede creer adentro!
Posted By: Mopius Re: Latinos unhappy with Obama picks - 2008-12-03 6:15 AM
Posted By: Irwin Schwab Re: Latinos unhappy with Obama picks - 2008-12-03 7:11 AM
That was 3 days ago Snarf.
Posted By: the G-man Re: Obama broken promises - 2008-12-03 8:02 AM
Obama Ditches Crude Tax: Now that oil hit $50 a barrel, president-elect turns back from campaign plan to use revenue from windfall profits tax to fund a rebate for middle class struggling with energy prices
Posted By: Tony Clifton Re: Obama broken promises - 2008-12-03 8:05 AM
This Obama character is so stupid he couldn't pour piss out of a boot if the instructions were written on the heel.
Posted By: Pariah Re: Obama broken promises - 2008-12-03 9:55 AM
 Originally Posted By: the G-man of Zur-En-Arrh
Obama Ditches Crude Tax: Now that oil hit $50 a barrel, president-elect turns back from campaign plan to use revenue from windfall profits tax to fund a rebate for middle class struggling with energy prices


So much for the democrat idea that the oil companies were just hoarding oil and swindling everyone out of their money.
Posted By: the G-man Obama Team's Secret Meetings with Lobbyists - 2008-12-08 5:47 PM
REACH OUT AND TOUCH SOMEONE
  • For all the talk about an Obama transition team not using Washington lobbyists for assistance, there sure are a lot of private meetings being held with Washington corporate lobbyists at Obama transition offices around the nation's capital.

    According to Obama transition insiders, senior Obama staff have held or have scheduled meetings with lobbyists from the telecom, health-care, pharmaceutical, energy, and automotive industries, asking for their input into stimulus packages and for their assistance in lobbying the House and the Senate for tax credits and line item funding items for appropriations and budget items to be placed in legislation that may come before Congress before the Obama Administration takes office.

    "We ran against companies like that throughout the campaign, and now we're getting in bed with them. It stinks, and we want it to end," says the source.
whoopsy!

no wonder whomod went into hiding!
Obama's more than a month away from being inaugurated, and he already has his first major scandal, that could destroy his presidency before it even begins.



"Culture of corruption", anyone?

The only difference between Obama's crew and that of the Bush administration is that Obama now has the largest donors coming to him for taxpayer-funded favors.
Including Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, and Wall Street. Not to mention MoveOn.org and ACORN.
WB did you see my Jeremy is a cockstealer thread? Please be careful.
 Originally Posted By: Im Not Mister Mxyzptlk
WB did you see my Jeremy is a cockstealer thread? Please be careful.


Jeremy is a cockstealer topic



Thanks for the warning !
I don't know what makes you so dumb but it really works!
 Originally Posted By: the G-man of Zur-En-Arrh
REACH OUT AND TOUCH SOMEONE
  • For all the talk about an Obama transition team not using Washington lobbyists for assistance, there sure are a lot of private meetings being held with Washington corporate lobbyists at Obama transition offices around the nation's capital.

    According to Obama transition insiders, senior Obama staff have held or have scheduled meetings with lobbyists from the telecom, health-care, pharmaceutical, energy, and automotive industries, asking for their input into stimulus packages and for their assistance in lobbying the House and the Senate for tax credits and line item funding items for appropriations and budget items to be placed in legislation that may come before Congress before the Obama Administration takes office.

    "We ran against companies like that throughout the campaign, and now we're getting in bed with them. It stinks, and we want it to end," says the source.


The Sin of Lobbying Washes Away After Two Years
  • So it seemed the Obama administration was going to have clear rules on lobbyists working in the administration:

    On Sunday on ABC’s “This Week,” Obama’s chief campaign strategist, David Axelrod, explained the role of lobbyists in an Obama administration this way:

    “No one who's an active lobbyist, no one who's been lobbying on issues for the last two years related to their industries is going to come into our administration and work on those.”

    Following up, host George Stephanopoulos asked, “"So, that means that if you worked in the energy industry, you're not going to be able to get a job at the Department of Energy?"

    And Axelrod replied, "If you were a lobbyist in the last couple of years, that's exactly right."

    Eric Holder, the nominee for Attorney General, skirts the rules set out by Axelrod. He registered as a lobbyist from 2002 to 2004. Will Global Crossing ever run across the Department of Justice in the next four years? Well, Holder lobbied for them, but it's outside the two year window, so apparently it's okay.

    Holder is still at the firm where he did the lobbying, Covington & Burling LLP, but is apparently no longer a registered lobbyist. But a list of the firm's clients include some giants, who seem near-certain to be affected by Justice Department decisions in one way or another over the next four years. Will Holder recuse himself from decisions that affect Microsoft, Johnson and Johnson, Shell Oil, the Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America (PhRMA), Yahoo, Bank of America, the Ford Foundation, Goodyear Tire, and the Governments of Singapore and the United Arab Emirates?

    Will the argument from the Obama camp really be that there is no potential conflict of interest in a law enforcement official making decisions about clients of his former employer?

    Everybody, all together now: "All statements from Barack Obama come with an expiration date. All of them."
American Spectator:
  • Despite denials from her soon-to-be former employers, the Albright Group, former Clinton EPA head and soon-to-be climate change czar Carol Browner served as a de facto lobbyist for Dubai Ports World, owned by the United Arab Emirate of Dubai, which arranged to buy a company operating six major U.S. ports, including New York and New Jersey.

    Browner told the Obama transition team that she never served as a lobbyist in her time in Washington, and her employer, the Albright Group, owned by former secretary of state Madeleine Albright, also said that the firm does not lobby. But in 2006, when the Dubai Ports deal set off a political firestorm, it was Browner taking her clients from Senate office to Senate office looking to build support for the deal.

    "She can call what she does whatever she wants, but she was clearly lobbying my boss on the issue," says a Democrat Senate aide
http://www.suntimes.com/news/sweet/1352924,CST-NWS-sweet29.article

 Quote:
WASHINGTON -- The Obama team, pledging the ''most open and transparent transition in history,'' gets an ''A'' for disclosing donors to the Jan. 20 inauguration and a ''F'' when it comes to revealing transition meetings with groups. Contrary to its own ''seat at the table transparency policy,'' meetings are not posted on a Web site.

During the presidential primary campaign, then candidate Obama, still an Illinois senator, made a pledge I heard for the first time on Oct. 24, 2007. In a school gym in Dover, N.H., Obama said if president, he would post his meetings on the Internet. That was interesting to me because Obama's Senate staff had been very selective about what Obama Senate-related meetings they disclosed and seemed to be guided by a ''less is best'' policy.

A month after the election, on Dec. 5, John Podesta, a transition co-chair, issued an Obama transparency policy. When it comes to meetings, ''the date and organizations represented at official meetings in the Transition headquarters or agency offices'' would be ''posted on our Web site,'' at http://www.change.gov.

Indeed, the ''seat at the table'' section states ''on this page, you can track these meetings, view documents provided to the Transition and leave comments for the team,'' but the statement is only partly true.

What is posted are materials -- for example, briefing or position papers -- submitted by groups in connection with a transition meeting. There is no list of meetings on the site, with a meeting defined in the policy as having three or more participants.

Transition spokesman Nick Shapiro, asked why the meetings are not posted despite the policy, said, ''This policy is part of President-elect Obama's commitment to run the most open and transparent transition in history. The transition staff has been instructed that this is a floor and not a ceiling. No transition has ever attempted to implement such disclosure requirements, and as we continue to evaluate the policy, refinements will be made to it."


sorry promod!
Posted By: Irwin Schwab Recession not GW's Fault - 2009-01-03 8:12 PM
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20090103/ap_on_go_pr_wh/obama

 Quote:
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., and Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., are to receive details on Monday. Obama plans meetings next week with other congressional leaders — including Republican members whose support he will need — and made an effort not to blame his predecessor, the unpopular President George W. Bush.

"However we got here, the problems we face today are not Democratic problems or Republican problems," Obama said. "The dreams of putting a child through college, or staying in your home, or retiring with dignity and security know no boundaries of party or ideology. ... I am optimistic that if we come together to seek solutions that advance not the interests of any party, or the agenda of any one group, but the aspirations of all Americans, then we will meet the challenges of our time just as previous generations have met the challenges of theirs."



I could have sworn they were Republican problems, specifically GW Bush, who John McCain was the evil twin of? WTF is going on here? Please don;t tell me I was lied to! Did big oil get to Obama?!?!?!?!
Posted By: Irwin Schwab Obama picks lobbyist as Pentagon No. 2 - 2009-01-09 5:07 AM
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20090109/ap_on_go_ca_st_pe/obama_defense

 Quote:
WASHINGTON – President-elect Barack Obama appointed a defense contractor's lobbyist Thursday to become the No. 2 official at the Defense Department, acknowledging that his choice appeared to break with his self-imposed rules to keep lobbyists at arm's length.

William J. Lynn III, Obama's choice for deputy defense secretary, is a former Pentagon official who now is senior vice president for government operations at Raytheon Co. Lynn hasn't been a registered lobbyist since July, meaning he can't personally lobby Congress or the White House. In the first three months of 2008, his lobbying team reported spending $1.15 million to influence issues including missiles, sensors and radar, advanced technology programs and intelligence funding.

Obama has vowed that no political appointees in his administration would be permitted to work on areas that "directly and substantially related to their prior employer for two years." His transition team, which voluntarily disclosed Lynn's lobbying activities, said Lynn's talents made him worth the apparent exception to the spirit of Obama's anti-lobbyists policy. It said it will work with Lynn to maintain Obama's high ethics standards.

Some government watchdogs questioned the revolving-door aspect of Lynn's appointment even while acknowledging his qualifications.

"He left public service and went into lobbying for one of the largest defense contractors in the nation. And that's the part that's troubling," said Bill Buzenberg, executive director of the Center for Public Integrity. "Even if he's completely above board and ethical, it raises questions about his loyalty."

During his presidential campaign, Obama took pains to tell voters he wouldn't tolerate influence-peddling.

"I am in this race to tell the corporate lobbyists that their days of setting the agenda in Washington are over," Obama said in November 2007 in Des Moines, Iowa. "I have done more than any other candidate in this race to take on lobbyists and won. They have not funded my campaign, they will not run my White House, and they will not drown out the voices of the American people when I am president."

It will be difficult for Lynn to avoid defense issues related to Raytheon, said James Thurber, who teaches lobbying at American University.

"I think it's impossible in our system not to have people that have been in the advocacy system," he said. "They're the people who know the issues and have the expertise." The key is for the administration to disclose those connections and avoid financial conflicts, he said.

Under Obama's rules, political appointees also would be precluded from lobbying the executive branch after leaving government service during the remainder of the administration.

Lynn has been an officer with Waltham, Mass.-based Raytheon since 2005.

The company, with 2007 sales of $21.3 billion, specializes in worldwide defense and homeland security-related sales.

Sen. Jack Reed, D-R.I., a member of the Senate Armed Services Committee, said Obama's picks were "strong leaders who have shown strategic vision and pragmatism."

Reed said Lynn in particular brought "a great deal of wisdom and experience to the table."



;\) of course he does!
Posted By: the G-man Re: Obama picks lobbyist as Pentagon No. 2 - 2009-01-09 5:54 AM
It's okay. It may look like Obama broke a promise. However, I'm sure that the president-elect's attorney will soon issue a report showing that he did no such thing.
I think if the Democratic Senator from Rhode Island vouches for him, it should be good enough for America.
Posted By: the G-man Re: Obama Broken Promises - 2009-01-09 8:26 PM
Obama and Hamas.
Posted By: the G-man Obama Broken Promises: Bin Laden - 2009-01-16 12:16 AM
Barack Obama, Democratic National Convention speech, Aug. 28, 2008:
  • "When John McCain said we could just 'muddle through' in Afghanistan, I argued for more resources and more troops to finish the fight against the terrorists who actually attacked us on 9/11, and made clear that we must take out Osama bin Laden and his lieutenants if we have them in our sights. John McCain likes to say that he'll follow bin Laden to the gates of hell--but he won't even go to the cave where he lives."

Barack Obama, CBS News interview, Jan. 14, 2009:
  • "I think that we have to so weaken his infrastructure that, whether he is technically alive or not, he is so pinned down that he cannot function. My preference obviously would be to capture or kill him. But if we have so tightened the noose that he's in a cave somewhere and can't even communicate with his operatives, then we will meet our goal of protecting America."
Posted By: Irwin Schwab Re: Obama Broken Promises: Bin Laden - 2009-01-16 12:51 AM
dammit g-man that was over 5 months ago, the world has changed so much!
Posted By: the G-man Re: Obama Broken Promises: Bin Laden - 2009-01-16 12:53 AM
Yeah, we have an attorney-general designee who thinks it is a good idea to pardon terrorists.
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20090117/ap_on_go_pr_wh/inauguration_spending

 Quote:
WASHINGTON – Unemployment is up. The stock market is down. Let's party.

The price tag for President-elect Barack Obama's inauguration gala is expected to break records, with some estimates reaching as high as $150 million. Despite the bleak economy, however, Democrats who called on President George W. Bush to be frugal four years ago are issuing no such demands now that an inaugural weekend of rock concerts and star-studded parties has begun.

Obama's inaugural committee has raised more than $41 million to cover events ranging from a Philadelphia-to-Washington train ride to a megastar concert with Beyonce, U2 and Bruce Springsteen to 10 official inaugural balls. Add to that the massive costs of security and transportation — costs absorbed by U.S. taxpayers — and the historic inauguration will produce an equally historic bill.

In 2005, Reps. Anthony Weiner, D-N.Y., and Jim McDermott, D-Wash., asked Bush to show a little less pomp and be a little more circumspect at his party.

"President Roosevelt held his 1945 inaugural at the White House, making a short speech and serving guests cold chicken salad and plain pound cake," the two lawmakers wrote in a letter. "During World War I, President Wilson did not have any parties at his 1917 inaugural, saying that such festivities would be undignified."

The thinking was that, with the nation at war, excessive celebration was inappropriate. Four years later, the nation is still at war. Unemployment has risen sharply. And Obama pressed Congress to release the second half of a $700 billion bailout package in hopes of rescuing a faltering banking industry.

Obama's inauguration committee says it is mindful of the times and is not worried people will see the four days of festivities as excessive.
http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2009/01/...titlement-cuts/

 Quote:
WASHINGTON -- House Speaker Nancy Pelosi appears to differ from Barack Obama on at least two issues -- rolling back tax cuts for the wealthy and investigating the Bush administration.

But the two Democrats agree on the need to address the soaring cost of entitlements such as Social Security and Medicare -- the programs that provide retirement benefits and health insurance primarily for the nation's growing senior population.

Pelosi, who as speaker is the top figure in the House leadership, said Sunday she wants Congress to consider repealing President Bush's tax cuts on those who make more than $250,000 well before they expire at the end of 2010. Obama had promised to repeal the tax cuts as well during the presidential campaign, but he has since backed off that pledge, signaling he would be willing to simply let them expire.

"We had campaigned in saying what the Republican Congressional Budget Office told us: Nothing contributed more to the budget deficit than the tax cuts for the wealthiest people in America," Pelosi said in an interview broadcast Sunday.

The California Democrat is pushing the president-elect to make good on a campaign promise that attracted some of the harshest criticism during the election -- that Obama is a typical tax-and-spend Democrat who would raise taxes once in office.

Obama has fought that label, emphasizing that any tax increase would be directed at those making more than $250,000. However, since the election, Obama has been reluctant even to raise taxes on people making that much.

Lawrence Summers, Obama's choice for director of the National Economic Council, signaled again Sunday that repealing the Bush tax cuts would not be a priority.

"Our overall focus is going to be on increasing spending," Summers said in a broadcast interview. "Beyond that, there's going to be a substantial tax cut for the American people."

Obama's aides worked with House Democrats to craft their version of an economic stimulus package. The package, unveiled last week, includes $550 billion in government spending and $275 billion in tax cuts. It would leave the Bush tax cuts in place.

Pelosi said she won't use the stimulus bill to address tax cuts. But she also said: "I don't want them to wait two years to expire. Because they have to prove their worth to me as to how they grow the economy, how they create jobs."

Republicans disputed the House speaker's assertion about tax cuts and the deficit.

"There is no CBO report that says tax cuts for the wealthiest are the biggest contributor to the deficit," said Don Stewart, spokesman for Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky. "Though we agree that Congress must carefully pursue ways to strengthen our economy, raising taxes won't grow jobs."

Pelosi and Obama appear to be on the same page when it comes to entitlements such as Social Security and Medicare. Obama announced last week that he would convene a "fiscal responsibility summit" in February to focus on long-term problems with the economy and the skyrocketing costs of benefit programs such as Social Security and Medicare.

"I support what he wants to do, to have a summit of that kind," Pelosi said Sunday. "We will have our own initiatives in the Congress to work with him on that."

Pelosi said everything should be on the table, including benefit cuts.

"The only thing we didn't want to put on the table is eliminating Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid," she said.

Pelosi appeared on "FOX News Sunday." Summers was interviewed on CBS' "Face the Nation."


It's nice to see McCain's stance that Obama's policies would lead to a cut in Social Security benefits has been proven so fast. MEM, I'm sorry you had to see this.
 Originally Posted By: BASAMS The Plumber
...

It's nice to see McCain's stance that Obama's policies would lead to a cut in Social Security benefits has been proven so fast. MEM, I'm sorry you had to see this.


It's a wee bit early to be saying proven. Pelosi says cuts in benefits are on the table. That isn't a cut. I will say though that just her bringing up that benefit cuts would be on the table is a big deal. Pelosi is probably going to be hearing about that one.
Facts are facts, McCain lost the election because he was honest, Obama won because times were tough and people wanted to buy a pipe dream.

More Obama hypocrisy:

http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20090119/pl_nm/us_usa_obama_race

  • OBAMA SEES RACE AS AN OPPORTUNITY: Says His Administration Will Open A New Chapter in Race Relations

    Mon Jan 19, 9:29 am ET
    WASHINGTON (Reuters) – U.S. President-elect Barack Obama, who avoided calling attention to race during the campaign, sees his race as an opportunity to bridge differences, The Washington Post reported on Monday.

    Obama spoke in an interview last week about how his racial identity can unify and transform the United States, the newspaper said.

    The son of a black Kenyan father and a white mother from Kansas, Obama will be inaugurated on Tuesday as the 44th U.S. president, and the first one to be an African American.

    "There is an entire generation that will grow up taking for granted that the highest office in the land is filled by an African American," Obama said in the interview.

    "I mean, that's a radical thing. It changes how black children look at themselves. It also changes how white children look at black children. And I wouldn't underestimate the force of that," Obama told the Post.

    Beyond the historic symbolism of his inauguration, Obama hopes to use his presidency as an example of how people can bridge differences, the Post reported.

    "What I hope to model is a way of interacting with people who aren't like you and don't agree with you that changes the temper of our politics," Obama was quoted as saying.

    "And then part of that changes how we think about moving forward on race relations. Race relations becomes a subset of a larger problem in our society, which is we have a diverse, complicated society where people have a lot of different viewpoints," Obama said.

    (Reporting by JoAnne Allen; Editing by Eric Walsh)



What utter horseshit, and adoring un-objective media coverage of the horseshit.

Obama said "I don't look like the other guys on the dollar bills" and other such race-spotlighting remarks during the campaign against McCain, and several times basically accused McCain of racism, despite McCain's attempts to bend over backward to avoid the subject of race, or even anything that could imply racist overtones. McCain campaigned with one arm tied behind his back, and avoided many subjects that could have won him the election (he declared Rev. Jeremiah Wright as off-limits), and still over and over Obama directly and through surrogates implied racism in his opponents.
Posted By: Irwin Schwab Re: Obama's Broken Promises - 2009-01-20 11:01 PM
 Originally Posted By: Steve T
I think the wardrobe thing was pretty silly, but you do leave yourself open when you run on the "small town values" ticket and then spend thousands on clothes.
On the other hand if she wore the same crappy cheap suit at every appearance.



http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/obamas_fashion

 Quote:
WASHINGTON – First lady Michelle Obama wore a sparkling yellow-gold sheath dress with matching coat by Cuban-born American designer Isabel Toledo for the inauguration of her husband, a choice many applauded as a cheerful message of hope and a vote for the American fashion industry.

She paired the embellished ensemble with green gloves from J. Crew and green shoes.

President Barack Obama wore a red tie and white shirt with his suit, topped with an overcoat adorned with an American flag pin.

Their daughters were style icons in their own right, with 10-year-old Malia in a double-breasted periwinkle-blue coat with a blue-ribbon bow at the waist, and Sasha, 7, in a pink coat with orange scarf and satin belt, a coral-colored dress peeking out at the hem. Their coats were from Crewcuts by J. Crew.

The fashion industry has anxiously looked to the election of Obama for months, embracing his wife as an emblem and ambassador of modern American style. She has won praise for her penchant for lesser-known designers and bold fashion choices, mixed with her unabashed love for mass fashion from mainstream American retailers.

"She is single-handedly breathing new life into designers like Narciso Rodriguez and Isabel Toledo, who have had a rocky past," said red-carpet and editorial stylist Mary Alice Stephenson.

"What's so powerful about Michelle Obama is we all see ourselves in her. She's a modern woman who is fashionable and even flamboyant in her style and she is still taken seriously," she said. "She's wearing that dress today for all of us. We're all wearing that dress with her. The dress is elegant, appropriate and has the individual style stamp of Michelle Obama and is timely for a woman in her 40s — and she wears embellishment during the day. Hallelujah!"

Nicole Phelps, executive editor of Style.com, notes that Michelle Obama has found an elegant silhouette that works for her: the narrow sheath dress and complementary coat.

The inaugural outfit is a "classic choice — rather conservative compared to some of the things she's worn so far," Phelps said, but she still gives her fashion wink with her gloves and colored pumps. The gold, she adds, captures the glistening sun.

"This choice sends a great message to the fashion community. She could have gone with someone more obvious, like Ralph Lauren, but this sends a message to the American designers who are struggling. ... It also says that just because she's in the White House, she'll support the under-the-radar designers she wore on the way to the White House," Phelps said.

Designer Toledo, who just a few years ago unsuccessfully tried to infuse more modern style into the venerable Anne Klein label, is considered among the more avant garde U.S. designers.

Michelle Obama has been noted for choosing unexpected fashion designers, including Narciso Rodriguez, Zero + Maria Cornejo and Chicago designer Maria Pinto. For the "Kids Inaugural" concert on Monday, Michelle Obama wore a J.Crew ensemble, including a metallic lace top, aqua-colored pencil skirt and cardigan.




If only Palin had been a liberal, dressing nicely would have been an asset instead of a blunder in the press corp eyes....
Posted By: the G-man Obama's Broken Lobbyist Promise - 2009-01-23 3:23 AM
The Project on Government Oversight finds that Obama's promise on banning lobbyists lasted all of-I dunno-twenty-four hours:

  • POGO believes strongly in the revolving door restrictions President Barack Obama has outlined to restore integrity and ethics to government," said POGO executive director Danielle Brian. "It is because we believe so strongly in the positive impact that such a change will have that we urge the President to withdraw his nomination of William J. Lynn III as Deputy Secretary of Defense. President Obama should not compromise his standards and the effectiveness of the Department of Defense by allowing a top defense industry lobbyist to receive a waiver from these standards. The defense industry is in a class of its own among all of the industries that have had a pervasive stranglehold on public policy to advance their own financial interests.


Waivers? A ban with waivers?

Oohhkay....
Posted By: Irwin Schwab McCain disappointed by ethics waiver - 2009-01-24 1:47 AM
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20090123/ap_on_go_co/pentagon_nomination_4

 Quote:
WASHINGTON – Sen. John McCain says he is disappointed in President Obama's decision to waive a new ethics requirement for the man picked to be the No. 2 at the Pentagon.

McCain, the ranking Republican on the Armed Services Committee, said in a statement late Friday that he won't endorse William J. Lynn III until he has more details. Specifically, McCain says he wants to know whether Lynn, a former Raytheon lobbyist, would disqualify himself from certain issues.

The administration delivered a waiver to Capitol Hill late Thursday exempting Lynn from the requirement that people must wait two years before working for an agency they once lobbied.



Change we can believe in!
Posted By: iggy Re: McCain disappointed by ethics waiver - 2009-01-24 6:47 AM
I've never seen an administration waver on issues so resolutely.
Posted By: Irwin Schwab Re: McCain disappointed by ethics waiver - 2009-01-24 4:35 PM
It's a world record for a political flip flop!
Posted By: the G-man Re: Obama broken promises - 2009-01-24 6:17 PM
Yeah, this one didn't take even 24 hours.
Posted By: Irwin Schwab Re: Obama broken promises - 2009-01-24 6:19 PM
The Clinton's must be impressed.
Posted By: iggy Re: Obama broken promises - 2009-01-25 8:30 AM
Must've been part of Hillary's I'll give up my political aspirations for the SoS job bargaining.
Posted By: Franta Re: Obama broken promises - 2009-01-25 10:15 AM
My wife adopted two biracial girls and these are now two of my four daughters.

I believe it IS racist to denounce either side of your race.

I raise ALL four of my daughters to treat everyone equally. And to be proud of your hertage regardless.

Yet Mr Obama who was actually raised by white wealthy grandparents who traveled with him and put him through Ivy League Schools, now much like Halle Berry, ignores the race who actually cared for him. Calling himself black reminds one of the racist era where one was a certain percent black they would be labeled ONLY as black...and THAT spoke toward racism!

He spoke of the hardships of his black father...who abadoned him yet ignored his white grandmother who died during his campaign the woman who raised him his real mother not Michelle as he called her! Nor did him mention the other side the trials and tribulations his mother endurred raising a biracial son.

Yet none of this is in the mainstream liberal media news....imagine
Posted By: Matter-eater Man Re: Obama's Broken Lobbyist Promise - 2009-01-26 8:47 AM
 Originally Posted By: the G-man of Zur-En-Arrh
The Project on Government Oversight finds that Obama's promise on banning lobbyists lasted all of-I dunno-twenty-four hours:

  • POGO believes strongly in the revolving door restrictions President Barack Obama has outlined to restore integrity and ethics to government," said POGO executive director Danielle Brian. "It is because we believe so strongly in the positive impact that such a change will have that we urge the President to withdraw his nomination of William J. Lynn III as Deputy Secretary of Defense. President Obama should not compromise his standards and the effectiveness of the Department of Defense by allowing a top defense industry lobbyist to receive a waiver from these standards. The defense industry is in a class of its own among all of the industries that have had a pervasive stranglehold on public policy to advance their own financial interests.


Waivers? A ban with waivers?

Oohhkay....


Not surprised. It's like the campaign finace issue, he'll just go around it.
Posted By: Irwin Schwab Re: Obama's Broken Lobbyist Promise - 2009-01-28 3:22 PM
Posted By: the G-man Re: Obama's Broken Lobbyist Promise - 2009-01-28 3:58 PM
 Originally Posted By: BASAMS The Plumber


\:lol\:
Posted By: the G-man Re: Obama's Broken Lobbyist Promise - 2009-01-28 6:19 PM
 Originally Posted By: the G-man of Zur-En-Arrh
The Project on Government Oversight finds that Obama's promise on banning lobbyists lasted all of-I dunno-twenty-four hours


More lobbyists join the Obama administration:
  • WASHINGTON — Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner picked a former Goldman Sachs lobbyist as a top aide Tuesday, the same day he announced rules aimed at reducing the role of lobbyists in agency decisions....

    Melanie Sloan, executive director of the Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington, said President Obama was retreating from his own ethics rules barring lobbyists from working on the issues they lobbied about during the previous two years.

    "It makes it appear that they are saying one thing and doing another," she said.
Posted By: Irwin Schwab Re: Obama's Broken Lobbyist Promise - 2009-01-28 7:19 PM
at two former lobbyist a week, we should be up to over 110 by the end of the year!



Change we believe in....some of the time!
Posted By: Irwin Schwab Commentary: Obama's hypocrisy showing - 2009-01-31 4:35 AM
http://www.cnn.com/2009/POLITICS/01/28/campbell.brown.ethics/index.html#cnnSTCText


 Quote:
(CNN) -- Unfortunately, we are again asking the president to explain why exactly he announced, with great fanfare, new ethics rules if he had no intention of abiding by them.

The Obama administration is yet again asking for a waiver to its very own rules about hiring lobbyists.

This time, it is the new treasury secretary, Tim Geithner. He wants a former lobbyist for Goldman Sachs to be his top aide at the Treasury Department.

My view is simple: Mr. President, if you want to hire former lobbyists because you think they are the best people to do the job, then hire former lobbyists. Just don't hold a big news conference first to tell us how your administration is going to be so different from previous administrations in that you won't be hiring lobbyists.

Don't make your disdain for lobbyists and your pledges that they won't wield influence in your administration a centerpiece of your campaign.

It's the hypocrisy and the double-talk that makes so many of us so cynical. Do what you think is best for the country. Just be straight with us about how you're going to do it.




Poor Campbell Brown, I'm guessing they'll ask her to clean out her desk by Sunday.
Posted By: the G-man Re: Commentary: Obama's hypocrisy showing - 2009-01-31 7:46 PM
 Originally Posted By: BASAMS The Plumber

Poor Campbell Brown, I'm guessing they'll ask her to clean out her desk by Sunday.


Maybe she can get a job at Fox news if they haven't been shut down by then.
Posted By: the G-man Obama's hypocrisy showing - 2009-01-31 7:47 PM
Obama's Health Chief Pick Under Fire: Report says probe into former Sen. Tom Daschle's taxes reveals he received $220G from health care groups.

I've lost count. Exactly how many people with ties to lobbying are in Obama's "lobbyist free" White House?
Posted By: Irwin Schwab Re: Obama's hypocrisy showing - 2009-02-01 7:11 PM
http://www.foxnews.com/politics/elections/2009/02/01/daschle-delayed-tax-revelation/

 Quote:
Former South Dakota Senator Tom Daschle waited nearly a month after being nominated to be secretary of health and human services before informing President Obama that he had not paid years of back taxes, the Washington Post reports.

On Jan. 2, Daschle paid $140,000 in back taxes and interest to the U.S. Treasury and about two days later informed the White House and the Senate Finance Committee, the White House confirmed to the Post.

Obama's transition team discovered in December that $15,000 of the $276,000 in charitable contributions claimed by Daschle lacked proper documentation. But Daschle waited until after amended returns were filed before he mentioned the larger tax liability.

The second-ranking GOP senator said Sunday he is troubled by Daschle's admission that he failed to pay taxes, but added that it is too early to know if the blunder will affect his chances of becoming the next health chief.

Sen. Jon Kyl of Arizona -- who serves on the Senate Finance Committee that is set to meet Monday to discuss Daschle's nomination -- suggested that the speed at which Obama selected his cabinet members might have prevented candidates from being properly vetted.

"You wonder if this would have happened with Bush," Kyl said on FOX News Sunday.

Daschle spokeswoman Jenny Backus said he had known since June 208 that his luxury car and driver provided by wealthy Democratic donor, longtime friend and business associate Leo Hindery might be taxable, but never expected the amount to be such a "jaw-dropping" sum and "thought it was being taken care of" by his accountant.

Hindery founded InterMedia Partners, a private equity firm, in 1988. Daschle was paid $1 million annually for his consulting services, the Senate Finance Committee said.

Daschle had an unreported consulting income of $88,333, in 2007.

Bloomberg reported that Backus said Daschle was "embarrassed and disappointed" by what had occurred.

"Senator Daschle is embarrassed and disappointed by these errors," Backus said. "He apologized for his part in these errors and expressed his deep regret that the committee had to devote time to them."

The White House acknowledged Friday that Daschle had "some tax issues," which, the administration said, have been resolved and should not bar his confirmation as secretary.

A statement issued by the White House affirmed that Daschle "is the right person to lead the fight for health care reform."

"Senator Daschle brought these issues to the Finance Committee's attention when he submitted his nomination forms and we are confident the committee is going to schedule a hearing for him very soon, and he will be confirmed," it said.



I finally get it. It use to drive me nuts trying to figure out why Obama thought raising taxes wouldnt kill the economy. Taxes aren't to be taken literally, it's just a figure of speech!
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20090204/ap_on_re_us/national_parks_drilling

 Quote:
SALT LAKE CITY – Interior Secretary Ken Salazar says he's scrapping the lease of dozens of parcels of federal land for oil and gas drilling in Utah's redrock country.

Salazar says the Bush administration rushed an auction in December of some of the country's most precious landscapes around national parks and the wild Green River.

Salazar on Wednesday ordered the Bureau of Land Management, which is part of the Interior Department, not to cash checks from winning bidders for the parcels at issue in a lawsuit filed by environmental groups.


So much for campaign promise to end our dependence on foreign oil.
anyone else feel like bludgeoning some treehuggers?
every day.
Posted By: the G-man Re: Obama's broken promise - 2009-02-06 9:21 PM
National Review:
  • Obama didn’t campaign on a sprawling, nearly $1 trillion new spending plan. If he had pledged in October to double federal domestic discretionary spending in a matter of weeks—including increasing the budget of the National Endowment for the Arts by a third, spending hundreds of millions more on federal buildings and throwing tens of billions on every traditional liberal priority from job training to Pell Grants—he’d have been hard-pressed to win at all.

    The president should read the transcript of the third presidential debate. He claimed his program represented “a net spending cut.” He called himself “a strong proponent of pay-as-you-go. Every dollar that I’ve proposed, I’ve proposed an additional cut so that it matches.” He added, “We need to eliminate a whole host of programs that don’t work.”


And

  • In a meeting with congressional Republicans, he brandished “I won” as a defense of his version of tax relief. But he later used “I won” to push back against an excessive reliance on tax cuts, claiming that it had been repudiated during the campaign even though he talked every day on the trail of cutting taxes for “95 percent of working people” and never once mentioned a commitment to extreme deficit spending.


So he ran on giving everyone a tax cut but now he claims the election "repudiated" that idea.

Posted By: Irwin Schwab Re: Obama's broken promise - 2009-02-06 10:18 PM
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/story/2009/02/06/ST2009020600191.html

 Quote:
"A failure to act, and act now, will turn crisis into a catastrophe."

-- President Obama, Feb. 4.


Catastrophe, mind you. So much for the president who in his inaugural address two weeks earlier declared "we have chosen hope over fear." Until, that is, you need fear to pass a bill.

And so much for the promise to banish the money changers and influence peddlers from the temple. An ostentatious executive order banning lobbyists was immediately followed by the nomination of at least a dozen current or former lobbyists to high position. Followed by a Treasury secretary who allegedly couldn't understand the payroll tax provisions in his 1040. Followed by Tom Daschle, who had to fall on his sword according to the new Washington rule that no Cabinet can have more than one tax delinquent.

The Daschle affair was more serious because his offense involved more than taxes. As Michael Kinsley once observed, in Washington the real scandal isn't what's illegal, but what's legal. Not paying taxes is one thing. But what made this case intolerable was the perfectly legal dealings that amassed Daschle $5.2 million in just two years.

He'd been getting $1 million per year from a law firm. But he's not a lawyer, nor a registered lobbyist. You don't get paid this kind of money to instruct partners on the Senate markup process. You get it for picking up the phone and peddling influence.

At least Tim Geithner, the tax-challenged Treasury secretary, had been working for years as a humble international civil servant earning non-stratospheric wages. Daschle, who had made another cool million a year (plus chauffeur and Caddy) for unspecified services to a pal's private equity firm, represented everything Obama said he'd come to Washington to upend.

And yet more damaging to Obama's image than all the hypocrisies in the appointment process is his signature bill: the stimulus package. He inexplicably delegated the writing to Nancy Pelosi and the barons of the House. The product, which inevitably carries Obama's name, was not just bad, not just flawed, but a legislative abomination.

It's not just pages and pages of special-interest tax breaks, giveaways and protections, one of which would set off a ruinous Smoot-Hawley trade war. It's not just the waste, such as the $88.6 million for new construction for Milwaukee Public Schools, which, reports the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, have shrinking enrollment, 15 vacant schools and, quite logically, no plans for new construction.

It's the essential fraud of rushing through a bill in which the normal rules (committee hearings, finding revenue to pay for the programs) are suspended on the grounds that a national emergency requires an immediate job-creating stimulus -- and then throwing into it hundreds of billions that have nothing to do with stimulus, that Congress's own budget office says won't be spent until 2011 and beyond, and that are little more than the back-scratching, special-interest, lobby-driven parochialism that Obama came to Washington to abolish. He said.

Not just to abolish but to create something new -- a new politics where the moneyed pork-barreling and corrupt logrolling of the past would give way to a bottom-up, grass-roots participatory democracy. That is what made Obama so dazzling and new. Turns out the "fierce urgency of now" includes $150 million for livestock (and honeybee and farm-raised fish) insurance.

The Age of Obama begins with perhaps the greatest frenzy of old-politics influence peddling ever seen in Washington. By the time the stimulus bill reached the Senate, reports the Wall Street Journal, pharmaceutical and high-tech companies were lobbying furiously for a new plan to repatriate overseas profits that would yield major tax savings. California wine growers and Florida citrus producers were fighting to change a single phrase in one provision. Substituting "planted" for "ready to market" would mean a windfall garnered from a new "bonus depreciation" incentive.

After Obama's miraculous 2008 presidential campaign, it was clear that at some point the magical mystery tour would have to end. The nation would rub its eyes and begin to emerge from its reverie. The hallucinatory Obama would give way to the mere mortal. The great ethical transformations promised would be seen as a fairy tale that all presidents tell -- and that this president told better than anyone.

I thought the awakening would take six months. It took two and a half weeks.
http://www.foxnews.com/politics/first100...an-sources-say/

 Quote:
WASHINGTON -- The White House is considering at least two troop withdrawal options as it weighs a new Iraq strategy -- one that would preserve President Barack Obama's campaign pledge to get all combat brigades out within 16 months and a second that would stretch it to 23 months, two officials said Friday.

A third, in-between option of 19 months is also being weighed, according to the officials, neither of whom would discuss the sensitive topic without being granted anonymity. One of the officials said the main focus appears to be on the 16-month and 23-month options; 23 months would run to the end of 2010.

Under either timeline, the U.S. would hope to leave behind a number of brigades that would be redesigned and reconfigured as multipurpose units to provide training and advising for Iraqi security forces, one official said. These brigades would be considered noncombat outfits and their presence would have to be agreed in advance by the Iraqi government, which under a deal signed late last year insisted that all U.S. forces -- not just combat brigades -- be out of Iraq by the end of 2011.

The concept of the stay-behind training and advising brigades has been well developed, the official said, although the details such as their size and composition are in an early stage of being sorted out.

At the White House's request, top military officials recently offered an assessment of the risks associated with the 16-, 19- and 23-month withdrawal timetables, without saying which is preferred. Obama's top two defense advisers, Defense Secretary Robert Gates and Joint Chiefs Chairman Adm. Mike Mullen, have not yet provided a formal recommendation to the president on a timetable, an official said.

Obama must weigh a number of risks in deciding how fast to pull out the 14 combat brigades that are now in Iraq, including the political risk associated with abandoning his campaign pledge to get out within 16 months.

The calculation is complex and tied to other concerns: relieving stress on war-weary troops and their families; tradeoffs in escalating the war in Afghanistan, and being ready for popup crises elsewhere.

The pace and sequencing of a troop pullout will have implications for preserving recent gains in reducing violence in Iraq. An erosion of security could in turn halt progress toward political reconciliation, raising once again the prospect of widespread sectarian warfare and a new crisis for Obama.

Also at issue is how to ensure proper protection for U.S. civilians, such as State Department members of military-civilian teams supporting Iraqi economic and political rebuilding, as the U.S. military presence shrinks. That civilian work, including the role of international non-governmental groups, will arguably grow in importance as the Iraqis focus less on fighting insurgents and more on building national unity.

The fact that Obama did not immediately order his generals to begin withdrawing -- as some might have expected, given his emphasis during the campaign on refocusing the U.S. military on Afghanistan -- is evidence that he recognized, even before assuming office Jan. 20, the dangers of a precipitous withdrawal.

During Obama's first meeting with the Joint Chiefs of Staff at the Pentagon last week, he did not mention a 16-month timeline, according to officials who were present.

U.S. military commanders in Iraq -- and some senior military leaders in the Pentagon -- still wonder whether the Iraqi security forces will be ready this year to handle what remains of the insurgency without substantial U.S. combat assistance. If they are not, and if a U.S. pullout accelerates, what will happen?

That question may be most important in northern Iraq, where the insurgency is still viable in the Tigris River city of Mosul and where ethnic tensions between Arabs and Kurds are high around the city of Kirkuk.



On behalf of George W. Bush, and John McCain I would like to accept Obama's apology. He was wrong about a quick withdrawal, and though many pointed to his lack of experience and understanding it's nice to see him come out and admit he was naive.
 Quote:
Obama must weigh a number of risks in deciding how fast to pull out...


Posted By: the G-man Re: Obama Poll Numbers - 2009-02-07 10:34 AM
Obama's Net Approval Rating Among Independents Down 12 Percent in a Week. Pretty much meaningless this early into a term, but interesting.
http://www.foxnews.com/politics/elections/2009/02/08/obama-putting-brakes-surge-afghanistan/100days/

 Quote:
President Obama has demanded that defense chiefs review their strategy in Afghanistan before going ahead with a troop surge, the Sunday Times reported.

There is concern among senior Democrats that the military is preparing to send up to 30,000 extra troops without a coherent plan or exit strategy.

The Pentagon was set to announce the deployment of 17,000 extra soldiers and marines last week but Defense Secretary Robert Gates postponed the decision after questions from Obama.
Looks like Bush was right again!
Thank you for that, BSAMS.

Along with Obama's closing Guantanamo Bay, suspending prosecution of Al Qaida prisoners for 6 months, and pussifying interrogation techniques to the point that they can no longer yield information...

Now Obama's delaying much-needed troop-deployment of 30,000 more soldiers to Afghanistan, that would turn the tide in that theatre of war. After Obama gave lip-service during the campaign to INCREASING troops there, he is actually doing the opposite.

Hypocrisy indeed.

Obama has terrified me with his potential to destroy the U.S. military from the beginning:
"Obama's Plan: 'Undermine U.S. Battlefield Superiority' "

If Obama were an islamic manchurian candidate, or a sleeper agent to carry on William Ayers' wet dream to destroy America, I couldn't possibly be surprised at this point.
Is it by idiocy or intent that Obama is on the path toward destroying our country?




And I'm still reeling from the series of tax-evading and otherwise scandal-laden nominations:
1) Bill Richardson (under investigation, withdrew in disgrace)
2) Tom Daschle (tax evasion upwards of $100,000, withdrew in disgrace, but Obama would have kept him anyway, if he didn't resign)
3) Tim Geithner (tax evader, who will ironically be our treasury secretary, i.e. he will be the chief officer to enforce the laws that he himself has broken. A certifiably corrupt nominee, who is somehow supposed to rally public trust and lead our economy out of corruption that he himself is already proven guilty of. )
4) Eric Holder likewise will head the Justice Department, enforcing the laws that he himself has undermined, in his legal defense on behalf of terrorists.
5) Leon Panetta (nominated for CIA dierctor. Beyond that he has largely tried to destroy the agency he would lead, He likewise has evaded taxes on $700,000 in speaking appearances.)
6) Jeffrey Immelt (CEO of G E, a failed exec who is arguably one of the corporate elites who caused our economic collapse, not to mention the collapse of his own company's stock, and trading with America's enemies, is now appointed by Obama for the "economic advisory recovery board")

Plus two other women appointees of Obama's,whose names I've forgotten, who have illegal nanny troubles, who were paid tax free and under the table.

And not to mention the number of former lobbyists Obama has "waived" his own ethical standards to shove on us anyway. Only nominees removing themselves from the running has removed ANY of these people from joining the Obama White House.

Where are Obama's "higher standards" for holding office ?!?
Every time someone fails to meet Obama's alleged standards, he "waives" standards and railroads them through anyway.

Complete hypocrisy on Obama's part.




I'm beginning tot think this Obama guy is a shady character.
rascist!
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/02/10/us/10torture.html?hp

 Quote:
SAN FRANCISCO — In a closely watched case involving rendition and torture, a lawyer for the Obama administration apparently surprised a panel of federal appeals judges Monday by pressing ahead with an argument for preserving state secrets originally developed by the Bush administration.

In the case, Binyam Mohamed, an Ethiopian native, and four other detainees filed suit against a subsidiary of Boeing for arranging flights for the Bush administration’s “extraordinary rendition” program, in which terrorism suspects were taken secretly to other countries and tortured. The Bush administration argued that the case should be dismissed because even discussing it in court could present a threat to national security and relations with other nations

President Obama had harshly criticized the Bush administration’s treatment of detainees during the campaign, and has broken with the previous administration on such questions as whether to keep open the prison camp at Guantánamo Bay, Cuba. But a lawyer for the government, Douglas N. Letter, made the same state-secrets argument on Monday, startling several judges on the panel of the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit.

“Is there anything material that has happened” that might have caused the Justice Department to shift its views, asked Judge Mary M. Schroeder, an appointee of President Jimmy Carter, coyly referring to the recent election.

“No, your honor,” Mr. Letter replied.

“The change in administration has no bearing?” she asked.

“No, your honor,” he said once more. The position he was taking in court on behalf of the government had been “thoroughly vetted with the appropriate officials within the new administration,” and “these are the authorized positions,” he said.

That produced an angry response from Anthony D. Romero, executive director of the American Civil Liberties Union, which is representing the plaintiffs in the case.

“This is not change,” he said in a statement. “This is definitely more of the same. Candidate Obama ran on a platform that would reform the abuse of state secrets, but President Obama’s Justice Department has disappointingly reneged on that important civil liberties issue. If this is a harbinger of things to come, it will be a long and arduous road to give us back an America we can be proud of again.”

A Justice Department spokesman, Matt Miller, said the government did not comment on pending litigation, but he seemed to suggest the Obama administration would invoke the privilege more sparingly than its predecessor.

“It is the policy of this administration to invoke the state secrets privilege only when necessary and in the most appropriate cases,” he said, adding that Attorney General Eric H. Holder Jr. had asked for a review of pending cases in which the government had previously asserted a state secret privilege.

“The Attorney General has directed that senior Justice Department officials review all assertions of the State Secrets privilege to ensure that the privilege is being invoked only in legally appropriate situations,” he said. “It is vital that we protect information that, if released, could jeopardize national security.”

The court papers describe horrific treatment in secret prisons. Mr. Mohamed claimed, for example, that during his detention in Morocco, “he was routinely beaten, suffering broken bones and, on occasion, loss of consciousness. His clothes were cut off with a scalpel and the same scalpel was then used to make incisions on his body, including his penis. A hot stinging liquid was then poured into open wounds on his penis where he had been cut. He was frequently threatened with rape, electrocution, and death.”

Ben Wizner, a lawyer for the A.C.L.U., told the judges that many of the facts that the government is trying to keep secret are scarcely secret at all, since the administration’s rendition program and the particulars of many of the cases have been revealed in the news media and in the work of government investigations from around the world. “The only place in the world where these claims can’t be discussed,“ Mr. Wizner said, “is in this courtroom.“

What the A.C.L.U. is asking, he said, is that the case be allowed to go forward, and giving the courts a chance to decide on a fact-by-fact basis based on classified information revealed solely to the judge by the government, what should be allowed to be discussed.

But Mr. Letter said that the lower court judge, James Ware, did receive classified information and came to the correct conclusion in dismissing the case last year. He urged the judges to pore over the same material, and predicted “you will understand precisely, as Judge Ware did, why this case can’t be litigated.”

In a related matter, Patrick J. Leahy, the Vermont Democrat who is chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee, proposed on Monday the establishment of a “truth commission” to investigate the Bush administration’s treatment of detainees and other issues, like the firings of United States Attorneys by the Justice Department. The commission, he said, could grant immunity to witnesses to explore the facts without the threat of criminal prosecution.



I applaud Obama for verifying the Bush administration's stance that national secrets are more important than the ACLU's mission to destroy the nation. I know it will upset some that it violates his campaign promise of exposing the secret programs.
Posted By: Irwin Schwab Obama Revives the Politics Of Fear - 2009-02-10 4:55 AM
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/obama

 Quote:


WASHINGTON – President Barack Obama pressed Congress Monday night to urgently approve a massive economic recovery bill, using the first prime-time news conference of his presidency to warn that a failure to act "could turn a crisis into a catastrophe." With the nation falling deeper into a long and painful recession, Obama defended his program against Republican criticism that it is loaded with pork-barrel spending and will not create jobs.

"The plan is not perfect," the president said, addressing the nation from the East Room of the White House. "No plan is. I can't tell you for sure that everything in this plan will work exactly as we hope, but I can tell you with complete confidence that a failure to act will only deepen this crisis as well as the pain felt by millions of Americans."

When the stimulus bill passed the House, not a single Republican voted for it. On Monday an $838 billion version of the legislation cleared a crucial test vote in the Senate by a 61-36 margin, with all but three Republican senators opposing it.

Obama said the federal government was the only power that could save the nation at a time of crisis, with huge spending outlays and tax cuts that he contended could save or create up to 4 million jobs.

"At this particular moment, with the private sector so weakened by this recession, the federal government is the only entity left with the resources to jolt our economy back to life," Obama said.

Rejecting criticism, he said that 90 percent of the jobs created by the plan would be in the private sector, rebuilding crumbling roads, bridges and other aging infrastructure.

"The plan that ultimately emerges from Congress must be big enough and bold enough to meet the size of the economic challenge we face right now," Obama said.

Again and again, he stressed that the economy is in dire straits.

"This is not your ordinary, run of the mill recession," he said. Obama said the United States aims to avoid the kind of economic pain that Japan endured in the 1990s — the "lost decade" when that nation showed no economic growth.

"My bottom line is to make sure that we are saving or creating 4 million jobs," he said, and that homeowners facing foreclosure receive some relief.

While Obama stressed the economy in the opening minutes of the news conference, he also faced questions on foreign policy, and was asked how his administration would deal with Iran, a nation accused by the United States of supporting terrorism and pursuing nuclear weapons.

The president said his administration was reviewing its policy toward Iran "looking at places where we can have constructive dialogue." He also said it was time for Iran to change its behavior.

"My expectation is in the coming months we will be looking for openings that can be created where we can be sitting across the table face to face," Obama said.

He said that Iran must understand that funding terrorist organizations and pursuing nuclear weapons are unacceptable.

On the economy, Obama took a swipe at Republicans for criticizing the stimulus bill as wasteful. He pointed out that he inherited the current economic crisis and a doubling of the national debt from eight years of the Bush administration.

Yet, he also acknowledged that some components of the bill would not create jobs, as GOP critics have complained. While such spending plans might be worthy, he said, "those programs should be out of this."

Obama spoke a day before his administration was to announce new policies to rescue the ailing financial industry. A major goal of that program is to persuade hedge funds, insurance companies and private equity firms to buy into some of U.S. banks' riskiest investments.

"The credit crisis is real and it's not over," Obama said. He faulted the way the first $350 billion of the $700 billion bailout program was spent. "We didn't get as big of a bang for the buck as we should have," he said.

He said the government would work with banks to take bad debts off of their books so they will start making loans again. He said his goal was to restore market confidence.

Obama said he did not know whether more bailout money would be needed and, if so, how much that might be.



Is this the guy that campaigned on hope, and promised to get rid of "the politics of fear"?he looks a lot like him.
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20090216/ap_on_go_pr_wh/obama_freedom_of_information

 Quote:
WASHINGTON – Despite President Obama's vow to open government more than ever, the Justice Department is defending Bush administration decisions to keep secret many documents about domestic wiretapping, data collection on travelers and U.S. citizens, and interrogation of suspected terrorists.

In half a dozen lawsuits, Justice lawyers have opposed formal motions or spurned out-of-court offers to delay court action until the new administration rewrites Freedom of Information Act guidelines and decides whether the new rules might allow the public to see more.

In only one case has the Justice Department agreed to suspend a FOIA lawsuit until the disputed documents can be re-evaluated under the yet-to-be-written guidelines. That case involves negotiations on an anti-counterfeiting treaty, not the more controversial, secret anti-terrorism tactics that spawned the other lawsuits as well as Obama's promises of greater openness.

"The signs in the last few days are not entirely encouraging," said Jameel Jaffer, an attorney for the American Civil Liberties Union, which filed several lawsuits seeking the Bush administration's legal rationales for warrantless domestic wiretapping and for its treatment of terrorism detainees.

The documents sought in these lawsuits "are in many cases the documents that the public most needs to see," Jaffer said. "It makes no sense to say that these documents are somehow exempt from President Obama's directives."

Groups that advocate open government, civil liberties and privacy were overjoyed that Obama on his first day in office reversed the FOIA policy imposed by Bush's first attorney general, John Ashcroft. The Bush Justice Department said it would use any legitimate legal basis to defend withholding records from the public. Obama pledged "an unprecedented level of openness in government" and ordered new FOIA guidelines written with a "presumption in favor of disclosure."

But Justice's actions in courts since then have cast doubt on how far the new administration will go.

In a FOIA case seeking access to the rules governing the FBI's Investigative Data Warehouse — a computer database containing 1 searchable documents about Americans and foreigners — Justice lawyers told a district court here Thursday, "It is not clear that the new guidelines, once issued, will be retrospective to FOIA requests that the agency already has finished processing."

They asked the court to rule instead that the FBI has done enough. The bureau has reviewed 878 pages, withheld 76 and released some portions of 802.

To withhold some material, the FBI cited discretionary FOIA exemptions and ones that require balancing privacy and public interests. David Sobel, attorney for the Electronic Frontier Foundation, a San Francisco-based group that advocates civil liberties in cyberspace and brought the lawsuit, said those decisions might come out differently under the new guidelines.

The issue isn't retroactivity, Sobel said. "The issue is whether the new administration is going to devote legal resources to fighting old battles now that the president has announced a fundamental change in the government's approach to FOIA."

Other lawsuits in which Justice's civil division has expressed opposition to delays until the administration writes its FOIA guidelines and uses them to review Bush decisions:

• One seeking documents about the Automated Targeting System used by Customs officers to screen all travelers leaving or entering the country.

_A case seeking records of lobbying by telecommunications companies to get legal immunity for cooperating in warrantless domestic wiretapping.

• A case seeking Justice's legal opinions justifying that wiretapping. One of the plaintiff attorneys, Meredith Fuchs, of the National Security Archive, a private group that publishes formerly classified government documents, said, "I'm somewhat surprised they did not take the opportunity to look at these again, but maybe it's because the administration doesn't have all its top Justice appointees in office yet."

• Three cases seeking Justice legal opinions about detention and interrogation of terrorism detainees. Civil division attorney Caroline Wolverton wrote the ACLU's Jaffer that Justice would proceed "consistent with the principles" in Obama's FOIA order "and also with due regard for the legitimate confidentiality interests of the executive branch and the national security interests of the United States."

Jaffer called that "a nonresponse response."

So far, Justice has expressed willingness to review Bush decisions in two cases, only one because of FOIA changes.

Only in Sobel's lawsuit for anti-counterfeiting treaty documents has Justice joined a plaintiff to obtain a court delay to give the administration time to write FOIA guidelines and use them to "review its determinations on the documents at issue."

But that case is unusual because Justice is represented by its Office of Information and Privacy, not by the civil division which handles all the other FOIA lawsuits. The information and privacy office provides governmentwide guidance on how to obey the FOIA. Attorneys in these cases worry that the information and privacy office doesn't have the clout of the much larger civil division and may not control administration policy.

The civil division has sought a delay to review one case — involving three 2005 Justice legal memos on the definition of "cruel and unusual" interrogation tactics. But its request didn't mention the new FOIA policy. Instead it said Obama's Jan. 22 executive order on detention and interrogation might alter the government position.

Even if the new administration reviews Bush decisions, that's no guarantee the outcome will change.

Last week, Attorney General Eric Holder announced a review of every court case in which the Bush administration used a different legal tool to preserve secrecy: the state secrets privilege it invoked a record number of times to have lawsuits thrown out. On the same day, however, civil division attorney Douglas Letter cited the state secrets privilege in asking a federal appeals court to uphold dismissal of a lawsuit accusing a Boeing Co. subsidiary of illegally helping the CIA fly suspected terrorists to allied foreign nations where they would be tortured.

Three times Letter assured the judges his position had been approved by Obama administration officials.

"This is not change," said ACLU executive director Anthony Romero. "President Obama's Justice Department has disappointingly reneged" on his promise to end "abuse of state secrets."
http://www.foxbusiness.com/story/markets/fox-business-wins-foia-lawsuit-treasury/

 Quote:
FOX Business Network has won a victory against the Treasury Department in its Freedom of Information Act request for details about the government’s bailout plan.

Judge Richard J. Holwell of the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York said in a decision Friday that the government is directed to comply with FOX Business’s request under the FOIA “within 30 days and to produce a Vaughn index with 45 days.”

That means Treasury must comply with FOX Business’s request by Monday, March 23, and must produce a Vaughn index by Monday, April 6.

A Vaughn index details which documents have been withheld and why.

FOX Business sued Treasury on Dec. 18 over failure to provide information on the bailout funds or respond to FBN’s expedited requests filed under the FOIA.

The initial request, filed on Nov. 25, sought actual data on the use of the bailout funds for American International Group (AIG: 0.5389, -0.0611, -10.18%) and the Bank of New York Mellon (BK: 22.82, -0.51, -2.19%), and an additional request, filed on Dec. 1, sought similar data on the bailout funds for Citigroup (C: 2.02, -0.49, -19.52%).

FBN asked the Treasury Department to identify, among other issues, the troubled assets purchased, any collateral extended, and any restrictions placed on these financial institutions for their participation in this program.


I'm glad Obama pushes for more transparency in government.
http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2009/02/20/obama-administration-affirms-bush-policy-detainee-rights/

 Quote:
WASHINGTON -- President Barack Obama's Justice Department sided with the former Bush administration on Friday, saying detainees in Afghanistan have no constitutional rights.

In a two-sentence court filing, department lawyers said the Obama administration agreed that detainees at Bagram Air Base cannot use U.S. courts to challenge their detentions. The filing shocked human rights attorneys.

"The hope we all had in President Obama to lead us on a different path has not turned out as we'd hoped," said Tina Monshipour Foster, a human rights attorney representing a detainee at the Bagram Air Base. "We all expected better."

In midyear last year, the Supreme Court gave al-Qaida and Taliban suspects held at the U.S. Naval Base at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, the right to challenge their detention. With about 600 detainees at Bagram Air Base in Afghanistan and thousands more held in Iraq, courts are grappling with whether they, too, can sue to be released.

Three months after the Supreme Court's ruling on Guantanamo Bay, four Afghan citizens being detained at Bagram tried to challenge their detentions in U.S. District Court in Washington. Court filings alleged that the U.S. military had held them without charges, repeatedly interrogating them without any means to contact an attorney. Their petition was filed for them by relatives since they had no way of getting access to the legal system.

The military has determined that all the detainees at Bagram are "enemy combatants." The Bush administration said in a response to the petition last year that the enemy combatant status of the Bagram detainees is reviewed every six months, taking into consideration classified intelligence and testimony from those involved in their capture and interrogation.

After Obama took office, a federal judge in Washington gave the new administration a month to decide whether it wanted to stand by Bush's legal argument. Justice Department spokesman Dean Boyd says the filing speaks for itself.

"They've now embraced the Bush policy that you can create prisons outside the law," said Jonathan Hafetz, an attorney with the American Civil Liberties Union who has represented several detainees.

The Justice Department argues that Bagram is different from Guantanamo Bay because it is in an overseas war zone and the prisoners there are being held as part of a continuing military action. The government argues that releasing enemy combatants into the Afghan war zone, or even diverting U.S. personnel there to consider their legal cases, could threaten security.

The government also said that if the Bagram detainees had access to the courts, it would allow all foreigners captured by the United States in conflicts worldwide to do the same.

It Is not the first time that the Obama administration has used a Bush administration legal argument after promising to review it. Last week, Attorney General Eric Holder announced a review of every court case in which the Bush administration invoked the state secrets privilege, a separate legal tool it used to have lawsuits thrown out rather than reveal secrets.

The same day, however, civil division attorney Douglas Letter cited that privilege in asking an appeals court to uphold dismissal of a lawsuit accusing a Boeing Co. subsidiary of illegally helping the CIA fly suspected terrorists to allied foreign nations that tortured them.

Letter said that Obama officials approved his argument.


i hope whomod's wife still has 911 on speed dial....
http://www.foxnews.com/politics/first100...budget-process/

 Quote:
The Pentagon said Wednesday that top military officers and civilians had to sign a letter promising to keep details secret as they work on the military's budget.

Defense Department press secretary Geoff Morrell told reporters that Secretary Robert Gates made the unusual request out of concern for national security. He said the department didn't want any leaks to "unravel" the budget process.

"This is highly sensitive stuff involving programs costing tens of billions of dollars, employing hundreds of thousands of people and go to the heart of national security," he said. "And so he wants this process to be as disciplined and as forthright as possible.

"And he thinks that by having people pledge not to speak out of school, if you will, on these matters while they are a work in progress, that you'll create a climate in which you can ultimately produce a better product, because people can speak candidly with the confidence that it will not be leaked," he said.

Gates remained as secretary under Obama after serving under President Bush, but this year is the first time he is requiring the non-disclosure statements.


Transparency?
Can I add the whole "cutting the deficit in half" thing now or should I wait until he doesn't do it?
add it.
Posted By: the G-man Re: Obama's Broken Promises - 2009-02-26 11:57 PM
Senate Democrats Surprised by Obama Plan to Leave Up to 50,000 Troops in Iraq. Senate Democrats want to hear an explanation from the White House as to why up to 50,000 troops would stay behind in Iraq.
Posted By: the G-man Re: Obama's Broken Promises - 2009-03-02 7:41 PM
Obama to Sign Pork-Filled Spending Bill: President will break campaign pledge, sign $410B budget bill laden with millions in lawmakers' pet projects
Posted By: Irwin Schwab Re: Obama's Broken Promises - 2009-03-03 4:53 AM
http://uk.reuters.com/article/usPoliticsNews/idUKTRE5216JY20090302

 Quote:
Republican Senator John McCain on Monday launched a broadside against former rival President Barack Obama, arguing he failed to live up to his commitment to change Washington by backing a $410 billion spending bill stuffed full of lawmakers' pet projects.

Officials have said Obama would likely sign the spending bill because it was wrapping up business left over from the previous administration but necessary to fund government operations through September 30.

McCain said the projects -- known as "earmarks" -- directly violated Obama's vow to get tough on spending.

"In his pledge last September, President Obama said 'We need earmark reform and when I'm president I will go line by line to make sure we're not spending money unwisely,'" McCain said on the Senate floor.

"So what's brought to the floor today, 9,000 earmarks, billions and billions of dollars of unneeded and wasteful spending," he said.

McCain has tried for years to eliminate earmarks, which represent a small fraction of U.S. spending. On the campaign trail he frequently criticized Obama for seeking earmarks during his early years as a senator.

"If it sounds like I'm angry ... it's because I am," the fiery McCain said. "The American people want the Congress to act in a fiscally responsible manner."




I really wish McCain hadn't tried to be the better man in the campaign. Being honest cost him the job and now we're stuck with a dud that loves to spend other peoples money.
Posted By: thedoctor Re: Obama's Broken Promises - 2009-03-04 6:47 PM
Posted By: PJP Re: Obama's Broken Promises - 2009-03-04 11:29 PM
Posted By: the G-man Re: Obama's Broken Promises - 2009-03-04 11:45 PM
 Originally Posted By: PJP


Posted By: PJP Re: Obama's Broken Promises - 2009-03-06 2:20 AM
Stocks plummeted again today! Bet douchebag Hussein is rethinking that strategy of talking down the economy every day since November.
Posted By: Irwin Schwab Re: Obama's Broken Promises - 2009-03-06 2:39 AM
Likely he isnt. In order to socialize the country and institute martial law he needs a total collapse.
Posted By: the G-man Re: Obama's Broken Promises - 2009-03-11 9:05 PM
 Originally Posted By: rex
Obama says he accepts 'imperfect' spending bill

  • WASHINGTON – Acknowledging it's an "imperfect" bill, President Barack Obama said Wednesday he will accept a $410 billion spending package that includes billions in earmarks like those he promised to curb in last year's campaign. But he insisted the bill must signal an "end to the old way of doing business."

    The massive measure funding federal agencies through the fall contains nearly 8,000 pet projects, known as earmarks and denounced by critics as pork.

    Obama defended earmarks when they're "done right," allowing lawmakers to direct money to worthy projects in their districts. But he said they've been abused, and he promised to work with Congress to curb them.

    "I am signing an imperfect omnibus bill because it's necessary for the ongoing functions of government," Obama declared. "But I also view this as a departure point for more far-reaching change."

    In a sign of his discomfort with the bill, Obama planned to sign the bill quietly rather than in public. He declined to answer a shouted reporters' question about why.

    Running for president, Obama denounced the many pet projects as wasteful and open to abuse — and vowed to rein them in.

    Explaining his decision, Obama said that future earmarks must have a "legitimate and worthy public purpose", and the any earmark for a private company should be subject to competitive bidding rules. Plus he said he'll "work with Congress" to eliminate any the administration objects to.

    But he acknowledged that earmarks have bred "cynicism", and he declared, "This piece of legislation must mark an end to the old way of doing business."

    White House officials in recent weeks have dismissed criticism of the earmarks in the bill, saying the legislation was a remnant of last year and that the president planned to turn his attention to future spending instead of looking backward.

    White House spokesman Robert Gibbs said Obama wouldn't be the first president to sign legislation that he viewed as less than ideal. Asked whether Obama had second thoughts about signing the bill, Gibbs' reply was curt: "No."

    Obama's modest set of reforms builds upon changes initiated by Republicans in 2006 and strengthened by Democrats two years ago. Most importantly, every earmark and its sponsor must be made public.

    In new steps — outlined in concert with House Democratic leaders Wednesday morning — the House Appropriations Committee will submit every earmark to the appropriate executive branch agency for a review. And any earmark designed to go to for-profit companies would have to be awarded through a competitive bidding process.

    But perhaps the most tangible change may be Obama's promise to resurrect the long-defunct process by which the president proposes to cut spending from bills that he has signed into law.

    Under this so-called rescissions process, the White House sends Congress a roster of cuts for its consideration. Congress is free to ignore the cuts, but both Obama and senior members like Appropriations Committee Chairman David Obey, D-Wis., say they want to use it to clean out bad earmarks that make it through the process.

    But Obama declined to endorse a stronger process advocated by Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., and others, that would have required Congress to vote on a presidential rescission earmark package. Senior Democrats dislike the idea even though many of them backed it in the early-to-mid 1990s.

    During his presidential campaign, Obama promised to force Congress to curb its pork-barrel-spending ways. Yet the bill sent from the Democratic-controlled Congress to the White House on Tuesday contained 7,991 earmarks totaling $5.5 billion, according to calculations by the Republican staff of the House Appropriations Committee.

    The 1,132-page bill has an extraordinary reach, wrapping together nine spending bills to fund the annual operating budgets of every Cabinet department except Defense, Homeland Security and Veterans Affairs. Among the many earmarks are $485,000 for a boarding school for at-risk native students in western Alaska and $1.2 million for Helen Keller International so the nonprofit can provide eyeglasses to students with poor vision.

    Most of the government has been running on a stopgap funding bill set to expire at midnight Wednesday. Refusing to sign the newly completed spending bill would force Congress to pass another bill to keep the lights on come Thursday or else shut down the massive federal government. That is an unlikely possibility for a president who has spent just seven weeks in office.

    The $410 billion bill includes significant increases in food aid for the poor, energy research and other programs. It was supposed to have been completed last fall, but Democrats opted against election-year battles with Republicans and former President George W. Bush.


By the end of four years I predict this will be the single longest thread in RKMB history
Posted By: the G-man Obama seen as weak - 2009-03-12 5:45 PM
Journalist Howard Fineman on the Today Show, discussing Obama's approval of the pork spending bill:
  • he was faced with a situation that he said he couldn’t change. But of course that’s what his campaign is about. The important thing politically in Washington, Matt, is everybody's trying to take their measure of Barack Obama, and frankly, they think they can roll him, based on the evidence of this thing.”

    For a president to be seen as toothless this early in his tenure bodes very badly. And not just in terms of his domestic agenda. Our foreign enemies are taking his measure too. If Barack Obama is seen as unable to stand up to Nancy Pelosi, surely that will embolden thugs, knaves and terrorists around the world.

As stunning as was that opening indictment, Fineman was far from finished:

  • “Inside the Beltway, it looks like the Congress and not the President is in charge.”
  • Rahm Emanuel was brought in to control Congress, but it’s worked the other way around.
  • “He’s got to not only be a popular president but a powerful one and make his will fact in Washington and he really hasn’t done that in the details.”
  • “He’s a great explainer—hasn’t always explained everything. He’s a detail guy—hasn’t always focused on it. He’s an interesting combination of energy and patience and a little bit of passivity. He’s allowed the Congress to dictate terms on the stimulus package, allowed them to dictate terms on this new funding bill. And he’s probably going to let them dictate the terms on health care. He’s satisfied to be a bottom-line guy, not the out-front guy.”
  • Asked by Lauer whether Joe Biden might be the blunt-spoken person required, Fineman laughed it off: “they’ve decided to say that anything Joe Biden says, he and he alone is responsible for. He’s the gabby uncle you don’t want to pay too much attention to. So no, he’s not the guy.”
  • “[Geithner] has hurt him a lot . . . The reality is Larry Summers really runs things behind the scenes.”
  • “For an explaining-type guy [Obama], it hasn’t worked so far.“
Posted By: the G-man Re: Obama seen as weak - 2009-03-14 12:07 AM
Obama flip flops again: now the fundamentals of the economy ARE strong
Posted By: Franta Re: Obama seen as weak - 2009-03-14 8:26 AM
Im too "Obamaized" to check....has anyone ANYWHERE given me evidence of what Barry did to become such a prime candidate for president?
Posted By: the G-man Re: Obama's broken promises - 2009-03-14 7:37 PM
 Originally Posted By: the G-man of Zur-En-Arrh

I've lost count. Exactly how many people with ties to lobbying are in Obama's "lobbyist free" White House?


Special Interest Groups Hit Record: Obama's election has helped spark the strongest growth in political action committees in a generation.


In every category imaginable, Obama has promised something, and each time done the exact opposite.



Posted By: the G-man Re: Obama's broken promises - 2009-03-16 1:52 AM
 Originally Posted By: Wonder Boy

In every category imaginable, Obama has promised something, and each time done the exact opposite.


Add raising taxes on the middle class to the list.

Administration Is Open to Taxing Health Benefits:

  • The Obama administration is signaling to Congress that the president could support taxing some employee health benefits, as several influential lawmakers and many economists favor, to help pay for overhauling the health care system.

    The proposal is politically problematic for President Obama, however, since it is similar to one he denounced in the presidential campaign as “the largest middle-class tax increase in history.” Most Americans with insurance get it from their employers, and taxing workers for the benefit is opposed by union leaders and some businesses.


So, far from cutting taxes on the middle class, there is a good chance Obama will raise their taxes.

But wait, there's more:

  • In television advertisements last fall, Mr. Obama criticized his Republican rival for the presidency, Senator John McCain of Arizona, for proposing to tax all employer-provided health benefits. The benefits have long been tax-free, regardless of how generous they are or how much an employee earns. The advertisements did not point out that Mr. McCain, in exchange, wanted to give all families a tax credit to subsidize the purchase of coverage.
Posted By: the G-man Re: Obama's broken promises - 2009-03-19 8:26 PM
Obama: one week ago:
  • "We're going to have to make sure that every single dollar is well spent. If we see money being misspent, we're going to put a stop to it, and we will call it out and we will publicize it," said Obama, who triggered an audible gasp from his audience with an announced appearance at the meeting.

    "You've got this wonderful mission and, you know, it's rare where you get a chance to put your shoulder to the wheel of history and move it in a better direction -- this is such an opportunity."


Today: Obama Stimulus Auditor says 'Some waste or fraud is ... inevitable.'
  • The chief auditor overseeing the spending of the $787 billion in stimulus funds is warning that some waste or fraud is regrettably inevitable.

    In prepared testimony before the House oversight committee, Earl Devaney says the challenge for the Recovery Accountability and Transparency Board he chairs is to significantly minimize any such loss.

    Devaney warns that he thinks federal agencies will have great difficulty attracting and hiring enough contract professionals to minimize the risks associated with moving the money fast enough to accomplish the recovery act's goals.
Posted By: the G-man Re: Obama's broken promises - 2009-03-22 2:27 AM
Even the reliably liberal Associated Press is starting to notice a trend:
  • Barack Obama's optimistic campaign rhetoric has crashed headlong into the stark reality of governing.

    In office two months, he has backpedaled on an array of issues, gingerly shifting positions as circumstances dictate while ducking for political cover to avoid undercutting his credibility and authority. That's happened on the Iraq troop withdrawal timeline, on lobbyists in his administration and on money for lawmakers' pet projects.

    But the shifts could take a toll over time if they become a persistent pattern and the public grows weary. His overall job-performance marks could suffer and jeopardize his likely re-election campaign in 2012. People could perceive him as a say-one-thing-do-another politician and the Democratic-controlled Congress could see him as a weak chief executive.

    Obama's moves and maneuvering for political cover run the gamut.

    He spent most of the campaign promising to bring combat troops home from Iraq 16 months after taking office, though he left himself wiggle room.

    After directing his commanders to map out a responsible pullout, President Obama adjusted that timeline to 19 months and said 50,000 troops, about one-third of the current force, would remain.

    While campaigning, Obama frequently swiped at lobbyists, saying, "When I am president, they won't find a job in my White House."

    Then he took office and had to fill thousands of positions. He did allow former lobbyists to join his administration. But he imposed ethics rules barring them from dealing with matters related to their lobbying work or joining agencies that they had lobbied in the previous two years. In several cases, he has made outright exceptions.

    Obama the candidate pledged to curb spending directed at lawmakers' pet projects; they're known in Washington as "earmarks." Obama the president signed an "imperfect" $410 billion budget measure that included 8,500 earmarks.

    He had little choice. The measure, a holdover from last year, was needed to keep government from shutting down. But to blunt the fallout, Obama outlined guidelines to ensure tighter restraints on the spending and made a new promise: Future earmarks won't become law so easily.

    As for politics, Obama campaigned as a new-style leader who chastised partisanship and renounced divisiveness in Washington. But as president, Obama's White House aides wasted little time pouncing on Republicans and mocking conservative commentator Rush Limbaugh as the GOP's leader.

    On fiscal matters, Obama the candidate urged Americans to tighten their belts. Once in office and saddled with recession, though, he signed a $787 billion stimulus measure and outlined a $3.6 trillion budget plan that will plunge the nation deeper into the red. But again he paired the proposal with a new promise, to cut the deficit by more than half by the end of his first term.


Of course, being the reliably liberal Associated Press, the reporter finds that breaking promises is actually quite presidential:
  • It's the same delicate dance each of his predecessors faced in moving from candidate to president, only to find he couldn't stick exactly by his word. Each was hamstrung by his responsibility to the entire nation and to individual constituencies, changes in the foreign and domestic landscapes, and the trappings of the federal government and Washington itself.

    Once in the White House, presidents quickly learn they are only one part of the political system, not in charge of it. They discover the trade-offs they must make and the parties they must please to get things done. Inevitably, they find out that it's impossible to follow through completely on their campaign proposals.

    For now at least, Obama's deviations have served only to invite occasional cries of hypocrisy from some Republicans and infrequent grumbles of disappointment from some Democrats. He has popularity on his side, and it seems people mostly are chalking up his moves to much-needed flexibility at a difficult time.

    Franklin D. Roosevelt ran for office promising to balance the budget. But he reversed course when he took over a country in depression and doled out a spending prescription to revive the economy. He made other shifts as well.

    The ailing public didn't view him as wishy-washy or politically calculating, but rather as a president who was experimenting in hopes of finding policy to fix the problems. His charm and communication savvy allowed him to get away with it.

    Historians agree that seems to be the model Obama is trying to emulate. "I didnt come here to pass on our problems to the next president or the next generation — I came here to solve them," he said Saturday in his radio and Internet address. A charismatic orator, he's trying to govern with a pragmatic posture while projecting a willingness to compromise.

    His mantra these days: "We will not let the pursuit of the perfect stand in the way of achievable goals."
Posted By: Irwin Schwab 10 questions for Obama - 2009-03-24 11:44 PM
http://news.yahoo.com/s/politico/20090324/pl_politico/20422

 Quote:
President Barack Obama holds his second primetime news conference at 8 p.m. Tuesday and, much like the first, the economy will be center stage.

But instead of selling his stimulus package to a country that welcomed the jolt, the president now has to explain why, once again, taxpayers must foot the bill to prop up Wall Street.

Obama is seeking to cool the white-hot anger, both in Congress and in the public, over the AIG bonuses by rolling out a series of new regulations to rein in Wall Street’s excesses.

But should his crackdown go too far, he risks turning away the very financial titans he needs to take part in his new plan — a public-private partnership to clean up the bank balance sheets that are clogging up the credit markets.

In short, it’s no easy task.

And that doesn’t even mention the sales pitch for his ambitious budget, full of tax increases and new spending, that has been met with ambivalence by members of Congress from both parties.

For all his challenges, Obama got some much-needed good news Monday – and we’ll start our 10 questions there.

1) You’ve dismissed the stock market’s frequent zig-zags, but do you think Monday’s rally in the Dow amounted to a Wall Street stamp of approval for your bank bailout plan?

Earlier this month, Obama called the stock market “sort of like a tracking poll in politics” – with daily ups and downs that are largely meaningless, a mantra his aides also have picked up. But that was when the Dow Jones Industrial Average was mostly heading south, and it served their interests to minimize its short-term importance.

But over recent weeks, the market has had a mini-recovery, punctuated by the Dow rocketing up nearly 500 points Monday – the same day Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner rolled out the administration’s new solution to help banks. The rally offered a nice salve for the embattled Geithner, whose first bailout rollout was met with a 380-point plunge. But the administration has resisted seizing on the market spike, to avoid backtracking on its never-mind-the-Dow talk.

2) Given that 15 of the top 20 AIG bonus recipients are now returning their bonuses, do you think the House acted too hastily to pass a bill levying a punitive tax on those individuals?

Top Obama officials have made little secret of their frustration with the AIG episode and the knee-jerk reaction of Congress. While assuring that, yes, the president was angry over the bonuses, White House Chief of Staff Rahm Emanuel said last week that Obama’s “main priority is getting the financial system stabilized, and he believes this is a big distraction in that effort.”

Now, as New York Attorney General Andrew Cuomo methodically recoups the money from AIG executives, the conventional wisdom is increasingly that Congress overreacted.

Obama is loathe to criticize his allies on the Hill, but said on “60 Minutes” Sunday that it’s important not to “govern out of anger.” He could send a message tonight to the Wall Street bigs he needs on the toxic asset plan by stating more strongly his unease with last week’s vote.

3) You talked on “60 Minutes” about missing the ability to talk to everyday Americans, but can you tell them for a moment how this economic downturn is impacting you and your family?

The president and first lady are, by virtue of book royalties and a healthy government salary, financially secure and able to send their daughters to an expensive private school. But a recent Business Week estimate concludes that they’ve lost six-figures in the market to date, much of it in mutual funds. Further, both Obamas come from modest roots and have relatives who have not similarly prospered.

Can Obama relate – “feel the pain,” to borrow from another Democratic president – to average Americans who have been hit hard, without lamenting problems that are mild as compared to those in the country who have lost their home, their job or both?

Recall the famous question directed at then-President George H.W. Bush at the pivotal Richmond, Va., debate in 1992 and his fumbling reaction.

4) Wall Street is, understandably, coming in for significant blame over the current financial crisis. But what responsibility, if any, do average Americans bear for the problem?

Obama may not be inclined to deliver tough love, but it’s true that the housing foreclosure crisis was spurred in part by people who bought homes beyond their means.

Yes, the financial industry made it easy by handing out loans too freely. But as a president who rode to office partly by touting the virtue of personal responsibility, shouldn’t Obama tell some of those pitchfork-wielding Americans that buying that $400,000 McMansion on a salary of $50,000 a year helped create the problem?

Presidents Clinton and Bush both trumpeted the gains in homeownership on their watch without regard to the fact that not everyone who bought could afford to pay. Obama, without discouraging this particular fulfillment of the American Dream, may need to be more direct.

5) On health care, you included a government-run insurance option in your campaign platform. Is that a must for comprehensive legislation? Also, some in your own party have expressed concern about paying for health care by, in effect, raising taxes on upper-income taxpayers, as you have proposed. Are you willing to pay for it through other means?

Battle lines are already being drawn on health care reform, with Republicans voicing strong objection to a public insurance option to compete with private insurers, and Democratic leaning groups increasingly standing up for the public-private mix.

As part of his health reform plan, Obama said he would provide a choice of public and private insurance options, so one government-run plan, a vastly expanded Medicare, would compete with private insurers. Liberals like it because because they don’t trust profit-minded insurers. Industry is fighting in, because they believe government is an unfair competitor and would cut into their profits, while not improving care.

Obama has yet to say whether he would support a package without the public option. Is he willing to give it up for the sake of a bipartisan bill? Such a move would infuriate an element of his base.

And his proposal to put a $634 million “down-payment” on health care through rolling back tax deductions for families making more than $250,000 a year has already met resistance from key Democrats on tax-writing committees. But if not that, how would Obama pay for his plan?

6) How many appointees have received waivers from your new ethics rules barring lobbyists from working in government?

The White House has conceded, in dribs and drabs, that a wide range of appointees to senior posts – the most senior being Deputy Defense Secretary William Lynn – are former lobbyists. But other administration allies who lobbied for non-corporate entities have been barred by the same policy, like a senior official from Human Rights Watch.

The White House hasn’t offered a clear statement on which appointees deserve waivers, and which don’t. But the issue is causing consternation among Obama’s allies, and cries of hypocrisy from his critics. And so much for transparency -- the White House also doesn’t regularly disclose the waivers. Will Obama say how many there are?

7) Larry Summers told New York Magazine last summer that he hoped you didn’t believe what you said about renegotiating the North American Free Trade Agreement with Canada and Mexico, while you were touting your opposition to the treaty on the campaign trail. So where do you stand now -- will changing NAFTA become a priority for you, or not?

Obama has conceded he went too far in attacking NAFTA to win over blue-collar voters in Ohio. And in fact, his early talk as president has been generally pro-trade, particularly with close allies. He’s interested in strengthening labor and environmental standards in the treaty but only if “not disruptive” to trade, he said in Canada.

Now, the question of how the White House handles trade agreements during the current economic crisis remains open -- and is being closely watched by Obama’s labor friends, who want him to take a more protectionist stance. U.S. allies are watching too – Mexico already has slapped $2.4 billion in tariffs on American goods after Congress restored restrictions on Mexican trucks crossing the border.

8) Throughout the campaign, you said Afghanistan represented the central front in the battle against Islamic terrorism but on “60 Minutes,” you said there must be an “exit strategy.” How long do you expect to keep American troops on the ground there?

If the battle against al Qaeda is going to take as long as many national security experts expect, then American troops may have to remain in Afghanistan for a sustained period of time, well past Obama’s first term.

The president is sending 17,000 more U.S. troops to the country to curb the growing violence there ahead of August elections, but he has not given a comprehensive speech yet on his policy toward what is widely seen as the new Iraq. His policy review is expected out Friday.

It’s an issue on which Obama has to watch his left flank and specifically the dovish wing of the Democratic party that was among his earliest supporters. Though little noticed, there were a few thousand anti-war protestors in Washington last weekend. One of the chants: "Hey, Obama, yes, we can. Troops out of Afghanistan."

9) Appearing before a crowd chanting “Death to America” and “Death to Israel,” Iran’s Ayatollah Khamenei rebuffed your video outreach to this country last week. Is there any hope of reaching a new, less contentious relationship with Iran?

Analysts are split on the success of Obama’s videotaped greeting to Iran on the occasion of a secular Persian holiday. Some say the negative response from Iran’s top religious leader demonstrates that the gap between the U.S. and Iran is impossible to bridge. Others said that Obama may draw a warmer response from other segments of Iranian society, and that the video demonstrates a clean break with President Bush’s unsuccessful efforts to strong-arm Iran into dropping its nuclear program.

Obama’s attempt, even if a failure in the short-term, may gives him leverage if he wants to tighten sanctions or take other hostile action toward Iran, by demonstrating to the Europeans, Russia and China that he made a good-faith effort at reaching out.

10) Most modern presidents have found it useful to confer with the other living presidents because of their unique insights and perspective. Can you tell us which presidents you have consulted since entering the White House and generally what you discussed?

Obama famously met with all the current living presidents before he was sworn in, but the group was tight-lipped about their conversations. On the day he announced his Iraq troop withdrawal plan, he called President George W. Bush from Air Force One to brief him on the move. And just last week, former President Jimmy Carter was spotted leaving the White House.

Just what sort of advice has Obama gotten from his brothers in the most elite fraternity in the world?
What a pleasure it was to see British Member of Parliament (MP) Daniel Hannan disembowell Gordon Brown with a dull rusty knife:



He could just as easily be saying this to lying sack of shit Barack Obama, who is in the process of putting our salvageable economy on the same unbelievably wrong course.


Posted By: the G-man Obama Breaks Signing Statement Promise - 2009-04-01 3:27 AM
 Originally Posted By: Friendly Neighborhood Ray-man
Bush has resorted to issuing constitutionally dubious "signing statements," which declare, by fiat, how he will interpret and execute the law in question, even when that interpretation flagrantly violates the will of Congress. Earlier presidents, including Jackson, raised hackles by offering their own view of the Constitution in order to justify vetoing congressional acts. Bush doesn't bother with that: He signs the legislation (eliminating any risk that Congress will overturn a veto), and then governs how he pleases -- using the signing statements as if they were line-item vetoes.




New York Times:
  • WASHINGTON — President Obama on Wednesday issued his first signing statement, reserving a right to bypass dozens of provisions in a $410 billion government spending bill even as he signed it into law.

    In the statement — directions to executive-branch officials about how to carry out the legislation — Mr. Obama instructed them to view most of the disputed provisions as merely advisory and nonbinding, saying they were unconstitutional intrusions on his own powers.

    Mr. Obama’s instructions followed by two days his order to government officials that they not rely on any of President George W. Bush’s provision-bypassing signing statements without first consulting Attorney General Eric H. Holder Jr. In that order, Mr. Obama said he would continue the practice of issuing signing statements
i hope whomod is ok.
this isnt a broken campaign promise, but a notable lie by the administration:


http://www.foxnews.com/politics/election...number-claimed/

 Quote:
EXCLUSIVE: You've heard this shocking "fact" before -- on TV and radio, in newspapers, on the Internet and from the highest politicians in the land: 90 percent of the weapons used to commit crimes in Mexico come from the United States.

-- Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said it to reporters on a flight to Mexico City.

-- CBS newsman Bob Schieffer referred to it while interviewing President Obama.

-- California Sen. Dianne Feinstein said at a Senate hearing: "It is unacceptable to have 90 percent of the guns that are picked up in Mexico and used to shoot judges, police officers and mayors ... come from the United States."

-- William Hoover, assistant director for field operations at the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, testified in the House of Representatives that "there is more than enough evidence to indicate that over 90 percent of the firearms that have either been recovered in, or interdicted in transport to Mexico, originated from various sources within the United States."

There's just one problem with the 90 percent "statistic" and it's a big one:

It's just not true.

In fact, it's not even close. The fact is, only 17 percent of guns found at Mexican crime scenes have been traced to the U.S.

What's true, an ATF spokeswoman told FOXNews.com, in a clarification of the statistic used by her own agency's assistant director, "is that over 90 percent of the traced firearms originate from the U.S."

But a large percentage of the guns recovered in Mexico do not get sent back to the U.S. for tracing, because it is obvious from their markings that they do not come from the U.S.

"Not every weapon seized in Mexico has a serial number on it that would make it traceable, and the U.S. effort to trace weapons really only extends to weapons that have been in the U.S. market," Matt Allen, special agent of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), told FOX News.

Video:Click here to watch more.

A Look at the Numbers

In 2007-2008, according to ATF Special Agent William Newell, Mexico submitted 11,000 guns to the ATF for tracing. Close to 6,000 were successfully traced -- and of those, 90 percent -- 5,114 to be exact, according to testimony in Congress by William Hoover -- were found to have come from the U.S.

But in those same two years, according to the Mexican government, 29,000 guns were recovered at crime scenes.

In other words, 68 percent of the guns that were recovered were never submitted for tracing. And when you weed out the roughly 6,000 guns that could not be traced from the remaining 32 percent, it means 83 percent of the guns found at crime scenes in Mexico could not be traced to the U.S.

So, if not from the U.S., where do they come from? There are a variety of sources:

-- The Black Market. Mexico is a virtual arms bazaar, with fragmentation grenades from South Korea, AK-47s from China, and shoulder-fired rocket launchers from Spain, Israel and former Soviet bloc manufacturers.

-- Russian crime organizations. Interpol says Russian Mafia groups such as Poldolskaya and Moscow-based Solntsevskaya are actively trafficking drugs and arms in Mexico.

- South America. During the late 1990s, the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) established a clandestine arms smuggling and drug trafficking partnership with the Tijuana cartel, according to the Federal Research Division report from the Library of Congress.

-- Asia. According to a 2006 Amnesty International Report, China has provided arms to countries in Asia, Africa and Latin America. Chinese assault weapons and Korean explosives have been recovered in Mexico.

-- The Mexican Army. More than 150,000 soldiers deserted in the last six years, according to Mexican Congressman Robert Badillo. Many took their weapons with them, including the standard issue M-16 assault rifle made in Belgium.

-- Guatemala. U.S. intelligence agencies say traffickers move immigrants, stolen cars, guns and drugs, including most of America's cocaine, along the porous Mexican-Guatemalan border. On March 27, La Hora, a Guatemalan newspaper, reported that police seized 500 grenades and a load of AK-47s on the border. Police say the cache was transported by a Mexican drug cartel operating out of Ixcan, a border town.

'These Don't Come From El Paso'

Ed Head, a firearms instructor in Arizona who spent 24 years with the U.S. Border Patrol, recently displayed an array of weapons considered "assault rifles" that are similar to those recovered in Mexico, but are unavailable for sale in the U.S.

"These kinds of guns -- the auto versions of these guns -- they are not coming from El Paso," he said. "They are coming from other sources. They are brought in from Guatemala. They are brought in from places like China. They are being diverted from the military. But you don't get these guns from the U.S."

Some guns, he said, "are legitimately shipped to the government of Mexico, by Colt, for example, in the United States. They are approved by the U.S. government for use by the Mexican military service. The guns end up in Mexico that way -- the fully auto versions -- they are not smuggled in across the river."

Many of the fully automatic weapons that have been seized in Mexico cannot be found in the U.S., but they are not uncommon in the Third World.

The Mexican government said it has seized 2,239 grenades in the last two years -- but those grenades and the rocket-propelled grenades (RPGs) are unavailable in U.S. gun shops. The ones used in an attack on the U.S. Consulate in Monterrey in October and a TV station in January were made in South Korea. Almost 70 similar grenades were seized in February in the bottom of a truck entering Mexico from Guatemala.

"Most of these weapons are being smuggled from Central American countries or by sea, eluding U.S. and Mexican monitors who are focused on the smuggling of semi-automatic and conventional weapons purchased from dealers in the U.S. border states of Texas, New Mexico, Arizona and California," according to a report in the Los Angeles Times.

Boatloads of Weapons

So why would the Mexican drug cartels, which last year grossed between $17 billion and $38 billion, bother buying single-shot rifles, and force thousands of unknown "straw" buyers in the U.S. through a government background check, when they can buy boatloads of fully automatic M-16s and assault rifles from China, Israel or South Africa?

Alberto Islas, a security consultant who advises the Mexican government, says the drug cartels are using the Guatemalan border to move black market weapons. Some are left over from the Central American wars the United States helped fight; others, like the grenades and launchers, are South Korean, Israeli and Spanish. Some were legally supplied to the Mexican government; others were sold by corrupt military officers or officials.

The exaggeration of United States "responsibility" for the lawlessness in Mexico extends even beyond the "90-percent" falsehood -- and some Second Amendment activists believe it's designed to promote more restrictive gun-control laws in the U.S.

In a remarkable claim, Auturo Sarukhan, the Mexican ambassador to the U.S., said Mexico seizes 2,000 guns a day from the United States -- 730,000 a year. That's a far cry from the official statistic from the Mexican attorney general's office, which says Mexico seized 29,000 weapons in all of 2007 and 2008.

Chris Cox, spokesman for the National Rifle Association, blames the media and anti-gun politicians in the U.S. for misrepresenting where Mexican weapons come from.

"Reporter after politician after news anchor just disregards the truth on this," Cox said. "The numbers are intentionally used to weaken the Second Amendment."

"The predominant source of guns in Mexico is Central and South America. You also have Russian, Chinese and Israeli guns. It's estimated that over 100,000 soldiers deserted the army to work for the drug cartels, and that ignores all the police. How many of them took their weapons with them?"

But Tom Diaz, senior policy analyst at the Violence Policy Center, called the "90 percent" issue a red herring and said that it should not detract from the effort to stop gun trafficking into Mexico.

"Let's do what we can with what we know," he said. "We know that one hell of a lot of firearms come from the United States because our gun market is wide open."
http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20090403/pl_nm/us_summers_hedgefund;_ylt=Anfr_P4DXwH.7svZ7wxukpQjtBAF

 Quote:
WASHINGTON (Reuters) – Lawrence Summers, a top economic adviser to U.S. President Barack Obama, was paid about $5.2 million in compensation by hedge fund D.E. Shaw during the past year, according to financial disclosure forms released on Friday by the White House.

Officials from D.E. Shaw were not immediately available for comment. Summers, a former U.S. treasury secretary, was a part-time managing director of the firm after stepping down as president of Harvard University.

Summers was also paid hundreds of thousands of dollars in speaking fees from major Wall Street firms and financial institutions, including JP Morgan, Citigroup, Goldman Sachs and Lehman Brothers, the forms showed.
change we can believe in!
http://www.foxnews.com/politics/first100days/2009/04/09/obama-seek-b-war-spending/

 Quote:
President Obama asked Congress on Thursday for $83.4 billion for U.S. military and diplomatic operations in Iraq and Afghanistan, pressing for special troop funding that he opposed two years ago when he was senator and George W. Bush was president.

Obama's request, including money to send thousands more troops to Afghanistan, would push the costs of the two wars to almost $1 trillion since the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks, according to the Congressional Research Service. The additional money would cover operations into the fall.

Obama is also requesting $350 million in new funding to upgrade security along the U.S.-Mexico border and to combat narcoterrorists, along with another $400 million in counterinsurgency aid to Pakistan.

"Nearly 95 percent of these funds will be used to support our men and women in uniform as they help the people of Iraq to take responsibility for their own future -- and work to disrupt, dismantle and defeat al-Qaida in Pakistan and Afghanistan," Obama wrote in a letter to House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif.

Robert Gibbs, the White House press secretary, acknowledged that Obama has been critical of Bush's use of similar special legislation to pay for the wars. He said it was needed this time because the money will be required by summer, before Congress is likely to complete its normal appropriations process.

"This will be the last supplemental for Iraq and Afghanistan. The process by which this has been funded over the course of the past many years, the president has discussed and will change," Gibbs said.

Last June, Congress approved $66 billion in advance 2009 funding for military operations. All told, the Pentagon would receive $142 billion in war funding for the budget year ending on Sept. 30.

The request is likely to win easy approval from the Democratic-controlled Congress, despite frustration among some liberals over the pace of troop withdrawals and Obama's plans for a large residual force of up to 50,000 troops -- about one-third of the force now there -- who will train Iraqis, protect U.S. assets and personnel and conduct anti-terror operations.

The official request was sent early Thursday evening.

The request would fund an average force level in Iraq of 140,000 U.S. troops. It would also finance Obama's initiative to boost troop levels in Afghanistan to more than 60,000 from the current 39,000. And it would provide $2.2 billion to accelerate the Pentagon's plans to increase the overall size of the U.S. military, including a 547,400-person active-duty Army.

Some Democrats were not pleased.

"This funding will do two things -- it will prolong our occupation of Iraq through at least the end of 2011, and it will deepen and expand our military presence in Afghanistan indefinitely," said anti-war Rep. Lynn Woolsey, D-Calif. "Instead of attempting to find military solutions to the problems we face in Iraq and Afghanistan, President Obama must fundamentally change the mission in both countries to focus on promoting reconciliation, economic development, humanitarian aid, and regional diplomatic efforts."

But House GOP leader John Boehner of Ohio predicted that Republicans would overwhelmingly support the request, provided congressional Democrats don't seek to "micromanage" the war by adding a timeline or other restrictions on the ability of military officials to carry on the fight.

Defense Secretary Robert Gates, a holdover from the Bush administration, said, "The reality is the alternative to the supplemental is a sudden and precipitous withdrawal of the United States from both places, and I don't know anybody who thinks that's a good idea." He said, "The reality is it would put everything we have achieved in Iraq at tremendous risk, and I believe it would greatly endanger our troops."

Obama was a harsh critic of the Iraq war as a presidential candidate, a stance that attracted support from the Democratic Party's liberal base and helped him secure his party's nomination. He opposed an infusion of war funding in 2007 after Bush used a veto to force Congress to remove a withdrawal timeline from the $99 billion measure.

But he supported a war funding bill last year that also included about $25 billion for domestic programs. Obama also voted for war funding in 2006, before he announced his candidacy for president.

The request includes $75.8 billion for the military and more than $7 billion in foreign aid. Pakistan, a key ally in the fight against al-Qaida, will receive $400 million in aid to combat insurgents.

The upcoming debate in Congress is likely to provide an early test of Obama's efforts to remake the Pentagon and its much-criticized weapons procurement system. He is requesting four F-22 fighter jets costing about $600 million as part of the war funding package but wants to shut the F-22 program down after that.

The special measure would include $3.6 billion for the Afghanistan National Army.

The White House wants the bill for the president's signature by Memorial Day, said a House Democratic aide.

Obama announced plans in February to withdraw U.S. troops from Iraq on a 19-month timetable.

His new request would push the war and diplomatic money approved for 2009 to about $150 billion. The totals were $171 billion for 2007 and $188 billion for 2008, the year Bush increased the tempo of military operations in a generally successful effort to quell the Iraq insurgency.
change we can believe in!

\:lol\:
\:lol\: \:lol\:
http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5iuK4RrdQYakZgAF3_iK0WphHFmPwD97HSRD01

 Quote:
WASHINGTON (AP) — Is Bo a rescued dog or not? Did President Obama keep or break a campaign promise in picking the purebred as the family's new pet?

The twists and turns of the Portuguese water dog's route to the White House make for the kind of intrigue that political junkies and the highly opinionated dog world delight in.

Barack Obama and his wife Michelle said during the presidential campaign that they had promised their two girls a dog after the election.

The Obamas repeatedly said they wanted it to be a rescued dog such as one from a shelter. Their search was complicated by daughter Malia's allergies, which would rule out many of the "mutts" the president has said he would prefer.

Enter Bo, a 6-month-old puppy given up by his first owner and matched with the Obamas through his breeders. Because he was given up by his first owner as a poor fit and is now with his second owners, the Obamas, but never spent time in a shelter or with a rescue group, Bo is a "quasi-rescue dog," says Wayne Pacelle, chief executive of The Humane Society of the United States.

Here's where the intrigue comes in:

_ Bo's breeders happen to have bred Sen. Edward Kennedy's Portuguese water dogs. The Massachusetts Democrat, an Obama friend and political ally, also acquired a pup from Bo's litter. Bo's breeders are fans of Obama and named Bo's litter the Hope and Change litter.

_ Bo's first owner lives in Washington.

_ Bo was returned to the breeder in early March, fitting the spring timeline the Obamas had given for their dog adoption.

_ Kennedy and his wife Victoria helped line Bo up with the Obamas. Before moving into the White House, the pup spent nearly a month with the Kennedys' dog trainer in Virginia.

In fact, Bo is a gift to the Obamas' daughters, Malia and Sasha, from the Kennedys, said Katie McCormick Lelyveld, a spokeswoman for Michelle Obama. The puppy officially arrives Tuesday.

"They were starting their search with shelter dogs, but when the Kennedys learned of this dog and offered it as a gift to the girls, they met the dog, it was a perfect fit for their lifestyle and for Malia's health concerns," she said, adding that the Obamas are making a donation to the Washington Humane Society. "Because this gift came before their pound search sort of was completed, they made a gift to some of the places they were looking."

Still, conspiracy buffs might speculate that Bo was meant for the Obamas all along. Was his adoption engineered to look like a rescue — or at least blur the line to head off criticism that the Obamas had picked a purebred from a breeder?

The Humane Society's Pacelle acknowledged that the Obamas never flat-out promised to get a dog from a pound or rescue group. And the society has kind words for Obama on its Web site: "Thanks, Mr. President, for giving a second-chance dog a forever home," it says.

"He's in a gray area," Pacelle said of Bo. "But I will say that many animal advocates are disappointed that he (Obama) didn't go to a shelter or breed rescue group, partly because he set that expectation and because so many activists are focused on trying to reduce the number of animals euthanized at shelters, and there's no better person to make the case to the American public that you can get a great dog from a shelter than the president."

The group later removed its congratulatory message and replaced it with: "First Dog Unveiled. Concerns about impact on shelters, demand for breed as Bo makes his debut."

Bo could be considered rescued, since he was removed from a situation that wasn't working, said Cesar Millan, host of the National Geographic Channel's "The Dog Whisperer" and co-founder with his wife of a nonprofit foundation to help abused dogs.

To help Bo settle in, the Obamas should walk him a lot in the early days to bond with him, drain his energy and make him hungry for his meals, Millan said. That will give the dog a routine and help him see that the family is the source of his food, and he has to work for it, he said.

"The dog doesn't know he just moved in with the president of the United States. The dog is going to say, `Who fulfilled my needs from day one, so who should I trust from day one?'" Millan said.

Bo's breeder, Martha Stern of Boyd, Texas, said she doesn't consider Bo a rescued dog. Owners of dogs from the kennel she and her husband run must sign contracts requiring them to return the dogs to the Sterns if they do not work out, she said. Bo went from his first home, in Washington, to the Kennedys' trainer in Virginia, and now to the White House, she said.

Portuguese water dogs aren't for everyone, Stern said. Known as PWDs, they tend to be high-energy "in-your-face" dogs that need a lot of attention, and their curly coats require a lot of maintenance, she said.

Stern said the first family did a lot of research and already knew the breed's pros and cons, and that Victoria Kennedy was closely involved. Bo seemed like a good fit because the Obamas are an active family and have the resources to give him the training and other things he needs, Stern said.

"I wouldn't say he's excessively high in energy," she said, but still a "little bit more than middle-of-the-road."

"On a scale of five, he's probably about three," Stern said.

The dog's non-shedding coat also makes him a good choice, given Malia Obama's allergies.

Stern worries that puppy mills will try to capitalize on the Obamas' dog choice and start churning out PWDs for an eager public. It's the responsibility of good Portuguese water dog breeders to try to prevent that, she said.

As for Bo, he has already been neutered, Mrs. Obama's spokeswoman said.
You know, if Obama had just said "I need a purebred dog because my daughter has allergies," most people would have accepted it. Why did he feel the need to concoct a story in the first place?
He's a dirty lying closet muslim. It's what they do.
http://www.foxnews.com/politics/first100...-secrecy-rules/

 Quote:
President Obama's most liberal supporters say they are dismayed and disgusted because this administration is invoking the "state secrets" privilege -- just as former President George W. Bush did -- to shield eavesdropping programs from public exposure.

"I wasn't happy when George Bush asserted that he could do these things and I'm not happy that President Obama is now agreeing with George Bush," said Jane Hamsher of Accountability Now.

"Other than being flat wrong, the Obama administration's position is seriously disappointing to those Americans who listened to candidate Obama's promises of a new era of government accountability and transparency, said Kevin Bankston, senior attorney at the Electronic Frontier Foundation.

EFF sued the government claiming that AT&T and perhaps other telecommunications companies cooperated with it to allow access to people's phone and Internet records -- a so-called dragnet in a search for terrorist communications.

Obama criticized the cooperation during the campaign, calling it an abuse of authority and arguing that the Bush administration "undermined the Constitution."

Now, the Obama administration is trying to have that same lawsuit dismissed.

"For the Obama administration now to try to have our lawsuit dismissed based on the exact same state secrecy arguments is quite a turnaround and very disappointing," Bankston said.

Top Obama officials, including Director of National Intelligence Dennis Blair, dispute the assertions claimed in the suit.

"Admiral Blair in two separate affidavits sworn under penalty of perjury has flatly said that the allegations of dragnet NSA surveillance are quote 'false' close quote," said Bryan Cunningham, a former CIA and Justice Department attorney.

After a full review, Attorney General Eric Holder and the administration has asked the case be dismissed, arguing that hearing it would cause "extremely grave harm to national security. "

"The Obama administration is making a very spirited, a very robust assertion of state secrets privilege just like the Bush administration did before it," said former Justice Department attorney Dave Rivkin.

"You would think that if the critics were sincere in the past but had real problems with the Bush administration they might take some note of this but no they are really not interested. They are just as disinclined to trust the Obama administration's officials when it comes to balancing individual liberty and public safety as they were with regard to .... officials of the Bush administration," he said.

"This is the attorney general and the director of national intelligence that were strongly supported by the left wing of the Democratic Party and I don't know what critics think happened," Cunningham said. "I don't know if they think Admiral Blair and Attorney General Holder got sent into the Dick Cheney mind meld machine or what."

Instead of the mind meld, analysts say Obama's eyes were opened as he learned more about the program and now realizes it is both lawful and necessary. But critics don't accept that. They think they've been betrayed by the man they expected to reverse almost every policy of the Bush years, especially this one.
somewhere whomod is crying.
 Originally Posted By: BASAMS The Plumber
http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5iuK4RrdQYakZgAF3_iK0WphHFmPwD97HSRD01

 Quote:


Bo could be considered rescued, since he was removed from a situation that wasn't working, said Cesar Millan, host of the National Geographic Channel's "The Dog Whisperer" and co-founder with his wife of a nonprofit foundation to help abused dogs.



Wait.

That guy is straight?
somewhere MEM is crying?
Posted By: Irwin Schwab The Humane Society’s real champion - 2009-04-15 5:50 AM
http://alexconant.com/?p=318

 Quote:
The wait for the President’s new puppy ends today, but the fallout from his broken promise to the Humane Society should not. And, exclusive to this website, it now develops that Rush Limbaugh has recorded PSAs for the Humane Society — guaranteeing that the controversy over the First Pup will not end.

By way of background: During the campaign, Obama said that his family would adopt a dog from a shelter if he won the election. This weekend, news broke that the new First Dog is not a shelter-animal, sparking criticism from animal-rights activists, including the Humane Society. As ABC’s Jake Tapper reports:

“Animal rights activists are chagrined with his decision. Wayne Pacelle, president and CEO Humane Society of the United States … was clearly disappointed, noting that families ‘like the Obamas, who are interested in a particular breed of animal or have special circumstances such as allergies in their household, can turn to their local animal shelter or breed rescue group.’”

Now comes a yet-to-be-released PSA from the Humane Society recorded by Rush Limbaugh last week (before the First Dog’s identity was publicly known) and leaked onto YouTube yesterday (and sent to me today by a source close to the Humane Society).


http://www.hsus.org/press_and_publications/press_releases/rush_limbaugh_records_audio_041409.html

 Quote:
Rush Limbaugh has recorded two statements of support for The Humane Society of the United States and its work to protect animals from cruelty and abuse: The first spot is on our partnerships with law enforcement agencies across the country to crack down on organized dogfighting and other animal cruelty crimes.

The second is on our outreach to communities of faith, and the moral obligation that we have to be good stewards of God's creatures.

The HSUS welcomes such vigorous statements of support from Americans of all points of view, and is grateful to Rush Limbaugh for reaching out to his audience with a message of kindness and compassion for animals. Like two-thirds of American households, Rush shares his home with a beloved pet – his cat, Pumpkin.


im glad Rush picked up Obama's slack....
Posted By: the G-man Re: Obama's Broken Promises - 2009-04-15 6:11 AM
 Originally Posted By: BASAMS The Plumber
somewhere whomod is crying.


...not as hard as his daughter, I fear.
Posted By: the G-man Re: Obama's Broken Promises - 2009-04-20 3:39 PM
Obama on Warrantless Surveillance: As Bad As Bush? Worse?

  • Barack Obama, who at one point was looking at least a little better than his predecessor on the issue of warrantless domestic surveillance, may turn out to be just as bad.

    During his campaign he criticized the Bush administration for flouting the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) by monitoring communications involving people in the U.S. without a court order. But then he went along with amendments to FISA that legalized such surveillance, even giving in on the issue of retroactive immunity for the telecommunications companies that facilitated it.

    Now The New York Times reports that the National Security Agency has been abusing its new statutory powers, collecting purely domestic communications along with the international phone calls and email messages covered by the FISA amendments

    [T]he Obama administration is trying to quash an Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) lawsuit aimed at holding Bush administration officials responsible for warrantless surveillance conducted prior to the FISA amendments, surveillance that Obama himself has said was illegal. It argues that allowing the lawsuit to proceed would harm national security—a claim frequently made by the Bush administration, which Obama has criticized as excessively secretive.

    Obama's Justice Department has gone even further than the Bush administration, arguing that the PATRIOT Act immunizes government officials who participate in illegal surveillance, except when "the Government obtains information about a person through intelligence-gathering, and Government agents unlawfully disclose that information." As EFF puts it, "DOJ claims that the U.S. Government is completely immune from litigation for illegal spying [as opposed to disclosure]—that the Government can never be sued for surveillance that violates federal privacy statutes."
http://foxforum.blogs.foxnews.com/2009/04/20/williams_obama_dc/

 Quote:
As I watch Washington politics I am not easily given to rage.

Washington politics is a game and selfishness, out-sized egos and corruption are predictable.

But over the last week I find myself in a fury.

The cause of my upset is watching the key civil rights issue of this generation — improving big city public school education — get tossed overboard by political gamesmanship. If there is one goal that deserves to be held above day-to-day partisanship and pettiness of ordinary politics it is the effort to end the scandalous poor level of academic achievement and abysmally high drop-out rates for America’s black and Hispanic students.

The reckless dismantling of the D.C. voucher program does not speak well of the promise by Obama to be the “Education President.”

This is critical to our nation’s future in terms of workforce preparation to compete in a global economy but also to fulfill the idea of racial equality by providing a real equal opportunity for all young people who are willing to work hard to succeed.

In a politically calculated dance step the Obama team first indicated that they wanted the Opportunity Scholarship Program to continue for students lucky enough to have won one of the vouchers. The five-year school voucher program is scheduled to expire after the school year ending in June 2010. Secretary Duncan said in early March that it didn’t make sense “to take kids out of a school where they’re happy and safe and satisfied and learning…those kids need to stay in their school.”

And all along the administration indicated that pending evidence that this voucher program or any other produces better test scores for students they were willing to fight for it. The president has said that when it comes to better schools he is open to supporting “what works for kids.” That looked like a level playing field on which to evaluate the program and even possibly expanding the program.

But last week Secretary Duncan announced that he will not allow any new students to enter the D.C. voucher program. In fact, he had to take back the government’s offer of scholarships to 200 students who had won a lottery to get into the program starting next year. His rationale is that if the program does not win new funding from Congress then those students might have to go back to public school in a year.

He does not want to give the students a chance for a year in a better school? That does not make sense if the students and their families want that life-line of hope. It does not make sense if there is a real chance that the program might win new funding as parents, educators and politicians rally to undo the “bigotry of low expectations” and open doors of opportunity — wherever they exist — for more low-income students.

And now Secretary Duncan has applied a sly, political check-mate for the D.C. voucher plan.

With no living, breathing students profiting from the program to give it a face and stand and defend it the Congress has little political pressure to put new money into the program. The political pressure will be coming exclusively from the teacher’s unions who oppose the vouchers, just as they oppose No Child Left Behind and charter schools and every other effort at reforming public schools that continue to fail the nation’s most vulnerable young people, low income blacks and Hispanics.

The National Education Association and other teachers’ unions have put millions into Democrats’ congressional campaigns because they oppose Republican efforts to challenge unions on their resistance to school reform and specifically their refusal to support ideas such as performance-based pay for teachers who raise students’ test scores.

By going along with Secretary Duncan’s plan to hollow out the D.C. voucher program this president, who has spoken so passionately about the importance of education, is playing rank politics with the education of poor children. It is an outrage.

This voucher programs is unique in that it takes no money away from the beleaguered District of Columbia Public Schools. Nationwide, the strongest argument from opponents of vouchers is that it drains hard-to-find dollars from public schools that educate the majority of children.

But Congress approved the D.C. plan as an experiment and funded it separately from the D.C. school budget. It is the most generous voucher program in the nation, offering $7,500 per child to help with tuition to a parochial or private school.

With that line of attack off the table, critics of vouchers pointed out that even $7,500 is not enough to pay for the full tuition to private schools where the price of a year’s education can easily go beyond $20,000. But nearly 8,000 students applied for the vouchers. And a quarter of them, 1,714 children, won the lottery and took the money as a ticket out of the D.C. public schools.

The students, almost all of them black and Hispanic, patched together the voucher money with scholarships, other grants and parents willing to make sacrifices to pay their tuition.

What happened, according to a Department of Education study, is that after three years the voucher students scored 3.7 months higher on reading than students who remained in the D.C. schools. In addition, students who came into the D.C. voucher program when it first started had a 19 month advantage in reading after three years in private schools.

It is really upsetting to see that the Heritage Foundation has discoverd that 38 percent of the members of Congress made the choice to put their children in private schools. Of course, Secretary Duncan has said he decided not to live in Washington, D.C. because he did not want his children to go to public schools there. And President Obama, who has no choice but to live in the White House, does not send his two daughters to D.C. public schools, either. They attend a private school, Sidwell Friends, along with two students who got there because of the voucher program.

This reckless dismantling of the D.C. voucher program does not bode well for arguments to come about standards in the effort to reauthorize No Child Left Behind. It does not speak well of the promise of President Obama to be the “Education President,’ who once seemed primed to stand up for all children who want to learn and especially minority children.

And its time for all of us to get outraged about this sin against our children.
i never thought i'd see the day a liberal saw through the lies.
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/04/21/business/21nafta.html

 Quote:
WASHINGTON — The administration has no present plans to reopen negotiations on the North American Free Trade Agreement to add labor and environmental protections, as President Obama vowed to do during his campaign, the top trade official said on Monday.

“The president has said we will look at all of our options, but I think they can be addressed without having to reopen the agreement,” said the official, Ronald Kirk, the United States trade representative. It was perhaps the clearest indication yet of the administration’s thinking on whether to reopen the core agreement to add labor and environmental rules.

Mr. Kirk spoke in a conference call with reporters after returning from a regional summit meeting that Mr. Obama attended over the weekend in Trinidad. He said that Mr. Obama had conferred with the leaders of Mexico and Canada — the other parties to the trade agreement — and that “they are all of the mind we should look for opportunities to strengthen Nafta.”

But while he said that a formal review of the 1992 pact had yet to be completed, Mr. Kirk noted that both Mr. Obama and President Felipe Calderon of Mexico had said that “they don’t believe we have to reopen the agreement now.”

Mexico in particular, whose exports have exploded under Nafta, has little interest in such a renegotiation.

Not only Mr. Obama but also one of his rivals for the presidency, Hillary Rodham Clinton, had promised during their campaigns to renegotiate the accord — a politically popular position in some electorally important Midwestern states that have lost thousands of manufacturing jobs.

change we can believe in!
http://www.foxnews.com/politics/first100days/2009/04/21/promises-promises-obama-black-farmers/

 Quote:
WASHINGTON -- As a senator, Barack Obama led the charge last year to pass a bill allowing black farmers to seek new discrimination claims against the Agriculture Department. Now he is president, and his administration so far is acting like it wants the potentially budget-busting lawsuits to go away.

The change isn't sitting well with black farmers who thought they'd get a friendlier reception from Obama after years of resistance from President George W. Bush.

"You can't blame it on the Bush administration anymore," said John Boyd, head of the National Black Farmers Association, which has organized the lawsuits. "I can't figure out for the life of me why the president wouldn't want to implement a bill that he fought for as a U.S. senator."

At issue is a class-action lawsuit known as the Pigford case. Thousands of farmers sued USDA claiming they had for years been denied government loans and other assistance that routinely went to whites. The government settled in 1999 and has paid out nearly $1 billion in damages on almost 16,000 claims.

Farmers, lawyers and activists like Boyd have worked for years to reopen the case because thousands of farmers missed the deadlines for participating. Many said the filing period was too short and they were unaware of the settlement until it was too late.

The cause gained momentum in August 2007 when Obama, then an Illinois senator, introduced Pigford legislation about six months into his presidential campaign.

Although the case was hardly a hot-button political issue, it had drawn intense interest among African-Americans in the rural South. It was seen as a way for Obama to reach out in those areas, where he was not well-known and where he would need strong support to win the Democratic primary.

The proposal won passage in May as sponsors rounded up enough support to incorporate it into the 2008 farm bill. The potential budget implications were huge: It could easily cost $2 billion or $3 billion given an estimated 65,000 pending claims.

With pressure to hold down costs, lawmakers set an artificially low $100 million budget. They called it a first step and said more money could be approved later.

But with 25,000 new claims and counting, the Obama administration is now arguing that the $100 million budget should be considered a cap to be split among the successful cases.

The position -- spelled out in a legal motion filed in February and reiterated in recent settlement talks -- would leave payments as low as $2,000 or $3,000 per farmer. Boyd called that "insulting."

Boyd noted that Obama's legislation specifically called for the new claimants to be eligible for the same awards as the initial lawsuit, including expedited payments of $50,000 plus $12,500 in tax breaks that the vast majority of the earlier farmers received.

"I'm really disappointed," Boyd said. "This is the president's bill."

"They did discriminate against these farmers, maybe not all of them, but a lot of these people would prevail if they could go to court," he said.
change we can believe in!
http://www.cnn.com/2009/POLITICS/04/23/rollins.obama.torture/

 Quote:
NEW YORK (CNN) -- Like so many politicians I have known, the man we elected president wants to be loved. He wants to be loved passionately and daily by the 69 million who voted for him and even some of the 60 million who voted for John McCain.

He wants to be loved by the Democrats on the Hill and even the Republicans who have still not given him any love.

He wants to be loved by the Europeans who have made a career out of badmouthing U.S. presidents and their policies.

The real example of searching for love in all the wrong places was last week's lovefest south of the border when, in effect, he appeared to be hugging Castro, Ortega and Chavez who have spent their lives fighting everything the United States stands for.

The problem, President Obama will find out as time goes on, is that he is not a rock star or a celebrity. He is certainly famous, and for the foreseeable future everyone will want to see him, touch him and hear him. But the job of president is about making choices. And right now he has the toughest job in the world at one of the toughest times in U.S. history. Every time he makes a choice, he will make the losing side mad.

This last week was the best example. The president decided, as he promised in the campaign, that he would ban torture -- a decision I agree with but many don't. Then he decided to release four Bush-era Justice Department memos that gave legal guidelines to the executive branch on "enhanced interrogation techniques."
Don't Miss

* Commentary: Obama was right on rescue
* Poll: Obama didn't raise terror attack risk
* In Depth: Commentaries

Many wanted these documents released, and the president, after a month-long internal debate, gave them up. At the same time he said he had no intention of prosecuting the drafters of those memos or anyone else in a federal agency, mainly the CIA, who followed those guidelines.

The Right went nuts over the release of the documents. The CIA felt betrayed. The Left went nuts over the contents of the memos and pressed to have the authors -- high Justice Department officials in the Bush administration -- prosecuted, investigated and maybe even tortured! The president went to the CIA and gave them a cheerleading speech.

The next day he reversed himself and said it's up to Attorney General Eric Holder and the Congress to determine if any laws were violated by the former officials.

He waffled big time. Now all sides are mad at him and he looks weak. Weakness is the death knell for a president. With 1,366 days to go before this term is up, Obama's got to get tougher or he will be viewed as a personality who reads well from a teleprompter.

The president obviously knows the war on terror is not over. I imagine every morning when he gets the National Security briefing from the Director of National Intelligence, Dennis Blair, he takes a deep breath because he knows the world is not a very safe place.

Things aren't as simple as they were in the old days, when, for the most part, countries had conflicts with each other and they went to war wearing different-colored uniforms so you knew who your enemy was and where they might be found.

Fortunately, because of the enormous talents of many federal agencies comprised of extraordinary Americans who work very hard at their jobs, the United States has not been struck in 2,781 days. That was the day we all remember and always will remember as 9/11 -- when four aircraft hijacked by 19 al Qaeda terrorists crashed into the Twin Towers, the Pentagon and a field in Pennsylvania, killing 2,974 people.

On that day and the days that followed we felt a new sense of vulnerability and said, "never again." We know now in hindsight that our intelligence mechanism failed us in regard to the threat posed by al Qaeda. A lot of things were done in the days after that to gather intelligence and protect ourselves, our families and our neighbors.

We were playing under a new set of rules and in a way making it up as we went along. What I am trying to say is the CIA doesn't need to be handcuffed again or demoralized. It needs to know its mission.

Historically it has been an agency that has done a lot of heavy lifting. It has often also done the dirty work that other agencies didn't want to do. Some of it benefited this nation immensely and some may have hurt us abroad. But it has been an important element in battling the bad guys. It's now Obama's agency under the direction of his people and he has to earn its trust. His visit to the agency's headquarters in Langley, Virginia, and his speech to the employees was helpful, but only a first step.

Releasing the Justice memos opened a door and the contents repulsed many people. But these were not evil men who drafted the memos. These were not evil people who carried out the methods authorized by them. They were our fellow citizens who were trying to protect us from the real evildoers.

The president has got a lot on his plate. If his fellow Democrats in Congress want to try to impeach a federal appeals court judge who oversaw the memos and interrogate or prosecute former Justice Department lawyers, an attorney general or two and maybe a former vice president, then the battle will be drawn in the courtroom and in the political arena.

The losers will be us. All of us.
Jimmy Carter II.
http://www.foxnews.com/politics/first100days/2009/04/24/obama-faces-dilemma-armenian-killings/

 Quote:
WASHINGTON -- President Barack Obama on Friday refrained from branding the massacre of an estimated 1.5 million Armenians in Turkey a "genocide," breaking a campaign promise while contending his views about the 20th century slaughter had not changed.

The phrasing of Obama's written statement attracted heightened scrutiny because of the sensitivity of the issue and because the two countries are nearing a historic reconciliation after years of tension. The Obama administration is wary of disturbing that settlement.

Marking the grim anniversary of the start of the killings, the president referred to them as "one of the great atrocities of the 20th century."

"I have consistently stated my own view of what occurred in 1915, and my view of that history has not changed," Obama said. "My interest remains the achievement of a full, frank and just acknowledgment of the facts."

"The best way to advance that goal right now," Obama said, "is for the Armenian and Turkish people to address the facts of the past as a part of their efforts to move forward."

For Obama, referring to the killings as genocide could have upended recent pledges of a closer partnership with Turkey, a vital ally in a critical region. Steering around the word, however, put him at odds with his own pledges to recognize the slaughter as genocide.

Obama said the Armenians who were massacred in the final days of the Ottoman Empire "must live on in our memories." He said unresolved history can be a heavy weight. "Reckoning with the past holds out the powerful promise of reconciliation," he said.

"I strongly support efforts by the Turkish and Armenian people to work through this painful history in a way that is honest, open, and constructive," he said.
http://www.philly.com/inquirer/currents/Obamas_first_100_days_littered_with_.html

 Quote:
Given all the hoopla and high expectations surrounding the new president, it's easy to overlook how he has shifted since the election in both tone and substance.

As we approach the 100-day mark of his presidency, Barack Obama has broken or bent many tenets of his campaign, including promises on war, spending and good government.

In terms of tone, Obama promised to be a hope-filled change agent who could fix our politics and "heal a nation." He would do it by refusing to appoint lobbyists to his administration, increasing transparency in government, and forging new bipartisan consensus. His campaign promised to strengthen government checks and balances by limiting the use of presidential signing statements, mandating public review of legislation, and vetoing wasteful congressional earmarks. Yet none of those promises survived his first 100 days.

Even before he was sworn in, Obama picked several lobbyists for top administration jobs, including major cabinet deputy secretaries. When challenged to explain and produce the waivers that permitted those nominations, the administration dragged its feet, bending only after embarrassing questions from the White House press corps.

The promise-breaking did not stop with the inauguration. Soon after he was sworn in, the president signed an earmark-laden spending bill with virtually no bipartisan support or public review - and then promptly issued a signing statement.

The speed and ease with which Obama broke his promises for a new politics are only eclipsed by his policy shifts since taking office. But whereas his good-government reversals have consistently trended toward politics-as-usual, his policy reversals go both ways.

Some shifts are decidedly conservative, like his new Iraq policy, which looks strikingly similar to the one he inherited from President George W. Bush. Gone is Obama's promise to remove all combat troops from Iraq within 16 months of taking office. Instead, Obama is embracing a conditions-based withdrawal that would leave up to 50,000 troops in Iraq until the end of 2011.

Similarly, Obama is showing a greater openness to free trade than he ever did on the campaign trail. Campaigning in Pennsylvania a year ago, Obama promised to renegotiate NAFTA if elected president, and opposed new free-trade agreements with Colombia and South Korea. But now, the Administration says Obama has no plans to reopen NAFTA and is pushing Congress to ratify the trade agreements.

That's not to say that Obama is proving to be a conservative. Most of Obama's policy shifts since winning the election are decidedly liberal, especially on issues of taxes, spending and borrowing.

During the campaign, Obama portrayed himself as a fiscal hawk, promising to cut taxes for most taxpayers while simultaneously putting our nation on a path toward fiscal responsibility with "a net spending cut." That would require making hard budgeting choices - which Obama has yet to do. Instead, Obama's budget would double the national debt over the next five years and triple it in 10. Similarly, his signature middle-class tax cuts expire in just two years, while his promises to cut taxes for small businesses are postponed until after his term in office.

Given the gravity of our nation's challenges, Obama can be forgiven for occasionally prioritizing pragmatism over political pledges. But the speed and scope of his promise-breaking in the first 100 days should not be ignored amid the general excitement surrounding the new president.

Look beneath the soaring rhetoric and it is clear Obama's presidency is off to a rocky start. He has consistently capitulated on the substantive issues that brought him into the office, eroding his credibility with many observers and making him appear more like a typical politician.

Hopefully, his new positions will lead us toward a more peaceful and prosperous future. But if victory is elusive overseas and recovery is slow at home, voters will become more skeptical of his future promises.
change we can believe in!
Mommy, Why Does President Obama Hate Polar Bears?
  • WASHINGTON, D.C.— Utilizing authority granted to him by Congress, Interior Secretary Ken Salazar rescinded a rule passed in the final days of the Bush administration that weakens the Endangered Species Act by exempting thousands of federal activities, including those that generate greenhouse gases, from review under the Endangered Species Act. Salazar, however, did not take action to rescind a rule that sharply limits protections for the threatened polar bear despite having authority to rescind this rule as well.
Fuck the polar bears. Even I'm gettin' fucked over by this prick, getting my hours cut to 20-30 a week, and my fucking department's shorthanded anyway.
the odharma initiativstration?
http://finance.yahoo.com/news/INSIDE-WASHINGTON-Rude-apf-15091434.html?.v=1

 Quote:
WASHINGTON (AP) -- Millions of Americans enjoying their small windfall from President Barack Obama's "Making Work Pay" tax credit are in for an unpleasant surprise next spring.

The government is going to want some of that money back.

The tax credit is supposed to provide up to $400 to individuals and $800 to married couples as part of the massive economic recovery package enacted in February. Most workers started receiving the credit through small increases in their paychecks in the past month.

But new tax withholding tables issued by the IRS could cause millions of taxpayers to get hundreds of dollars more than they are entitled to under the credit, money that will have to be repaid at tax time.

At-risk taxpayers include a broad swath of the public: married couples in which both spouses work; workers with more than one job; retirees who have federal income taxes withheld from their pension payments and Social Security recipients with jobs that provide taxable income.

The Internal Revenue Service acknowledges problems with the withholding tables but has done little to warn average taxpayers.

"They need to get the Goodyear blimp out there on this," said Tom Ochsenschlager, vice president of taxation for the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants.

For many, the new tax tables will simply mean smaller-than-expected tax refunds next year, IRS spokesman Terry Lemons said. The average refund was nearly $2,700 this year.

But taxpayers who calculate their withholding so they get only small refunds could face an unwelcome tax bill next April, said Jackie Perlman, an analyst with the Tax Institute at H&R Block.

"They are going to get a surprise," she said.

Perlman's advice: check your federal withholding to make sure sufficient taxes are being taken out of your pay. If you are married and both spouses work, you might consider having taxes withheld at the higher rate for single filers. If you have multiple jobs, you might consider having extra taxes withheld by one of your employers. You can make that request with a Form W-4.

The IRS has a calculator on its Web site to help taxpayers figure withholding. So do many private tax preparers.

Obama has touted the tax credit as one of the big achievements of his first 100 days in office, boasting that 95 percent of working families will qualify in 2009 and 2010.

The credit pays workers 6.2 percent of their earned income, up to a maximum of $400 for individuals and $800 for married couples who file jointly. Individuals making more $95,000 and couples making more than $190,000 are ineligible.

The tax credit was designed to help boost the economy by getting more money to consumers in their regular paychecks. Employers were required to start using the new withholding tables by April 1.

The tables, however, don't take into account several common categories of taxpayers, experts said.

For example:

--A single worker with two jobs making $20,000 a year at each job will get a $400 boost in take-home pay at each of them, for a total of $800. That worker, however, is eligible for a maximum credit of $400, so the remaining $400 will have to be paid back at tax time -- either through a smaller refund or a payment to the IRS.

The IRS recognized there could be a similar problem for married couples if both spouses work, so it adjusted the withholding tables. The fix, however, was imperfect.

-- A married couple with a combined income of $50,000 is eligible for an $800 credit. However, if both spouses work and make more than $13,000, the new withholding tables give them each a $600 boost -- for a total of $1,200.

There were 33 million married couples in 2008 in which both spouses worked. That's 55 percent of all married couples, according to the Census Bureau.

-- A single college student with a part-time job making $10,000 would get a $400 boost in pay. However, if that student is claimed as a dependent on a parent's tax return, she doesn't qualify for the credit and would have to repay it when she files next year.

Some retirees face even bigger headaches.

The Social Security Administration is sending out $250 payments to more than 50 million retirees in May as part of the economic stimulus package. The payments will go to people who receive Social Security, Supplemental Security Income, railroad retirement benefits or veteran's disability benefits.

The payments are meant to provide a boost for people who don't qualify for the tax credit. However, they will go to retirees even if they have earned income and receive the credit. Those retirees will have the $250 payment deducted from their tax credit -- but not until they file their tax returns next year, long after the money may have been spent.

Retirees who have federal income taxes withheld from pension benefits also are getting an income boost as a result of the new withholding tables. However, pension benefits are not earned income, so they don't qualify for the tax credit. That money will have to paid back next year when tax returns are filed.

More than 20 million retirees and survivors receive payments from defined benefit pension plans, according to the Employee Benefit Research Institute. However, it is unclear how many have federal taxes withheld from their payments.

The American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees union raised concerns about the effect of the tax credit on pension payments in a letter to Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner in March.

Geithner responded that Treasury and IRS understood the concerns and were "exploring ways to mitigate that effect."

Rep. Dave Camp of Michigan, the top Republican on the tax-writing House Ways and Means Committee, said Geithner has yet to respond to concerns raised by committee members.

"So far we've got the, 'If we don't address this maybe it will go away' approach," Camp said.

IRS withholding calculator:

http://www.irs.gov/individuals/article/0,,id96196,00.html
Considering that their only job is to crunch numbers on these taxes and shit, the IRS fucking sucks at their job.
change we can believe in!
Posted By: the G-man Re: Obama's Broken Promises - 2009-05-02 4:12 PM
Obama Looks to Revive Guantanamo Court System: The Obama administration is moving toward reviving the military commission system for prosecuting terrorism suspects held at a detention center in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, even though the president has criticized the system in the past, the New York Times reported.

whomod?

Adler?

MEM?

Posted By: Irwin Schwab Re: Obama's Broken Promises - 2009-05-03 3:12 PM
\:lol\:

whomod just smacked his wife!
Posted By: Captain Sammitch Re: Obama's Broken Promises - 2009-05-03 6:28 PM
he probably blamed it on her being a little too assertive with the strap-on the other night!
 Originally Posted By: BASAMS The Plumber
 Originally Posted By: Steve T
I think the wardrobe thing was pretty silly, but you do leave yourself open when you run on the "small town values" ticket and then spend thousands on clothes.
On the other hand if she wore the same crappy cheap suit at every appearance.



http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/obamas_fashion

 Quote:
WASHINGTON – First lady Michelle Obama wore a sparkling yellow-gold sheath dress with matching coat by Cuban-born American designer Isabel Toledo for the inauguration of her husband, a choice many applauded as a cheerful message of hope and a vote for the American fashion industry.

She paired the embellished ensemble with green gloves from J. Crew and green shoes.

President Barack Obama wore a red tie and white shirt with his suit, topped with an overcoat adorned with an American flag pin.

Their daughters were style icons in their own right, with 10-year-old Malia in a double-breasted periwinkle-blue coat with a blue-ribbon bow at the waist, and Sasha, 7, in a pink coat with orange scarf and satin belt, a coral-colored dress peeking out at the hem. Their coats were from Crewcuts by J. Crew.

The fashion industry has anxiously looked to the election of Obama for months, embracing his wife as an emblem and ambassador of modern American style. She has won praise for her penchant for lesser-known designers and bold fashion choices, mixed with her unabashed love for mass fashion from mainstream American retailers.

"She is single-handedly breathing new life into designers like Narciso Rodriguez and Isabel Toledo, who have had a rocky past," said red-carpet and editorial stylist Mary Alice Stephenson.

"What's so powerful about Michelle Obama is we all see ourselves in her. She's a modern woman who is fashionable and even flamboyant in her style and she is still taken seriously," she said. "She's wearing that dress today for all of us. We're all wearing that dress with her. The dress is elegant, appropriate and has the individual style stamp of Michelle Obama and is timely for a woman in her 40s — and she wears embellishment during the day. Hallelujah!"

Nicole Phelps, executive editor of Style.com, notes that Michelle Obama has found an elegant silhouette that works for her: the narrow sheath dress and complementary coat.

The inaugural outfit is a "classic choice — rather conservative compared to some of the things she's worn so far," Phelps said, but she still gives her fashion wink with her gloves and colored pumps. The gold, she adds, captures the glistening sun.

"This choice sends a great message to the fashion community. She could have gone with someone more obvious, like Ralph Lauren, but this sends a message to the American designers who are struggling. ... It also says that just because she's in the White House, she'll support the under-the-radar designers she wore on the way to the White House," Phelps said.

Designer Toledo, who just a few years ago unsuccessfully tried to infuse more modern style into the venerable Anne Klein label, is considered among the more avant garde U.S. designers.

Michelle Obama has been noted for choosing unexpected fashion designers, including Narciso Rodriguez, Zero + Maria Cornejo and Chicago designer Maria Pinto. For the "Kids Inaugural" concert on Monday, Michelle Obama wore a J.Crew ensemble, including a metallic lace top, aqua-colored pencil skirt and cardigan.




If only Palin had been a liberal, dressing nicely would have been an asset instead of a blunder in the press corp eyes....


http://www.nydailynews.com/lifestyle/fas...tas_lanvin.html

 Quote:
Michelle Obama has taken casual to a haute new level.

While volunteering Wednesday at a D.C. food bank, the First Lady sported her usual J.Crew cardigan, a pair of utilitarian capri pants and, on her feet, a sneaky splurge: trainers that go for $540.

That's right: These sneakers - suede, with grosgrain ribbon laces and metallic pink toe caps - are made by French design house Lanvin, one of fashion's hottest labels. They come in denim and satin versions, and have been a brisk seller all spring.

They're out of stock at posh Meatpacking District boutique Jeffrey, and Barneys New York boasts a limited selection of the sneaks, which are a cult favorite among fashionistas.

It's likely Michelle got hers through Ikram, the Chicago retailer that often outfits her.

"They're shoes," the First Lady's reps sniffed when curious reporters inquired about the fancy footwear.

Michelle has stepped out in Lanvin before while getting down to business. A week ago, she shoveled dirt at a tree planting while wearing the line's chiffon tank.

Dresses and strappy pumps cost upward of $1,500, while tops go for $400 to $1,000.

Other celebrity fans of Lanvin's costly kicks include Ellen DeGeneres and Kanye West, who has blogged about his faves.


the voice of the common people!
Posted By: the G-man Re: Obama's Broken Promises - 2009-05-04 5:16 PM
Another Obama Promise by the Wayside
  • President Barack Obama says lobbyists won't run his administration, but he picked an antitobacco lobbyist with ties to the pharmaceutical industry as the No. 2 official at the Department of Health and Human Services.

    The nomination of William Corr -- former executive director of the Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids, where he was a registered lobbyist until September -- highlights the murkiness of Mr. Obama's antilobbyist policy.

    Mr. Obama requires employees to sign a pledge stating they will not "participate in any particular matter on which I lobbied within the two years before the date of my appointment." Those rules prohibit Mr. Corr from working on tobacco issues, the White House says.

    But Mr. Corr's nomination raises another question: In an era when industries often make financial donations to public-interest groups that support policies that help those industries, when are public-interest advocates conflicted by the funding that supports the causes they advocate?

    The problem isn't hiring former lobbyists. The problem is telling the world that you won't fill your administration with former lobbyists and then doing so.
http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2009/05/13/white-house-obama-release-photos-detainee-abuse/

 Quote:
President Obama has decided not to release hundreds of photos potentially showing U.S. military personnel abusing prisoners in Iraq and Afghanistan in the aftermath of the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks on New York City and the Pentagon.

A senior administration official told FOX News that Obama met with his legal team last week and told them that he did not feel comfortable with the release of the photos because he believes they would endanger U.S. troops, and that the national security implications of such a release have not been fully presented in federal court.

At the end of that meeting, the president directed his counsel to object to the immediate release of the photos on those grounds, the official said.

The Pentagon had planned to release the photos by May 28 in response to a Freedom of Information Act lawsuit filed by the American Civil Liberties Union. That decision was made after the Justice Department lost its latest round in federal court and concluded that any further appeal probably would be fruitless.

But on Tuesday, the president raised the issue of these photos with Gen. Ray Odierno, the top U.S. commander in Iraq, during a White House meeting and told him of his decision to argue against this release, the official said.

"Through his actions from the first days of his administration, the president has made it clear that the United States will hold itself and all the men and women who serve our country to the highest standards of conduct," the official said in a statement.

"Obama would be the last to excuse the actions depicted in these photos," the official continued. "That is why the Department of Defense investigated these cases, and why individuals have been punished through prison sentences, discharges, and a range of other punitive measures.

"But the president strongly believes that the release of these photos, particularly at this time, would only serve the purpose of inflaming the theaters of war, jeopardizing US forces, and making our job more difficult in places like Iraq and Afghanistan."
Wow first Nancy Pelosi let "torture" happen, now Obama is covering for the US comitting "torture", today is not a good day to be whomod's wife......
Posted By: Juche Re: Obama's Broken Promises - 2009-05-16 5:25 AM
Epic thread, I think I'm going to print this for a read on the toilet.
Posted By: iggy Re: Obama's Broken Promises - 2009-05-16 6:18 PM
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/30776209/

Sorry, Whomod.
Posted By: Irwin Schwab Obama uses Bush policies - 2009-05-22 8:02 PM
http://news.cincinnati.com/article/20090522/EDIT02/305220011/Krauthammer++Obama+uses+Bush+policies

 Quote:
"We were able to hold it off with George Bush. The idea that we might find ourselves fighting with the Obama administration over these powers is really stunning."
--Unnamed and dismayed human rights advocate, on legalizing indefinite detention of alleged terrorists, New York Times, May 21

WASHINGTON – If hypocrisy is the homage that vice pays to virtue, then the flip-flops on previously denounced anti-terror measures are the homage that Barack Obama pays to George Bush. Within 125 days, Obama has adopted with only minor modifications huge swaths of the entire, allegedly lawless Bush program.

The latest flip-flop is the restoration of military tribunals. During the 2008 campaign, Obama denounced them repeatedly, calling them an “enormous failure.” Obama suspended them upon his swearing in. Now they’re back.

Of course, Obama will never admit in word what he’s doing in deed. As in his rhetorically brilliant national-security speech on Thursday claiming to have undone Bush’s moral travesties, the military commissions flip-flop is accompanied by the usual Obama three-step: (a) excoriate the Bush policy, (b) ostentatiously unveil cosmetic changes, (c) adopt the Bush policy.

Cosmetic changes such as Obama’s declaration that “we will give detainees greater latitude in selecting their own counsel.” Laughable.

High-toned liberal law firms are climbing over each other for the frisson of representing these miscreants in court.

What about disallowing evidence received under coercive interrogation?

Hardly new, notes former prosecutor Andrew McCarthy. Under the existing rules, military judges have that authority, and exercised it under the Bush administration to dismiss charges against al-Qaeda operative Mohammed al-Qahtani on precisely those grounds.

On Guantanamo, it’s Obama’s fellow Democrats who have suddenly discovered the wisdom of Bush’s choice. In open rebellion against Obama’s pledge to shut it down, the Senate voted 90 to 6 to reject appropriating a single penny until the president explains where he intends to put the inmates. Sen. James Webb, the de facto Democratic authority on national defense, wants the closing to be put on hold. And on Tuesday, Democratic Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid said, no Gitmo inmates on American soil – not even in American jails.

That doesn’t leave a lot of places. The home countries won’t take them. Europe is recalcitrant. Saint Helena needs refurbishing. Elba didn’t work out too well the first time. And Devil’s Island is now a tourist destination. Gitmo is starting to look good again.

Observers of all political stripes are stunned by how much of the Bush national security agenda is being adopted by this new Democratic government. Victor Davis Hanson (National Review) offers a partial list:

“The Patriot Act, wiretaps, e-mail intercepts, military tribunals, Predator drone attacks, Iraq (i.e. slowing the withdrawal), Afghanistan (i.e. the surge) – and now Guantanamo.”

Jack Goldsmith (The New Republic) adds: rendition – turning over terrorists seized abroad to foreign countries; state secrets – claiming them in court to quash legal proceedings on rendition and other erstwhile barbarisms; and the denial of habeas corpus – to detainees in Afghanistan’s Bagram prison, indistinguishable logically and morally from Guantanamo.

What does it all mean? Democratic hypocrisy and demagoguery? Sure, but in Washington, opportunism and cynicism are hardly news.

There is something much larger at play – an undeniable, irresistible national interest that, in the end, beyond the cheap politics, asserts itself. The urgencies and necessities of the actual post-9/11 world, as opposed to the fanciful world of the opposition politician, present a rather narrow range of acceptable alternatives.

Among them: reviving the tradition of military tribunals, used historically by George Washington, Andrew Jackson, Winfield Scott, Abraham Lincoln, Arthur MacArthur and Franklin Roosevelt. And inventing Guantanamo – accessible, secure, offshore and nicely symbolic (the tradition of island exile for those outside the pale of civilization is a venerable one) – a quite brilliant choice for the placement of terrorists, some of whom, the Bush administration immediately understood, would have to be detained without trial in a war that could be endless.

The genius of democracy is that the rotation of power forces the opposition to come to its senses when it takes over. When the new guys, brought to power by popular will, then adopt the policies of the old guys, a national consensus is forged and a new legitimacy established.

That’s happening before our eyes. The Bush policies in the war on terror won’t have to await vindication by historians. Obama is doing it day by day. His denials mean nothing. Look at his deeds.


The liberals are eating their own again. Fair warning it's MSNBC's Rachel Maddow so it will be painful to watch.

I have seen some encouraging signs from Obama on national security, one way to tell he's doing things to defend America is to see American haters like Maddow criticize him. Obama to his discredit thinks that it is all about bashing Bush/Cheney, thats why in his speech he basically said he would continue and expand their policies while at the same time bashing them. He naively thought that would soothe the liberal anti-American establishment, but it seems they saw through the pretty words and realized he was talking about defending America.

He is in my mind not doing nearly enough, closing Gitmo is a mistake. Releasing half memos and stirring this torture nonsense are not helpful in keeping us safe. He has a lot of learning to do, but it is encouraging to see him push back those who would destroy us from the inside.

It's also nice to see Maddow whine like a bitch.
Every time I see that bitch on TV she's bitching about Sarah Palin.


Jealousy can be a horrible thing.
Actually, I'm guessing it's less "jealousy" and more "unrequited dyke lust for hot straight woman."
it kills liberals to see a strong woman speak out about their values, as they believe the only way to be strong is to be submissive to the liberal cause....
and the dyke lust.






Taken from hannity.com
http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2009/06/...ogle-executive/

 Quote:
Google's dominance of the digital world may be not enough for the Internet giant as some key executives migrate to the Obama administration.

Google boss Eric Schmidt is a member of President Obama's Council of Advisors on Science and Technology and three other company executives have left the firm to work in the Obama administration, including Andrew McLaughlin, who will become the nation's deputy technology officer.

But two consumer groups are seeking to throw a roadblock in front of one those appointments. The Center of Digital Democracy and Consumer Watchdog urged President Obama in a letter this week to withdraw the pending appointment of McLaughlin, who was Google's top global public policy official, arguing that it would violate Obama's ethics rules aimed at eliminating the influence of lobbyists on the federal government.

"No lobbyist or special interest political operative from one of the leading Internet companies should be placed in such a key position where they can influence technology policy," said Jeffrey A. Chester, executive director of the Center for Digital Democracy.

"Appointing someone from a Google (or Microsoft, AT&T, etc.) lobbying shop to this position sends the wrong message – that the well-connected can still make a quick trip to the White House through a special interest revolving door.

"The goal of the Obama administration to use new technology to improve how the government works requires someone whose background ensures they can make independent decisions that will benefit all Americans."

John M. Simpson, a consumer advocate at Consumer Watchdog, said McLaughlin is good at what he does – "lobbying around the world for Google's interests," he said. "That's not what this job requires. It should not go to any person whose most recent position has been advocating policy for a technology company," he said.

The White House refused to comment on the opposition to McLaughlin because it has not announced his appointment yet. Google did not return an e-mail or a voice mail message seeking a comment.

But Google has told Politico that McLauglin was mistakenly listed in Senate records as a lobbyist in 2007 and the company amended the reports in 2008.

Simpson told FOXNews.com said the reports were citing a distinction without a difference.

"He essentially got their whole lobbying shop started," he said. "There's some questions about whether he lobbied or not. The point is he's running the public policy efforts around the world. He may not be knocking on the doors themselves, but he was telling them what to do and say."

Simpson acknowledged that he's concerned about Google's growing influence everywhere. "But that's not the reason for this particular objection," he said, adding that he would have opposed lobbyists from Microsoft or companies working in the Obama administration.
change we an believe in!
 Originally Posted By: BASAMS The Plumber
http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2009/06/06/consumer-groups-challenge-obamas-appointment-google-executive/

.... Google's dominance of the digital world may be not enough for the Internet giant as some key executives migrate to the Obama administration...


Strange. Fox News no longer shows up in Google's search engine....


(kidding)

(for now)
Posted By: the G-man Re: Obama's Broken Promise of the Day - 2009-06-07 5:07 PM
Obama's Betrayal on Don't Ask Don't Tell: The president's forgotten civil rights promise
 Originally Posted By: BASAMS The Plumber
 Originally Posted By: BASAMS The Plumber
 Originally Posted By: Steve T
I think the wardrobe thing was pretty silly, but you do leave yourself open when you run on the "small town values" ticket and then spend thousands on clothes.
On the other hand if she wore the same crappy cheap suit at every appearance.



http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/obamas_fashion

 Quote:
WASHINGTON – First lady Michelle Obama wore a sparkling yellow-gold sheath dress with matching coat by Cuban-born American designer Isabel Toledo for the inauguration of her husband, a choice many applauded as a cheerful message of hope and a vote for the American fashion industry.

She paired the embellished ensemble with green gloves from J. Crew and green shoes.

President Barack Obama wore a red tie and white shirt with his suit, topped with an overcoat adorned with an American flag pin.

Their daughters were style icons in their own right, with 10-year-old Malia in a double-breasted periwinkle-blue coat with a blue-ribbon bow at the waist, and Sasha, 7, in a pink coat with orange scarf and satin belt, a coral-colored dress peeking out at the hem. Their coats were from Crewcuts by J. Crew.

The fashion industry has anxiously looked to the election of Obama for months, embracing his wife as an emblem and ambassador of modern American style. She has won praise for her penchant for lesser-known designers and bold fashion choices, mixed with her unabashed love for mass fashion from mainstream American retailers.

"She is single-handedly breathing new life into designers like Narciso Rodriguez and Isabel Toledo, who have had a rocky past," said red-carpet and editorial stylist Mary Alice Stephenson.

"What's so powerful about Michelle Obama is we all see ourselves in her. She's a modern woman who is fashionable and even flamboyant in her style and she is still taken seriously," she said. "She's wearing that dress today for all of us. We're all wearing that dress with her. The dress is elegant, appropriate and has the individual style stamp of Michelle Obama and is timely for a woman in her 40s — and she wears embellishment during the day. Hallelujah!"

Nicole Phelps, executive editor of Style.com, notes that Michelle Obama has found an elegant silhouette that works for her: the narrow sheath dress and complementary coat.

The inaugural outfit is a "classic choice — rather conservative compared to some of the things she's worn so far," Phelps said, but she still gives her fashion wink with her gloves and colored pumps. The gold, she adds, captures the glistening sun.

"This choice sends a great message to the fashion community. She could have gone with someone more obvious, like Ralph Lauren, but this sends a message to the American designers who are struggling. ... It also says that just because she's in the White House, she'll support the under-the-radar designers she wore on the way to the White House," Phelps said.

Designer Toledo, who just a few years ago unsuccessfully tried to infuse more modern style into the venerable Anne Klein label, is considered among the more avant garde U.S. designers.

Michelle Obama has been noted for choosing unexpected fashion designers, including Narciso Rodriguez, Zero + Maria Cornejo and Chicago designer Maria Pinto. For the "Kids Inaugural" concert on Monday, Michelle Obama wore a J.Crew ensemble, including a metallic lace top, aqua-colored pencil skirt and cardigan.




If only Palin had been a liberal, dressing nicely would have been an asset instead of a blunder in the press corp eyes....


http://www.nydailynews.com/lifestyle/fas...tas_lanvin.html

 Quote:
Michelle Obama has taken casual to a haute new level.

While volunteering Wednesday at a D.C. food bank, the First Lady sported her usual J.Crew cardigan, a pair of utilitarian capri pants and, on her feet, a sneaky splurge: trainers that go for $540.

That's right: These sneakers - suede, with grosgrain ribbon laces and metallic pink toe caps - are made by French design house Lanvin, one of fashion's hottest labels. They come in denim and satin versions, and have been a brisk seller all spring.

They're out of stock at posh Meatpacking District boutique Jeffrey, and Barneys New York boasts a limited selection of the sneaks, which are a cult favorite among fashionistas.

It's likely Michelle got hers through Ikram, the Chicago retailer that often outfits her.

"They're shoes," the First Lady's reps sniffed when curious reporters inquired about the fancy footwear.

Michelle has stepped out in Lanvin before while getting down to business. A week ago, she shoveled dirt at a tree planting while wearing the line's chiffon tank.

Dresses and strappy pumps cost upward of $1,500, while tops go for $400 to $1,000.

Other celebrity fans of Lanvin's costly kicks include Ellen DeGeneres and Kanye West, who has blogged about his faves.








this reminded me of this AFP story that ran today:

 Quote:
A US "taster" tested the food being dished up to President Barack Obama at a dinner in a French restaurant, a waiter said on Sunday.

"They have someone who tastes the dishes," said waiter Gabriel de Carvalho from the "La Fontaine de Mars" restaurant where Obama and his family turned up for dinner on Saturday night.

"It wasn't very pleasant for the cooks at first, but the person was very nice and was relaxed, so it all went well," he said on the Itele news channel.

Asked by AFP to comment, the restaurant confirmed the report.
I would love to have $500 sneakers, and a personal taste tester, as well as free broadway shows!
not really.
it's good to be the king!
Posted By: Irwin Schwab Obama's 'soft lies' - 2009-06-14 2:28 PM
http://news.cincinnati.com/article/20090...80%98soft+lies+

 Quote:
WASHINGTON – When President Obama returned from his first European trip, I observed that while over there he had been “acting the philosopher-king who hovers above the fray mediating” between America and the world. Now that Obama has returned from his “Muslim world” pilgrimage, even the left agrees. “Obama’s standing above the country, above – above the world. He’s sort of God,” Newsweek’s Evan Thomas said to a concurring Chris Matthews, reflecting on Obama’s lofty perception of himself as the great transcender.

Not that Obama considers himself divine. (He sees himself as merely messianic, or, at worst, apostolic.) But he does position himself as hovering above mere mortals, mere country, to gaze benignly upon the darkling plain beneath him where ignorant armies clash by night, blind to the common humanity that only he can see. Traveling the world, he brings the gospel of understanding and godly forbearance. We have all sinned against each other. We must now look beyond that and walk together to the sunny uplands of comity and understanding. He shall guide you. Thus:

(A) He told Iran that, on the one hand, America once helped overthrow an Iranian government, while on the other hand “Iran has played a role in acts of hostage-taking and violence against U.S. troops and civilians.” (Played a role?!) We have both sinned; let us bury the past and begin anew.

(B) On religious tolerance, he gently referenced the Christians of Lebanon and Egypt, then lamented that the “divisions between Sunni and Shia have led to tragic violence” (note the use of the passive voice). He then criticized (in the active voice) Western religious intolerance for regulating the wearing of the hijab – after citing America for making it difficult for Muslims to give to charity.

(C) Obama offered Muslims a careful admonition about women’s rights, noting how denying women education impoverishes a country – balanced, of course, with “meanwhile, the struggle for women’s equality continues in many aspects of American life.”

Well, yes. On the one hand, there certainly is some American university where the women’s softball team has received insufficient Title IX funds – while, on the other hand, Saudi women showing ankle are beaten in the street, Afghan school girls have acid thrown in their faces, and Iranian women are publicly stoned to death for adultery. (Gays, as well – but then again we have Prop 8.) We all have our shortcomings, our national foibles. Who’s to judge?

That’s the problem with Obama’s transcultural evenhandedness. It gives the veneer of professorial sophistication to the most simple-minded observation: Of course there are rights and wrongs in all human affairs.

Our species is a fallen one. But that doesn’t mean that these rights and wrongs are of equal weight.

A CIA rent-a-mob in a coup 56 years ago does not balance the hostage-takings, throat-slittings, terror bombings and wanton slaughters perpetrated for 30 years by a thug regime in Teheran (and its surrogates) that our own State Department calls the world’s “most active state sponsor of terrorism.”

True, France prohibits the wearing of the hijab in certain public places, in part to allow the force of law to protect Muslim women who might be coerced into wearing it by neighborhood fundamentalist gangs. But it borders on the obscene to compare this mild preference for secularization (seen in Muslim Turkey as well) to the violence that has been visited upon Copts, Maronites, Baha’i, Druze and other minorities in Muslim lands, and to the unspeakable cruelties perpetrated by Shiites and Sunnis upon each other.

Even on freedom of religion, Obama could not resist the compulsion to find fault with his own country: “For instance, in the United States, rules on charitable giving have made it harder for Muslims to fulfill their religious obligation” – disgracefully giving the impression to a foreign audience not versed in our laws that there is active discrimination against Muslims, when the only restriction, applied to all donors regardless of religion, is on funding charities that serve as fronts for terror.

Obama undoubtedly thinks he is demonstrating historical magnanimity with all these moral equivalencies and self-flagellating apologetics. On the contrary. He’s showing cheap condescension, an unseemly hunger for applause and a willingness to distort history for political effect.

Distorting history is not truth-telling, but the telling of soft lies.

Creating false equivalencies is not moral leadership, but moral abdication.

And hovering above it all, above country and history, is a sign not of transcendence but of a disturbing ambivalence toward one’s own country.
Posted By: the G-man Re: Obama's 'soft lies' - 2009-06-15 6:50 PM
When 'Compromise' Means 'Make The Issue Go Away'
  • A gallon of gasoline has hit $2.67 average nationwide. Remember how the push for offshore drilling started gaining traction last summer, and then Obama surprised everyone by saying he was open to expanding offshore drilling?

    Seen any offshore drilling lately?

    Nope. Here we are a year later, and we find: "Congress lifted its 27-year moratorium on drilling off Florida and the East and West Coast last year, but billions of barrels of that oil remains untouched and off-limits because the Obama administration has postponed development there."

    Flip, baby, flip.
http://www.bostonherald.com/news/us_politics/view.bg?articleid=1179382&format=text


it appears Obama was going to stick to his pledge to leave gay marriage up to the States yesterday:

 Quote:
U.S. Rep. Barney Frank, one of the nation’s leading gay rights champions, blasted President Obama yesterday over a controversial anti-gay marriage court filing and is calling on the commander in chief to explain himself.

“I think the administration made a big mistake. The wording they used was inappropriate,” Frank (D-Newton) said of a brief filed by Obama’s Department of Justice that supported the Defense of Marriage Act.

The DOJ brief, which has touched off a firestorm of anger in the gay community, argued that states should not have to recognize same-sex marriages from other states, just as states don’t have to recognize incestuous marriages or unions involving underage girls.

“I’ve been in touch with the White House and I’m hoping the president will make clear these were not his views,” Frank said.

The controversy has prompted some prominent gay political donors and activists to boycott a gay/lesbian Democratic National Committee fund-raiser being co-hosted by Frank next week in Washington, D.C., Vice President Biden is slated to be the keynote speaker, but protests could mar the $1,000-a-head event.

Among those who’ve already pulled out of the fund-raiser are noted gay bloggers Andrew Towle and David Mixner, a former adviser to President Clinton.

Mixner called the DOJ brief “a sickening document that could have been written by the Rev. Pat Robertson.”

“Using the worst of stereotypes, it intimates that we don’t have constitutional guarantees, invokes scenarios of incest, of children and advocates that we don’t have the same rights as others,” Mixner wrote on his blog.

Frank said he understands the rage but vowed that the fund-raiser - one of the gay community’s biggest of the year - will go on.

“There are a lot of people who aren’t boycotting,” he said. “I think it’s a mistake to deny money to the DNC.”

DNC Treasurer Andrew Tobias, a staunch gay rights advocate, defended Obama, telling Politico, “If this debacle of a brief represented the president’s views, I’d boycott too. I totally understand all the hurt and anger . . . (but I) still personally totally believe in the president.”



Loss of campaign $ later he pulls a UAW $ thank you:

http://www.reuters.com/article/topNews/idUSTRE55G0OR20090617

 Quote:
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - President Barack Obama on Wednesday extended limited job benefits to gay partners of U.S. government workers in what he called a first step to end discrimination against gays and lesbians.

Under pressure from gay rights groups, Obama urged Congress to pass legislation that would extend full healthcare and retirement benefits to gay families in the 1.9 million-strong federal workforce, as many U.S. businesses already do.

"Many of our government's hardworking and dedicated and patriotic public servants have long been denied basic rights that their colleagues enjoyed for one simple reason: the people that they love are of the same sex," Obama said before signing an order to extend benefits for federal workers' gay partners.

"It's a day that marks a historic step toward the changes we seek, but I think we all have to acknowledge this is only one step."

Obama's announcement showed that his administration may focus more on incremental, tangible gains for gays and lesbians, rather than wading directly into the divisive gay marriage debate that has played out at the state level.

Gay rights groups called Wednesday's move a welcome first step and said they understood that the president had been busy trying to shore up the economy and lay the groundwork for landmark healthcare and climate-change legislation.

But they said they would continue to press the administration to outlaw workplace discrimination and extend benefits for same-sex couples.

"Those things should happen today, should have happened yesterday and they haven't and until they do there's going to be a frustration," said Joe Solomonese, president of the Human Rights Campaign, a gay-rights group.

Obama did not back gay marriage during the 2008 campaign, but he did promise to repeal a 1996 law that prevents the government from recognizing same-sex marriages.

The administration will work with Congress to repeal that law, the Defense of Marriage Act, and extend workplace-discrimination laws to cover gays, said John Berry, head of the U.S. Office of Personnel Management.

The administration will also try to overturn the "Don't Ask, Don't Tell" policy that allows the U.S. military to expel troops that are openly gay, Berry said.
Posted By: Irwin Schwab Shooting The Watchdog - 2009-06-18 6:37 AM
http://www.ibdeditorials.com/IBDArticles...=1&show=1&rss=1

 Quote:
Oversight: The inspector general for the AmeriCorps program is fired after accusing an administration supporter of misappropriating funds. The only thing transparent in this administration is its cronyism and hypocrisy.

After "hope" and "change," transparency was the thing most promised by the new administration. Everything would be above aboard and visible. We wouldn't see things like the Bush administration firing U.S. attorneys for "political" reasons even though it had the right to do so.

Enter — or should we say, exit — Gerald Walpin, who until Thursday was inspector general for the AmeriCorps program, that army of paid volunteers soon to be transformed into an endlessly funded national service program.

Seems that Mr. Walpin did a very bad thing — his job. He followed the money and discovered that the St. Hope Academy in Sacramento, Calif., had misappropriated hundreds of thousands of dollars in federal AmeriCorps funds.

The nonprofit education group, led by Sacramento mayor and former professional basketball star Kevin Johnson, had apparently spent the money on local politics. Specifically, according to the AP, funds were used "to pay volunteers to engage in school-board political activities, run personal errands for Johnson and even wash his car." All this, presumably, was to stimulate the local Sacramento economy.

As a result of Walpin's efforts, Sacramento U.S. attorney Larry Brown reached an agreement with Mayor Johnson and the group to repay half of the $850,000 in grant money it had received, including $72,836.50 that came out of Johnson's own wallet.

So does Walpin get an "atta boy" from the administration? Is a press conference held praising him for his due diligence and the oversight of this administration as it carefully shepherds every single taxpayer dollar through the system? Not exactly.

On Wednesday evening, Walpin was contacted by White House counsel Norman L. Eisen and given one hour to resign or be fired. Walpin refused, saying in an e-mail that it "would be a disservice to the independent scheme that Congress has mandated — and could possibly raise questions as to my own integrity."

If you read the letter of the law that President Obama himself co-sponsored as legislation in the U.S. Senate in 2007, this attempt to intimidate Walpin into resigning was illegal. Unlike U.S. attorneys, who can be fired at will, there's a specific and difficult process to fire an inspector general designed to guard the independence of an IG and block political interference.

The president must first, not as an afterthought, send a letter to Congress declaring his intention to fire an IG and giving the specific reasons why that person should be fired. After the ultimatum, President Obama did send a letter, one saying he no longer "had the fullest confidence" in Walpin and not much else. That's not good enough.

As commentator Rush Limbaugh noted on his radio program Friday: "Firing an inspector general is a big deal. If you'll remember, Alberto Gonzales as attorney general fired a couple of U.S. attorneys. He took hell for it. This is bigger. Inspectors general are supposed to be completely above politics."

Walpin was appointed by President George W. Bush and sworn into office in January 2007 after being confirmed by the Senate. Mayor Johnson, as it turns out, is a big Obama supporter and contributor. In August 2007, he gave $2,300 to Obama For America. Hmmm: Bush appointee fired after investigating Obama contributor.

Sen. Charles Grassley, R-Iowa, who also co-sponsored with then-Sen. Obama the Inspector General Reform Act, immediately fired off a letter to the president questioning both the firing of Walpin and the way it was done.

Grassley reminded the president of the statutory requirement to submit 30 days' notice to Congress of an IG's dismissal and pointedly noted, "No such notice was provided to Congress in this instance."

We await the righteous indignation of Keith Olbermann, Chris Matthews and the New York Times, as well as all those senators and congressmen who said, "Give us the head of Alberto Gonzales."
Posted By: Irwin Schwab White House vs. Whistleblower - 2009-06-18 7:40 PM
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB124529359030226317.html

 Quote:
A leading Democratic Senator who wrote the law shielding the government's inspectors general from political pressure or retaliation says President Obama didn't abide by the law when he fired one of those watchdogs last week. This despite the fact that Senator Obama was a co-sponsor of the legislation when it passed Congress last year.

Senator Claire McCaskill, a Missouri Democrat and longtime Obama supporter, says that in firing Gerald Walpin, Inspector General of the government's community service agency AmeriCorps, proper procedures were flouted. The law requires that any inspector general who is removed be given 30 days notice. The White House told Mr. Walpin he had to leave immediately.

"The White House has failed to follow the proper procedure in notifying Congress as to the removal of the Inspector General for the Corporation for National and Community Service," Ms. McCaskill said. "The legislation which was passed last year requires that the president give a reason for the removal."

She noted that the stated reasons for Mr. Walpin's firing -- that the White House no longer had confidence in him -- were not a sufficient explanation. Mr. Walpin claims he was fired after he refused to reinstate Sacramento Mayor Kevin Johnson's eligibility for federal funding following the discovery that thousands of dollars given to a non-profit run by Mr. Johnson had been misused. Mr. Johnson, a former NBA player and prominent supporter of Mr. Obama's presidential campaign, recently agreed to return about half of the $800,000 in AmeriCorps funding he had received in previous years.

It didn't take long for the Obama White House to respond to Senator McCaskill's criticism. Last night, Norm Eisen, a White House counsel, sent a letter to the Senate Governmental Affairs Committee attacking Mr. Walpin directly. Mr. Eisen wrote that at a May 20 AmeriCorps board meeting, the inspector general "was confused, disoriented, unable to answer questions and exhibited other behavior that led the Board to question his capacity to serve."

Mr. Walpin, the White House alleged, also engaged in "troubling and inappropriate conduct. Mr. Walpin had become unduly disruptive to agency operations, impairing his effectiveness and, for the reasons stated above, losing the confidence of the Board."

Here's hoping that Senator Joe Lieberman, who has shown streaks of independence in the past as chairman of the Senate Governmental Affairs Committee, is willing to hold a hearing on the firing and give Mr. Walpin a chance to defend himself.
Posted By: Irwin Schwab How to can crack the AmeriCorps scandal - 2009-06-20 6:00 PM
http://www.washingtonexaminer.com/politi...l-48556282.html

 Quote:
What's next in the budding scandal over President Obama's abrupt firing of Gerald Walpin, the inspector general of AmeriCorps?

Republican investigators on Capitol Hill know one thing very well. As minorities in both House and Senate, they have no power to compel the White House to disclose anything. And majority Democrats, at least for now, are not inclined to help the opposition uncover embarrassing facts about one of President Obama's favorite federal programs.

So Republicans are brainstorming things they can do by themselves to shake loose information from an administration that has no obligation to cooperate with them. And indeed, there are a few ways.

The first is to enlarge the scope of the AmeriCorps investigation to include the Justice Department. Walpin was fired in part because of his aggressive investigation of the misuse of AmeriCorps funds by Sacramento mayor -- and prominent Obama supporter -- Kevin Johnson. The acting U.S. attorney in Sacramento, Lawrence Brown, took a strongly pro-Johnson position in the matter, even though there's no question that Johnson misused federal money. In the end, Brown played a key role in helping Johnson get off easy and in setting in motion the chain of events that led to Walpin's firing. Republicans intend to pursue the Justice Department for an explanation.

A second possible step involves the candidate, still un-chosen, who will take Walpin's place as the next inspector general for the Corporation for National and Community Service, which oversees AmeriCorps. That person will have to be confirmed by the Senate. Republicans have significant powers to slow down and even block the nomination unless they are given the information they seek about the Walpin affair.

A third step would be to push for greater emphasis on inspectors general at the Corporation. Recently, President Obama signed a $5.7 billion measure that will triple the size of the domestic volunteer agency. Republicans can argue that if you are going to triple the money for an agency, you should also increase the money for the agency's inspector general, to ensure that taxpayer money will be well spent. Increased attention to inspectors general means increased attention to the Walpin affair.

A fourth step concerns Alan Solomont, the Democratic fundraiser appointed by President Obama to chair the Corporation board. It just happens that Solomont has also been nominated to be the next U.S. ambassador to Spain. Republicans could threaten to hold up his nomination until they get the information they seek.

A fifth and final step involves Lawrence Brown, the previously-mentioned acting U.S. attorney in Sacramento. If the president chooses to nominate Brown to be the permanent U.S. attorney, then Brown will have to be confirmed by the Senate. Republicans could put a hold on that nomination, too.

With their majority, Senate Democrats could work around any hold or other measure that has only the support of Republicans. But it could be a slow and frustrating process, especially at a time when Democrats are working to pass the president's hyper-ambitious domestic agenda. That's what could give the GOP leverage.

As the Walpin revelations continue, it appears some Republicans are ready to act. This week, Sen. Charles Grassley, a longtime champion of inspectors general, expressed frustration with his inability to get much information out of the Justice Department. (Grassley has sent many requests to the department, one of them for more information about the AmeriCorps affair.)

"I've learned that holding up nominees for an executive branch agency is an effective tool to get answers," Grassley said. "So, until we start getting answers to these outstanding requests, I'm noticing my intention to hold certain Justice Department nominees."

In the past, you've probably heard about secret holds in the Senate, in which a single senator hides behind the rules to block a nomination while remaining anonymous. Grassley wouldn't do that. Fastidious about keeping the public informed on what he's doing, if Grassley tries to stop a nominee, he'll do it out in the open, by name, and he'll tell the White House exactly why he's doing it. And he'll keep doing it until he gets what he wants.

It's possible that these measures won't be necessary, that the White House will act in accordance with the president's promise to conduct its business in a spirit of transparency and openness. But just in case that doesn't happen, Republicans are studying their options.
  • OBAMA CLOSES DOOR ON OPENNESS

    Critics say the president has left a huge loophole for himself on the issue of transparency

    As a senator, Barack Obama denounced the Bush administration for holding "secret energy meetings" with oil executives at the White House. But last week public-interest groups were dismayed when his own administration rejected a Freedom of Information Act request for Secret Service logs showing the identities of coal executives who had visited the White House to discuss Obama's "clean coal" policies. One reason: the disclosure of such records might impinge on privileged "presidential communications." The refusal, approved by White House counsel Greg Craig's office, is the latest in a series of cases in which Obama officials have opted against public disclosure. Since Obama pledged on his first day in office to usher in a "new era" of openness, "nothing has changed," says David -Sobel, a lawyer who litigates FOIA cases. "For a president who said he was going to bring unprecedented transparency to government, you would certainly expect more than the recycling of old Bush secrecy policies."

    The hard line appears to be no accident. After Obama's much-publicized Jan. 21 "transparency" memo, administration lawyers crafted a key directive implementing the new policy that contained a major loophole, according to FOIA experts. The directive, signed by Attorney General Eric Holder, instructed federal agencies to adopt a "presumption" of disclosure for FOIA requests. This reversal of Bush policy was intended to restore a standard set by President Clinton's attorney general, Janet Reno. But in a little-noticed passage, the Holder memo also said the new standard applies "if practicable" for cases involving "pending litigation." Dan Metcalfe, the former longtime chief of FOIA policy at Justice, says the passage and other "lawyerly hedges" means the Holder memo is now "astonishingly weaker" than the Reno policy. (The visitor-log request falls in this category because of a pending Bush-era lawsuit for such records.)

    Administration officials say the Holder memo was drafted by senior Justice lawyers in consultation with Craig's office. The separate standard for "pending" lawsuits was inserted because of the "burden" it would impose on officials to go "backward" and reprocess hundreds of old cases, says Melanie Ann Pustay, who now heads the FOIA office. White House spokesman Ben LaBolt says Obama "has backed up his promise" with actions including the broadcast of White House meetings on the Web. (Others cite the release of the so-called torture memos.) As for the visitor logs, LaBolt says the policy is now "under review."


http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2009/06/24/obama-leaves-door-open-new-tax-health-benefits/

 Quote:
President Obama left the door open to a new tax on health care benefits Wednesday, and officials said top lawmakers and the White House were seeking $150 billion in concessions from the nation's hospitals as they sought support for legislation struggling to emerge in Congress.

"I don't want to prejudge what they're doing," the president said, referring to proposals in the Senate to tax workers who get expensive insurance policies. Obama, who campaigned against the tax when he ran for president, drew a quick rebuff from one union president.

The chief executive also met with governors and arranged a prime-time, town hall at the White House, the latest in a string of events designed to bend public opinion toward his top domestic initiative to reduce health care costs while making insurance available to the nearly 50 million Americans who lack it.

The flurry of activity extended to the Capitol, where the administration and its allies hoped for a prominent display of progress in the Senate before Congress begins a weeklong vacation on Friday.

Senate Finance Committee Chairman Max Baucus, D-Mont., labored in a daylong series of meetings to produce at least an outline of legislation that could command bipartisan support. Of the five House and Senate committees working on health care, Finance is the only one that appears to have a chance at such an agreement.

For their part, key Republicans pressed the White House for assurances that any concessions made now would not merely lead to additional demands at a later date. "We want to know the president is working in good faith along the way as we are," said Sen. Olympia Snowe, R-Maine, after meeting with Nancy-Ann DeParle, the top White House official on the issue.

Baucus appeared especially eager to show progress before the exodus from the Capitol began.

To that end, several officials said he was negotiating with representatives of the nation's hospitals, hoping to conclude an agreement that would build on an $80 billion weekend deal with the pharmaceutical industry.

Hospitals were being asked to accept a reduction of roughly $155 billion over the next decade in fees they are promised under government programs such as Medicare and Medicaid, according to numerous officials.

Officials at the American Hospital Association and the Federation of American Hospitals said they could not comment on any discussions.

Baucus is seeking similar concessions from nursing homes, insurance companies, medical device makers and possibly others, noting that any legislation would create a huge new pool of customers for industry providers.

At its heart, any legislation is expected to require insurance companies to offer coverage to any applicant, without exclusions or higher premiums for pre-existing medical conditions.

Overall, Baucus has said he hopes to hold the size of any legislation to $1 trillion or less, and in private negotiations, there were discussions about further scaling back eligibility for insurance subsidies from the government.

Additionally, Baucus was still searching for ways to cover the cost of his emerging legislation, and numerous officials said he appeared roughly $200 billion shy of achieving that goal. They added that a proposal to make it harder for taxpayers to itemize their medical expenses was drawing renewed interest among key senators as one way to raise revenue.

Current law allows those expenses to be itemized when they exceed 7.5 percent of adjusted gross income. The proposal under review would raise that to 10 percent, officials said.

At the White House, Obama sidestepped when asked if he was open to taxing health care benefits -- a proposal he opposed vigorously in the campaign for the White House.

"I have identified the ways that I think we should finance this. I think Congress should adopt them. I'm going to wait and see what ideas ultimately they come up with," he said on ABC's "Good Morning America."

"I don't want to prejudge what they're doing. We've put forward what we think is best."

Organized labor weighed in quickly.

Gerald W. McEntee, president of the 1.6 million-member American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees, said in an interview that union leaders believe Obama is "a person of his word." He was referring to Obama's opposition to taxing those benefits during last year's campaign.

"They're not going to take it," McEntee said of workers' views of that proposal. "They're not going to tolerate that."

It was the latest in a series of signs of presidential flexibility. On Tuesday, he left open the possibility that he could sign legislation that does not contain an option for a government-run insurance plan. And he has said recently he could accept a requirement for individuals to buy insurance, a position he opposed in the campaign.

Baucus and many Republicans support taxing health care benefits, and officials have said discussions center on imposing the tax in cases in which premium costs exceed $17,000 combined in payments by the employer and worker. Democrats want to exempt union members covered by contracts, but Republicans are resisting.

The officials who provided specifics on the negotiations in the Senate did so on condition of anonymity, saying they were not authorized to disclose private talks.

Despite months of efforts, Obama said in the ABC interview, "I think that we're still early in the process. All these issues are getting worked through."

At the same time, some of the Democrats' initial deadlines have slipped under the weight of higher-than-expected cost estimates from the Congressional Budget Office, internal disagreements and other difficulties.

Many Democrats insist on having an option for government-run insurance in the legislation so consumers can have a choice other than a plan from private insurers. Republicans are vehemently opposed, and compromise efforts have centered on a proposal for a nonprofit co-operative that would be initially funded by the federal government.

The U.S. Chamber of Commerce said Wednesday that the government-run option would "gut the private market."

ABC News was the lone network broadcasting Obama's town hall -- drawing criticism from Republicans who wanted equal time.

In defense, ABC News President David Westin said the show would "include a variety of perspectives coming from private individuals asking the president questions and taking issue with him, as they see fit."
Change we can believe in!
http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2009/06/...ly-sources-say/

 Quote:
WASHINGTON -- Stymied by Congress so far, the White House is considering issuing an executive order to indefinitely imprison a small number of Guantanamo Bay detainees considered too dangerous to prosecute or release, two administration officials said Friday.

No final decisions have been made about the order, which would be the third major mandate by President Barack Obama to deal with how the United States treats and prosecutes terror detainees.

One of the officials said the order, if issued, would not take effect until after the Oct. 1 start of the upcoming 2010 fiscal year. Already, Congress has blocked the administration from spending any money this year to imprison the detainees in the United States.

The administration also is considering asking Congress to pass new laws that would allow the indefinite detentions, the official said.

Both of the officials spoke Friday on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to discuss the still-tentative issue publicly. The possibility of an executive order was first reported by ProPublica and The Washington Post.

"A number of options are being considered," said one of the officials.

Asked if the detainees would be indefinitely held overseas or in the United States, the official said: "There's not really a lot of options overseas."

Christopher Anders, senior legislative counsel for the American Civil Liberties Union Washington office, says the organization strongly opposes any plans for indefinite detention of prisoners.

"We're saying it shouldn't be done at all," he said Friday.

The Senate Armed Services Committee just completed work on its FY-2010 defense authorization bill. It was silent on the matter of indefinite detentions, according to a Senate aide familiar with the bill.

Without legislative backing, an executive order is the only route Obama has to get the needed authority.

The order also would only apply to current detainees at Guantanamo -- and not ones caught and held in future counterinsurgent battles.

There are 229 detainees currently being held at Guantanamo. Several have been transferred to United States for prosecution, while others have been sent to foreign nations. The Obama administration is trying to relocate as many as 100 Yemeni detainees to Saudi Arabia for rehabilitation.

Obama said last month he was looking at continued imprisonment for a small number of Guantanamo detainees whom he described as too dangerous to release. He called it "the toughest issue we will face."

"I am not going to release individuals who endanger the American people," Obama said during a May 21 speech at the National Archives. "Al-Qaida terrorists and their affiliates are at war with the United States, and those that we capture -- like other prisoners of war -- must be prevented from attacking us again."

It's not clear how many detainees could fall into that category. Defense and Justice Department officials have privately said at least some could be freed at trial because prosecutors would be reluctant to expose classified evidence against the detainees.

A Pentagon task force is currently reviewing every case to see which are eligible for transfer or release, which could face trial in civilian U.S. courts, which are best suited to some version of a military commission, and which fall into the category to which Obama was referring: too dangerous to free, but against whom legal cases would have a difficult time being mounted because of the manner in which evidence was gathered --coercion by cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment.
\:lol\:

whomod is gunna have to smack a bitch tonight!
http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2009/06/...th-care-reform/

 Quote:
When it came to taxes, candidate Barack Obama seemed to clearly draw a line in the sand.

"If you are a family making less than $250,000 a year, you will not see your taxes go up," Obama said repeatedly on the campaign trail last year.

But that line in the sand may get harder to spot now that Obama has assumed power and as some lawmakers lobby to tax a portion of the most generous employer-provided health insurance policies to help pay for the president's signature initiative of health care reform.

"The president's going to watch the process," White House spokesman Robert Gibbs said Tuesday about efforts to overhaul the health care system. "He's going to be flexible, and we'll evaluate as we go."

Obama has proposed limiting itemized deductions for people who make more than $250,000 a year, but that would only raise a third of the lowest estimated cost of adding 40 or 50 million people to the ranks of the insured.

Computerized medical records and other efficiency improvements and emphasizing wellness and preventive care could further reduce costs but not nearly enough, according to Ryan Ellis of Americans for Tax Fairness.

"What the president is talking about won't even pay for a fraction of that," he said.

The first President Bush learned the cost of breaking a campaign promise on taxes can be high. Bush failed to win a second term in 1992 after reneging on his earlier declaration: "Read my lips. No new taxes."

Ellis says Obama already broke his tax promise when he increased the tax on cigarettes a little more than two weeks after taking office to pay for an expansion of the children's health insurance program.

"There aren't many rich smokers in the United States," Ellis said.

Republican presidential nominee John McCain's proposal to tax health care benefits drew strong criticism from the president during the campaign.

White House officials say privately McCain's proposal was a long way from taxing a small portion of employer provided health benefits. And the president told ABC News he's against even that, though he's willing to listen to the proposal, at least for now.

Aides say one lesson of past failed attempts at health care reform is, don't draw lines in the sand.

"Bright lines that cause people to leave the table," Gibbs said. "Everybody's still at the table."

If bright lines cause people to leave the table, bright lights are why presidents prefer not to negotiate in the press. Gibbs says Obama's clearly laid out his financing plan. He just won't say "Read my lips."
http://article.nationalreview.com/?q=OTAyNzFjMmMwOWJjYmFmMTA2ODdjODZmZmQ0MWE1Mzg=

 Quote:
In the first six months of the Obama administration, we have witnessed an assault on the truth of a magnitude not seen since the Nixon Watergate years. The prevarication is ironic given the Obama campaign’s accusations that the Bush years were not transparent and that Hillary Clinton, like her husband, was a chronic fabricator. Remember Obama’s own assertions that he was a “student of history” and that “words mean something. You can’t just make stuff up.”

Yet Obama’s war against veracity is multifaceted.

Trotskyization. Sometimes the past is simply airbrushed away. Barack Obama has a disturbing habit of contradicting his past declarations as if spoken words did not mean much at all. The problem is not just that once-memorable statements about everything from NAFTA to public campaign financing were contradicted by his subsequent actions. Rather, these pronouncements simply were ignored to the point of making it seem they were never really uttered at all.

What is stunning about Obama’s hostile demagoguery about Bush’s War on Terror is not that he has now contradicted himself on one or two particulars. Instead, he has reversed himself on every major issue — renditions, military tribunals, intercepts, wiretaps, Predator drone attacks, the release of interrogation photos, Iraq (and, I think, soon Guantanamo Bay) — and yet never acknowledged these reversals.

Are we supposed to think that Obama was never against these protocols at all? Or that he still remains opposed to them even as he keeps them in place? Meanwhile, his attorney general, Eric Holder, is as voluble on the excesses of the Bush War on Terror as he is silent about his own earlier declarations that detainees in this war were not entitled to the protections of the Geneva Convention.

Politicians often go back on earlier promises, and they often exaggerate (remember Obama’s “10,000” who died in a Kansas tornado [12 perished], or his belief that properly inflating tires saves as much energy as offshore drilling can produce?). But the extent of Obama’s distortions suggests that he has complete confidence that observers in the media do not care — or at least do not care enough to inform the public.

The “Big Lie.” Team Obama says that Judge Sotomayor misspoke when she asserted that Latinas were inherently better judges than white males. Yet the people around Obama knew before Sotomayor was nominated that she has reiterated such racialist sentiments repeatedly over many years.

Obama complained that his deficits were largely inherited — even though his newly projected annual deficit and aggregate increase in the national debt may well, if they are not circumvented, equal all the deficit spending compiled by all previous administrations combined.

The president lectures Congress on its financial excesses. He advocates “pay as you go” budgeting. But he remains silent about the unfunded liabilities involved in his own proposals for cap-and-trade, universal health care, and education reform, which will in aggregate require well over a trillion dollars in new spending on top of existing deficits — but without any “pay as you go” proposals to fund them.

By the same token, his promise that 95 percent of Americans will receive an Obama “tax cut” is impossible. Remember, almost 40 percent of households currently pay no income taxes at all — and the $1.7-trillion annual deficit will necessitate a broad array of taxes well beyond those assessed on incomes above $250,000.

Obama talks about cutting federal outlays by eliminating $17 billion in expenditures — one-half of one percent of a $3.4-trillion budget. Here the gap between rhetoric and reality is already so wide that it simply makes no difference whether one goes completely beyond the limits of belief. Why would a liberal “budget hawk” go through the trouble of trying to cut 10 or 20 percent of the budget when he might as well celebrate a 0.5 percent cut and receive the same amount of credit or disdain? If one is going to distort, one might as well distort whole-hog.

Outright historical dissimulation. On matters of history, we now know that much of what President Obama says is either not factual or at least misleading. He predictably errs on the side of political correctness. During the campaign, there was his inaccurate account of his great-uncle’s role in liberating Auschwitz. In Berlin, he asserted that the world — rather than the American and British air forces — came together to pull off the Berlin Airlift.

In the Cairo speech, nearly every historical allusion was nonfactual or inexact: the fraudulent claims that Muslims were responsible for European, Chinese, and Hindu discoveries; the notion that a Christian Córdoba was an example of Islamic tolerance during the Inquisition; the politically correct canard that the Renaissance and Enlightenment were fueled by Arab learning; the idea that abolition and civil rights in the United States were accomplished without violence — as if 600,000 did not die in the Civil War, or entire swaths of Detroit, Gary, Newark, and Los Angeles did not go up in flames in the 1960s.

Here we see the omnipotent influence of Obama’s multicultural creed: Western civilization is unexceptional in comparison with other cultures, and history must be the story of an ecumenical, global shared brotherhood.

The half-, and less-than-half, truth. At other times, Obama throws out historical references that are deliberately incomplete. To placate critical hosts, he evokes the American dropping of the bomb. But he is silent about the impossible choices for the Allies — after Japanese atrocities in Manchuria, Korea, the Philippines, Iwo Jima, and Okinawa — facing the necessity of stopping a Japanese imperial killing machine, determined to fight to the death.

He lectures about equivalent culpability between Muslims and Americans without mentioning American largess to Egypt, Jordan, and the Palestinians. He mostly ignores American military efforts to save Muslims in Afghanistan, Bosnia, Kosovo, Kuwait, and Somalia — and American criticism of Russia’s and China’s treatment of their own persecuted Muslim minorities.

When Obama contextualizes the United States’ treatment of Muslims, does he do so in comparison to the Chinese treatment of the Uighurs, the Russians in Chechnya and Afghanistan, or the European colonial experience in North Africa?

When he cites European colonialism’s pernicious role in the Middle East, does he mention nearly 400 years of Ottoman Muslim colonial rule in the Arab-speaking world? Or the Muslim world’s own role in sending several million sub-Saharan Africans to the Middle East as slaves? By no stretch of the imagination is purported Western bias against Islam commensurate with the Islamic threats that have been issued to Danish cartoonists, British novelists, the pope, or German opera producers.

Obama surely knows that a mosque is acceptable in America and Europe in a way that a church is not in most of the Gulf States, or that Muslims freely voice their beliefs in Rotterdam and Dearborn in a way Westerners dare not in Tehran, Damascus, or Riyadh.

Here we see the classic notion of the “noble lie,” or the assumption that facts are to be cited or ignored in accordance with the intended aim: Interfaith reconciliation means downplaying Muslim excesses, or treating Islamic felonies as equivalent with Western misdemeanors.

Why has President Obama developed a general disregard for the truth, in a manner far beyond typical politicians who run one way and govern another, or hide failures and broadcast successes?

First, he has confidence that the media will not be censorious and will simply accept his fiction as fact. A satirist, after all, could not make up anything to match the obsequious journalists who bow to their president, proclaim him a god, and receive sexual-like tingles up their appendages.

Second, Obama is a postmodernist. He believes that all truth is relative, and that assertions gain or lose credibility depending on the race, class, and gender of the speaker. In Obama’s case, his misleading narrative is intended for higher purposes. Thus it is truthful in a way that accurate facts offered by someone of a different, more privileged class and race might not be.

Third, Obama talks more than almost any prior president, weighing in on issues from Stephen Colbert’s haircut, to Sean Hannity’s hostility, to the need to wash our hands. In Obama’s way of thinking, his receptive youthful audiences are proof of his righteousness and wisdom — and empower him to pontificate on matters he knows nothing about.

Finally, our president is a product of a multicultural education: Facts either cannot be ascertained or do not matter, given that the overriding concern is to promote an equality of result among various contending groups. That is best done by inflating the aspirations of those without power, and deflating the “dominant narratives” of those with it.

The problem in the next four years will be not just that the president of the United States serially does not tell the truth. Instead, the real crisis in our brave new relativist world will be that those who demonstrate that he is untruthful will themselves be accused of lying.
great article, it should be required reading in Civics classes....
I would challenge any Obama apologist to dispute the article. Feel free to blame Bush if you must.
 Originally Posted By: BASAMS The Plumber
I would challenge any Obama apologist to dispute the article. Feel free to blame Bush if you must.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20090708/ap_on_go_pr_wh/us_obama_tax_promise

 Quote:


WASHINGTON – President Barack Obama promised to fix health care and trim the federal budget deficit, all without raising taxes on anyone but the wealthiest Americans. It's a promise he's already broken and will likely have to break again. Obama and the Democratic-controlled Congress have already increased tobacco taxes — which disproportionately hit the poor — to pay for extending health coverage to 4 million children in working low-income families.

Now, lawmakers are looking for more revenues to help pay for providing medical insurance to millions more who lack it at a projected cost of $1 trillion over the next decade.

The floated proposals include increasing taxes on alcohol, which could raise $62 billion over the next decade, and a new tax on sugary drinks such as soda, which could raise $52 billion.

Senate Democrats this week pretty much rejected a proposal by Finance Committee Chairman Max Baucus, D-Mont., to tax health benefits, an idea that Obama repeatedly criticized during the presidential election campaign but has refused to take off the table.

Sen. Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., said negotiators are still looking for revenue alternatives. Asked during an interview with The Associated Press if they included tax increases on families with incomes less than $250,000 a year, Schumer said, "There are lots of things on the table now."

The health care bill is a long way from Obama's desk, but tax experts say the debate illustrates a stark reality: It is simply implausible for the vast majority of Americans to get a free ride while the nation tackles such an incredibly difficult — and expensive — issue.

"We're all going to have to contribute," said Eugene Steuerle, a former treasury official in the Reagan administration and now vice president of the Peter G. Peterson Foundation.

Paying for Obama's agenda might be easier, Steuerle said, if the nation wasn't already facing massive federal budget deficits for the foreseeable future.

"The dilemma is trying to do the new while the old is still unpaid for," Steuerle said.

The federal budget deficit is projected to hit an unprecedented $1.8 trillion this year — on top of a national debt that has already topped $11 trillion. Obama insists that any bill on health care or climate change not add to the debt.

Obama says much of the $1 trillion needed for his health care overhaul will come from cutting costs. So far, drug companies and hospitals have agreed to provide 10-year savings of $235 billion.

Health care experts say cost cutting alone won't produce enough money to insure the nearly 50 million Americans who lack coverage. Moreover, Congress is obligated to follow budget rules that might not recognize many of the promised savings.

"The administration has an extremely difficult educational problem on its hands," said Henry J. Aaron, a health care expert at the Brookings Institution. "They understand that at some point tax increase are going to be necessary across the board.

"Yes, for the middle class, too," he added.

Obama made a firm tax pledge during the presidential campaign, repeating it numerous times in the weeks and months leading up to Election Day: no tax increases for individuals making less than $200,000 a year or couples making less than $250,000.

"Not your income tax, not your payroll tax, not your capital gains taxes, not any of your taxes," Obama told a crowd in Dover, N.H., last year.

But less than a month after taking office, Obama signed an expansion of child health care financed by 62-cent tax increase on each pack of cigarettes.

Obama also signed an anti-smoking bill in June that grants authority to the Food and Drug Administration to regulate tobacco. To pay for the new program, a fee is being imposed on the industry — and presumably passed on to consumers — estimated to generate more than $5 billion over the next decade.

While not directly increasing taxes, a House-passed version of Obama's plan to reduce greenhouse gases blamed for causing global warming would similarly increase American families' home energy bills by $175 a year on average, according to the Congressional Budget Office.

Obama hasn't offered a detailed plan to fix health care, though his aides are working with lawmakers as they craft proposals. Obama included only a down payment for health care reform in the budget proposal he unveiled this spring.

He proposed limiting itemized tax deductions for individuals making more than $200,000 and couples making more than $250,000. The plan, which faces stiff opposition in Congress, would limit deductions for mortgage insurance, state and local taxes and charitable contributions, raising about $270 billion over the next decade.

Obama also proposed a series of business tax increases and accounting changes that would raise an additional $30 billion.

Kenneth Baer, a spokesman for the OMB, said Obama's cost reductions and tax increases add up to "a plan which gets you really close to what you need."

"Congress has other ideas," Baer said. "We'll work with them."

The appeal of Baucus's proposed tax on health benefits was the amount of money it could raise. Currently, employer-provided health benefits are not taxed, regardless of how generous they are.

One version of it would tax health benefits that exceed the value of the basic insurance plan offered to federal workers, raising about $420 billion over the next decade, according to the nonpartisan Joint Committee on Taxation. But limiting it to individuals making more than $100,000 a year and couples making more than $200,000 would raise only $162 billion.

The math illustrates how difficult it is to raise enough money to pay for expensive programs, when tax increases are limited to the wealthy.

"We're living in an era, over a period of 20 years or more, in which the idea that tax rates would actually be boosted is unutterable," said Aaron, the health care expert. "That has to stop."
someone at the AP will surely be canned over publishing this.....
http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2009/07/...eporm-proposal/

 Quote:
WASHINGTON -- House Democrats scrambling for ways to pay for overhauling health care would raise taxes on the wealthiest Americans to levels not seen since the 1980s, breaking one of President Barack Obama's campaign pledges.

The tax increase would be limited to the top 1.2 percent of earners -- families that make more than $350,000 a year. But it would raise a total of $544 billion over the next decade, covering a little more than half the cost of the health care plan.

The bill unveiled by House Democratic leaders Tuesday would create three new tax brackets for high earners, with a top rate of 45 percent for families making more than $1 million. That would be the highest income tax rate since 1986, when the top rate was 50 percent.

The plan would honor Obama's campaign promise not to raise taxes on families making less than $250,000.But it would break an Obama pledge that no one -- including the wealthy -- would pay higher taxes than they did in the 1990s. The pledge, as listed on Obama's campaign Web site, was: "No family will pay higher tax rates than they would have paid in the 1990s."

Democrats argue that high-income families fared well under President George W. Bush's two terms as their taxes dropped and their incomes soared, giving them the ability to absorb higher taxes. Republicans argue that the tax increases would hurt small business owners who typically pay their business taxes on their individual returns.

Rep. Charles Rangel, chairman of tax-writing House Ways and Means Committee, called the plan "the moral thing to do."

"This innovative bill provides a uniquely American solution to control costs and put patients first without burdening future generations with debt," the New York Democrat said.

Obama's strategy throughout the health care debate has been to publicly encourage the efforts of congressional Democrats even as they debate proposals that would break his campaign promises. The goal is to keep lawmakers working toward a package that expands coverage and slows the growth in costs.

On Wednesday, Obama said that both the House bill and a separate measure passed by a Senate committee would "take what's best about our system today and make it the basis of our system tomorrow -- reducing costs, raising quality, and ensuring fair treatment of consumers by the insurance industry."

House Democratic leaders hope to pass the health care bill before Congress goes on vacation in August. Under the House plan, the federal government would be responsible for ensuring that all people, regardless of income or the state of their health, have access to an affordable insurance plan. Individuals and employers would have new obligations to get coverage, or face hefty penalties.

The bill would add a 5.4 percent income tax "surcharge" on families making more than $1 million a year, starting in 2011. Families making more than $350,000 would get a 1 percent tax and those making more than $500,000 would get a 1.5 percent tax.

If certain savings in the health care system are not achieved by 2013, the new tax on families making more than $350,000 would increase to 2 percent, and the tax on those making more than $500,000 would go to 3 percent.

Currently, the top marginal income tax rate is 35 percent. Obama wants to let some tax cuts enacted under Bush expire, boosting the top rate to 39.6 percent in 2011. The new health care taxes would increase the top rate to 45 percent.

House Republican leader John Boehner, R-Ohio, called the bill a job killer that would result in rationed care, fewer choices for patients and diminished quality.

"If this isn't bad enough, this new maze of government bureaucracy will be funded by a new small business tax that will cost more American jobs," Boehner said. "During a time of economic recession, the last thing Congress should be doing is punishing small businesses that create a majority of the jobs in this country."

Democrats argue that the tax increases would affect only 4.1 percent of tax filers who report small business income. Those small businesses, however tend to be the ones that employ the most workers, according to data from the National Federation of Independent Business.

The National Association of Manufacturers said the new taxes would make it harder for small businesses to grow, invest and create jobs.

"These new taxes will have longstanding negative consequences to the U.S. economy and cost jobs," Jay Timmons, the association's executive vice president, wrote in a letter to members of Congress.
\:lol\: busted again!
Rich people have no right to keep their own money.
-MEM
They don't own it. They didn't print it. We lent it to them. Now, we're getting Obama to take it back.

-The Federal Reserve
Behold the latest:

PrincessElisa
WILL YOU MARRY ME!


You had me at the Batman Animated Series on DC Boards!
Obama's EVERY move reminds me of THE EMPEROR'S NEW CLOTHES
 Originally Posted By: Franta
PrincessElisa
WILL YOU MARRY ME!


Pssst! She's a dude!
http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2009/07/...test=latestnews

 Quote:
President Obama has irked close allies in Congress by declaring he has the right to ignore legislation on constitutional grounds after having criticized George W. Bush for doing the same.

Four senior House Democrats on Tuesday said they were "surprised" and "chagrined" by Obama's declaration in June that he doesn't have to comply with provisions in a war spending bill that puts conditions on aid provided to the World Bank and International Monetary Fund.

In a signing statement accompanying the $106 billion bill, Obama said he wouldn't allow the legislation to interfere with his authority as president to conduct foreign policy and negotiate with other governments.

Earlier in his six-month-old administration, Obama issued a similar statement regarding provisions in a $410 billion omnibus spending bill. He also included qualifying remarks when signing legislation that established commissions to govern public lands in New York, investigate the financial crisis and celebrate Ronald Reagan's birthday.

"During the previous administration, all of us were critical of (Bush's) assertion that he could pick and choose which aspects of congressional statutes he was required to enforce," the Democrats wrote in their letter to Obama. "We were therefore chagrined to see you appear to express a similar attitude."

The letter was signed by Reps. David Obey of Wisconsin, chairman of the House Appropriations Committee, and Barney Frank of Massachusetts, chairman of the House Financial Services Committee, as well as Reps. Nita Lowey and Gregory Meeks, both of New York, who chair subcommittees on those panels.

Obama needs Obey and Frank in particular to push through Congress key pieces of his agenda, including health care and financial oversight reform.

The White House said Tuesday the administration plans to implement the provisions of the bill and suggested that Obama's signing statement was aimed more at defending the president's executive powers than skirting the law.

"The president has also already made it clear that he will not ignore statutory obligations on the basis of policy disagreements and will reserve signing statements for legislation that raises clearly identified constitutional concerns," White House spokesman Ben LaBolt said in a statement.

Bush issued a record number of signing statements while in office as he sparred with Democrats on such big issues as the war in Iraq.

Democrats, including Obama, sharply criticized Bush as overstepping his bounds as president. In March, Obama ordered a review of Bush's guidelines for implementing legislation.

"There is no doubt that the practice of issuing such statements can be abused," Obama wrote in a memo to the heads of executive departments and agencies.

At the same time, however, Obama did not rule out issuing any signing statements, which have been used for centuries. Rather, he ordered his administration to work with Congress to inform lawmakers about concerns over legality before legislation ever reaches his desk. He also pledged to use caution and restraint when writing his own signing statements, and said he would rely on Justice Department guidance when doing so.

Two days after issuing the memo, Obama issued his first signing statement after receiving a $410 billion omnibus spending bill. He said the bill would "unduly interfere" with his authority by directing him how to proceed, or not to, in negotiations and discussions with international organizations and foreign governments.

Obey and the other House lawmakers said this week that Obama's signing statement on the war bill will make it tougher in the future to persuade other lawmakers to support the World Bank and IMF.

If Congress can't place conditions on the money, "it will make it virtually impossible to provide further allocations for these institutions," they wrote.
Posted By: the G-man Re: Obama breaks ANOTHER Promise - 2009-07-22 6:59 PM
Add to the File: Barack Obama's closing statement from the third presidential debate, October 15, 2008:
  • I'm absolutely convinced we can do it. I would ask for your vote, and I promise you that if you give me the extraordinary honor of serving as your president, I will work every single day, tirelessly, on your behalf and on the behalf of the future of our children.


And today, from USA Today, the headline: "It's official: Obamas to vacation on Martha's Vineyard next month."
Posted By: the G-man Re: Obama breaks ANOTHER Promise - 2009-07-23 3:55 AM
Los Angeles Times: White House declines to disclose visits by health industry executives
  • Citing an argument used by the Bush administration, the Secret Service rejects a request from a watchdog group to list those who have visited the White House to discuss the healthcare overhaul.

    As a candidate, President Obama vowed that in devising a healthcare bill he would invite in TV cameras — specifically C-SPAN — so that Americans could have a window into negotiations that normally play out behind closed doors.

    Having promised transparency, the administration should be willing to disclose who it is consulting in shaping healthcare policy
    , said an attorney for the citizens' group.
Posted By: the G-man Re: Obama breaks ANOTHER Promise - 2009-07-26 12:49 AM
The Continued Demise of Transparency:
  • I seem to recall when Barack Obama promised the most open and transparent administration ever. Since his inauguration, Obama has fired one IG for daring to oppose a sweetheart settlement with a political ally, allowed another to get dumped by the agency she oversaw, and now have publicly feuded with Barofsky. Earlier, they tried to limit his authority by claiming that Barofsky didn’t work independently of Treasury, which got a stern letter from Senator Charles Grassley. It looks as though the White House has declared war on transparency, and especially the IGs who exist to provide it.
Posted By: Irwin Schwab Obama to raise taxes on middle class - 2009-08-03 12:42 AM
http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5gNiyJ905Ho0Ur96V2TQhsBX19lGwD99QVHO80

 Quote:
WASHINGTON — President Barack Obama's treasury secretary said Sunday he cannot rule out higher taxes to help tame an exploding budget deficit, and his chief economic adviser would not dismiss raising them on middle-class Americans as part of a health care overhaul.

"There is a lot that can happen over time," Summers said, adding that the administration believes "it is never a good idea to absolutely rule things out, no matter what."

During his presidential campaign, Obama repeatedly vowed "you will not see any of your taxes increase one single dime." But the simple reality remains that his ambitious overhaul of how Americans receive health care — promised without increasing the federal deficit — must be paid for.

"If we want an economy that's going to grow in the future, people have to understand we have to bring those deficits down. And it's going to be difficult, hard for us to do. And the path to that is through health care reform," Geithner said. "We're not at the point yet where we're going to make a judgment about what it's going to take."
Posted By: Irwin Schwab Re: Obama to raise taxes on middle class - 2009-08-03 12:42 AM
\:lol\:

I can't wait till the morons that voted for him wake up and read this in the morning!
Anonymous 2 minutes 4 seconds ago Reading a post
Forum: Politics and Current Events
Thread: Obama's Broken Promises


at least whomod still visits......
Posted By: thedoctor Obama Gonna Raise Your Taxes - 2009-08-03 4:47 PM
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20090803/ap_on_go_pr_wh/us_economy
 Quote:
Two of President Barack Obama's economic heavyweights said middle-class taxes might have to go up to pare budget deficits or to pay for the proposed overhaul of the nation's health care system.

The tough talk from Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner and National Economic Council Director Lawrence Summers on Sunday capped a week that brought rare good news for the economy: The worst recession in the United States since World War II could be on the verge of ending. Even so, officials appeared willing to extend unemployment benefits.

Geithner and Summers both sidestepped questions on Obama's intentions about taxes. Geithner said the White House was not ready to rule out a tax hike to reduce the federal deficit; Summers said Obama's proposed health care overhaul needs funding from somewhere.

"There is a lot that can happen over time," Summers said, adding that the administration believes "it is never a good idea to absolutely rule things out, no matter what."

During his presidential campaign, Obama repeatedly pledged "you will not see any of your taxes increase one single dime." But the simple reality remains that his ambitious overhaul of how Americans receive health care — promised without increasing the federal deficit — must be paid for.

"If we want an economy that's going to grow in the future, people have to understand we have to bring those deficits down. And it's going to be difficult, hard for us to do. And the path to that is through health care reform," Geithner said. "We're not at the point yet where we're going to make a judgment about what it's going to take."
Posted By: Matter-eater Man Re: Obama Gonna Raise Your Taxes - 2009-08-04 4:13 AM
 Originally Posted By: thedoctor
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20090803/ap_on_go_pr_wh/us_economy
 Quote:
Two of President Barack Obama's economic heavyweights said middle-class taxes might have to go up to pare budget deficits or to pay for the proposed overhaul of the nation's health care system.

The tough talk from Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner and National Economic Council Director Lawrence Summers on Sunday capped a week that brought rare good news for the economy: The worst recession in the United States since World War II could be on the verge of ending. Even so, officials appeared willing to extend unemployment benefits.

Geithner and Summers both sidestepped questions on Obama's intentions about taxes. Geithner said the White House was not ready to rule out a tax hike to reduce the federal deficit; Summers said Obama's proposed health care overhaul needs funding from somewhere.

"There is a lot that can happen over time," Summers said, adding that the administration believes "it is never a good idea to absolutely rule things out, no matter what."

During his presidential campaign, Obama repeatedly pledged "you will not see any of your taxes increase one single dime." But the simple reality remains that his ambitious overhaul of how Americans receive health care — promised without increasing the federal deficit — must be paid for.

"If we want an economy that's going to grow in the future, people have to understand we have to bring those deficits down. And it's going to be difficult, hard for us to do. And the path to that is through health care reform," Geithner said. "We're not at the point yet where we're going to make a judgment about what it's going to take."


That would be good news for the GOP if that occurred however saying it might happen isn't the same thing as it happening.
Posted By: thedoctor Re: Obama Gonna Raise Your Taxes - 2009-08-04 4:55 AM
No, because now the White House is having to cover for two of it's people, one being the big money expert, and trying to douse the fire that their comments have created. Plain and simple, these guys let slip the reality of Obama's drive for health care and have the public losing even more confidence in his vision.
Posted By: Irwin Schwab Re: Obama Gonna Raise Your Taxes - 2009-08-04 4:59 AM
Barry is in over his head.
Posted By: Irwin Schwab Re: Obama Gonna Raise Your Taxes - 2009-08-08 6:09 AM
Posted By: the G-man Obama vs Obama - 2009-08-12 4:57 PM
The Heritage Group has put together this devastating 17-second video exposing Obama's lie misstatement from yesterday that he never advocated a single-payer health care system:

Posted By: Irwin Schwab Re: Obama vs Obama - 2009-08-14 12:42 AM
Posted By: Glacier16 Re: Obama vs Obama - 2009-08-14 12:44 AM
\:lol\:
Posted By: Irwin Schwab Re: Latinos unhappy with Obama picks - 2009-08-18 5:21 AM
Anonymous 10 seconds ago Reading a post
Forum: Politics and Current Events
Thread: Obama's Broken Promises
Posted By: Irwin Schwab What Went Wrong - 2009-08-18 5:32 AM
 Quote:
We are witnessing one of the more rapid turnabouts in recent American political history. President Obama’s popularity has plummeted to 50 percent and lower in some polls, while the public expresses even less confidence in the Democratic-led Congress and the direction of the country at large. Yet, just eight months ago, liberals were talking in Rovian style about a new generation to come of progressive politics — and the end of both the Republican party and the legacy of Reaganism itself. Barack Obama was to be the new FDR and his radical agenda an even better New Deal.

What happened, other than the usual hubris of the party in power?

First, voters had legitimate worries about health care, global warming, immigration, energy, and inefficient government. But it turns out that they are more anxious about the new radical remedies than the old nagging problems. They wanted federal support for wind and solar, but not at the expense of neglecting new sources of gas, oil, coal, and nuclear power. They were worried about high-cost health care, the uninsured, redundant procedures, and tort reform, but not ready for socialized medicine. They wanted better government, not bigger, DMV-style government. There is a growing realization that Obama enticed voters last summer with the flashy lure of discontent. But now that they are hooked, he is reeling them in to an entirely different — and, for many a frightening — agenda. Nothing is worse for a president than a growing belief among the public that it has been had.

Second, Americans were at first merely scared about the growing collective debt. But by June they became outraged that Obama has quadrupled the annual deficit in proposing all sorts of new federal programs at a time when most finally had acknowledged that the U.S. has lived beyond its means for years. They elected Obama, in part, out of anger at George W. Bush for multi-billion dollar shortfalls — and yet as a remedy for that red ink got Obama’s novel multi-trillion-dollar deficits.

Third, many voters really believed in the “no more red/blue state America” healing rhetoric. Instead, polls show they got the most polarizing president in recent history — both in his radical programs and in the manner in which he has demonized the opposition to ram them through without bipartisan support. “Punch back harder” has replaced “Yes, we can.”

Fourth, Americans wanted a new brand — youthful, postracial, mesmerizing abroad. At first they got that, too. But after eight months, their president has proven not so postracial, but instead hyper-racially conscious. Compare the Holder “cowards” outburst, the Sotomayor riff on innate racial and gender judicial superiority, and the president’s Cambridge police comments. All that sounds more like Jesse Jackson than Martin Luther King Jr. Demagogues, not healers, trash their predecessors at the beginning of every speech. When a once-eloquent president now goes off teleprompter, the question is not whether he will say something that is either untruthful or silly, but simply how many times he might do so at one outing. Some once worried that George W. Bush could not articulate our goals in Iraq; far more now sense that Obama is even less able to outline his own health-care reform.

Fifth, even skeptics are surprised at the partisan cynicism. A year ago, Democratic leaders such as Nancy Pelosi, Harry Reid, and Barack Obama praised organizing, dissidents, and protest. Today they have become near-Nixonian in demonizing popular resistance to their collectivized health-care plans as mob-like, inauthentic, scripted, Nazi-like, and un-American. There are still ex-lobbyists in the government. High officials still cheat on their taxes. Hacks in the Congress still profit from their office. The public is sensing not only that Obama has failed to run the most ethically clean government, as promised, but indeed that he is not running as ethically clean a government as the predecessor whom he so assiduously ridiculed.

Sixth, there is a growing fear that Obamism is becoming cult-like and Orwellian. Almost on script, Hollywood ceased all its Rendition/Redacted–style films. Iraq — once the new Vietnam — is out of the news. Afghanistan is “problematic,” not a “blunder.” Tribunals, renditions, the Patriot Act, and Predators are no longer proof of a Seven Days in May coup, but legitimate tools to keep us safe. Words change meanings as acts of terror become “man-caused disasters.” Hunting down jihadists is really an “overseas contingency operation.” Media sycophants do not merely parrot Obama, but now proclaim him a “god.” New York Times columnists who once assured us that Bush’s dastardly behavior was proof of American pathology now sound like Pravda apologists in explaining the “real” Obama is not what he is beginning to seem like.


Seventh, the Obama cabinet is sounding downright uncouth and boorish. The tax-challenged Treasury secretary, Tim Geithner, unleashed a profanity-laced diatribe against bank regulators. Hillary Clinton’s recent outburst in the Congo, captured on YouTube, was something out of Days of Our Lives. Joe Biden cannot speak extemporaneously without causing an incident with the Russians or misleading the public about swine flu. Attorney General Holder sounds like a tired scold, only to be overshadowed by the president’s off-the-cuff cuts about the Special Olympics, Las Vegas, and the Cambridge police. Press Secretary Robert Gibbs makes Scott McClellan sound like a Cicero by comparison.

Eighth, we were all appalled by Wall Street greed and the notion that an individual could take $100 million rather than one or two million as a bonus. But the Obama remedy for that obscenity was to conflate Goldman Sachs or AIG with the family orthodontist or local asphalt contractor whose 80-hour weeks might result in an annual $250,000 income. Worse still, the public impression is that while small entrepreneurs may pay up to 65 percent of their income in new state and federal income taxes, payroll taxes, and surcharges, those on Wall Street have been bailed out and have cut various deals with upscale liberals in government.

Ninth, Democratic populism turned out to be largely aristocratic elitism. Obama spends more money on himself than did Bush. The liberal Congress has a strange fondness for pricy private jets. Those environmentalists and racialists who lecture us about our ecological and ethical shortcomings prefer Martha’s Vineyard and country estates to Dayton and Bakersfield. Offering left-wing populist sermonizing for others while enjoying the high life oneself is never a winning combination.

Tenth, Americans no longer believe this is our moment when the seas stop rising and the planet ceases warming. Instead, there is a growing hopelessness that despite all the new proposed income taxes, payroll taxes, and surtaxes, the deficit will skyrocket, not shrink. There is foreboding that while apologies abroad are nice in the short term, they will soon earn a reckoning. And while the productive classes pay more of their income, and while government grows and entitlement expands, there is a sense that what follows will not be thanks for either taxes paid or benefits received, but even more anger that neither is enough and that much more is owed.

Obama’s popularity might rebound with a natural upturn in the economy, continued low energy prices, and good will for our first multiracial president. But then again, it could get even worse if the recovery turns into stagflation, gas prices soar, and the identity-politics lectures amplify. The next six months should be interesting.
Posted By: thedoctor Where's the transparency? - 2009-08-27 10:49 PM
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20090826/ap_on_go_co/us_stimulus_border_crossings
 Quote:
A sleepy Montana checkpoint along the Canadian border that sees about three travelers a day will get $15 million under President Barack Obama's economic stimulus plan. A government priority list ranked the project as marginal, but two powerful Democratic senators persuaded the administration to make it happen.

Despite Obama's promises that the stimulus plan would be transparent and free of politics, the government is handing out $720 million for border upgrades under a process that is both secretive and susceptible to political influence. This allowed low-priority projects such as the checkpoint in Whitetail, Mont., to skip ahead of more pressing concerns, according to documents revealed to The Associated Press.

A House oversight committee has added the checkpoint projects to its investigation into how the stimulus money is being spent. The top Republican on that committee, California's Rep. Darrell Issa, sent a letter to Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano on Wednesday, questioning why some projects leapfrogged others.

It wasn't supposed to be that way. In 2004, Congress ordered Homeland Security to create a list, updated annually, of the most important repairs at checkpoints nationwide. But the Obama administration continued a Bush administration practice of considering other, more subjective factors when deciding which projects get money.

The results:

• A border station in Napolitano's home state of Arizona is getting $199 million, five times more than any other border station. The busy Nogales checkpoint has required repairs for years but was not rated among the neediest projects on the master list reviewed by the AP. Napolitano credited her lobbying as Arizona governor for getting the project near the front of the line for funding under the Bush administration. All it needed was money, which the stimulus provided.

• A checkpoint in Laredo, Texas, which serves more than 55,000 travelers and 4,200 trucks a day, is rated among the government's highest priorities but was passed over for stimulus money.

• The Westhope, N.D., checkpoint, which serves about 73 people a day and is among the lowest-priority projects, is set to get nearly $15 million for renovations.

The Whitetail project, which involves building a border station the size and cost of a Hollywood mansion, benefited from two key allies, Montana Sens. Max Baucus and Jon Tester. Both pressed Napolitano to finance projects in their state. Tester's office boasted of that effort in an April news release, crediting Baucus and his seat at the head of the "powerful Senate Finance Committee."

Customs officials would not discuss that claim. Asked to explain Whitetail's windfall, they provided a one-page fact sheet that contains no information about Whitetail's needs and is almost identical to the fact sheet for every other Montana project.

It's hardly a recent phenomenon for politicians to use their influence to steer money to their home states. Yet Obama said the stimulus would be different. He banned "earmarks," which lawmakers routinely slip into bills to pay for pet projects, and he told agencies to "develop transparent, merit-based selection criteria" for spending.

Customs and Border Protection, the Homeland Security agency overseeing border projects, allowed the AP to review the list but will not make it public or explain its justifications for deviating from it.

Releasing that information would allow the public to see whether less important projects are getting money. The Transportation Department, for instance, recently was criticized by its internal watchdog for not following its standards when handing out money for 50 airport construction projects. Now the full $1.1 billion airport construction program is under scrutiny.

Without the lists, the public and members of Congress don't know when the administration bumps a project ahead of others ranked more important.

Customs officials said they wouldn't release the master list because it was just a starting point and subject to misunderstanding. They acknowledged there's no way for the public to know whether they are cherry-picking projects.

"There's a certain level of trust here," said Robert Jacksta, a deputy customs commissioner.

Some discrepancies between the stimulus plan and the priority list can be attributed to Congress, which set aside separate pools of money for large and small border stations. That guaranteed that a few small, probably lower-rated projects would be chosen ahead of bigger, higher-priority projects. But it doesn't explain all the discrepancies, because even within the two pools, Homeland Security sometimes reached way down on the list when selecting projects.

Many of the nation's 163 border checkpoints, known as land ports, are more than 40 years old and in need of upgrade and repairs. After the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks, those needs became more pressing and complex as officials beefed up border security. There is far more work to be done than money to complete it.

To prioritize, officials score each project on traffic volume, security vulnerability, construction needs and other factors. The resulting list represents "an objective and fair method for prioritizing projects," officials wrote in a 2005 summary.

That's the process the Obama administration described in a news release announcing $720 million in stimulus money for borders. But it didn't say that officials can choose projects out of order for many reasons.

Trent Frazier, who oversees the border projects, said the list Congress required is more like a meal plan. The administration can decide when to eat each dish, as long as everything eventually gets eaten.

Explaining why one project might get pushed ahead, Frazier said, "You just really liked pizza and you wanted to accelerate it."

In the case of the stimulus, officials said the Nogales, Ariz., project was construction-ready, a requirement of the recovery law. Officials also consider the economy, which means if the government expects local businesses to close and border traffic to decrease, it can delay paying for that project.

In one instance, officials said they reached deep into the list to provide $39 million for repairs in Van Buren, Maine, because flooding made the facility a safety hazard. In another, they are spending $30 million in Blaine, Wash., a lower-rated project that is unusual because it includes covering the costs of a state road project. With the 2010 Olympics coming to nearby Vancouver, Canada, officials worried the border would be strained without the project.

Officials said they could similarly justify every decision they've made. They would not provide those justifications to the AP. Frazier said the department would answer questions on a case-by-case basis, working through Congress to explain decisions to the public.

But even some in Congress say they aren't getting answers. Rep. Henry Cuellar, D-Texas, said he has yet to hear a good explanation about why highly ranked projects such as Laredo were snubbed.

More than $116 billion in freight passed through Laredo last year, according to the Transportation Department. It is one of the busiest border stations in the country. Unemployment in the metropolitan area is 9.4 percent.

"For the sake of fairness, if you have a list, there's some sort of expectation that you're going to follow that list," Cuellar said.

Tester, who said he pressed the Obama administration to get money for Montana projects, said border crossings in his state had been unfairly ignored.

"The northern border tends to be forgotten, and it shouldn't be," Tester told the Great Falls Tribune after announcing $77 million for Montana posts in the stimulus.

Whitetail, Mont., an unincorporated town with a population of 71, saw only about $63,000 in freight cross its border last year. County unemployment is an enviable 4 percent.

"I think, absolutely, it's going to create jobs and build the infrastructure," Tester said.
Posted By: Irwin Schwab Re: Where's the transparency? - 2009-08-28 12:04 AM
in other news, someone was fired at yahoo today.
http://blogs.abcnews.com/politicalpunch/...amily-ride.html

 Quote:
President Obama took a bike ride with his family today in Aquinnah, on Martha’s Vineyard. The First Family cruised along Lobsterville Beach on a gorgeous sunny day but there was one glaring omission in an otherwise picture perfect tableau – the president was not wearing a bike helmet.

White House spokesman Bill Burton said he did not know why the president was not wearing a helmet because he generally does.

“He supports the wearing of bicycle helmets,” Burton said.
well MEM, you voted for him.
Posted By: Irwin Schwab Obama lied again - 2009-08-31 1:23 AM
http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2009/08/30/cheney-slams-obamas-politicized-probe-cia-interrogations/


 Quote:
But Cheney reserved his strongest criticism for Holder's decision Monday to appoint a prosecutor and open a criminal investigation into alleged abuses by CIA agents who interrogated terrorists during the administration of former President George W. Bush. The former vice president accused Obama of breaking a promise not to prosecute the agents.

"We had the president of the United States, President Obama, tell us a few months ago there wouldn't be any investigation like this, that there would not be any look back at CIA personnel who were carrying out the policies of the prior administration," Cheney said. "Now they get a little heat from the left wing of the Democratic Party, and they're reversing course on that."

In January, just days before he took office, Obama assured CIA agents they need not worry about prosecution.

"We need to look forward, as opposed to looking backwards," the president-elect said. "At the CIA you've got extraordinarily talented people who are working very hard to keep Americans safe. I don't want them to suddenly feel like they've got to spend all their time looking over their shoulders and lawyering up."

In April, after disclosing classified documents that detailed the CIA's enhanced interrogation techniques, Obama said: "This is a time for reflection, not retribution."

"Nothing will be gained by spending our time and energy laying blame for the past," the president added. "For those who carried out some of these operations within the four corners of legal opinions or guidance that had been provided from the White House, I do not think it's appropriate for them to be prosecuted."

At the time, Holder added: "It would be unfair to prosecute dedicated men and women working to protect America for conduct that was sanctioned in advance by the Justice Department."

In his interview with FOX News, Cheney disputed the administration's assertion last week that the decision to go after the CIA agents was made by Holder, not Obama.

"If you look at the Constitution, the president of the United States is the chief law enforcement officer in the land," Cheney said. "The attorney general's a statutory officer. He's a member of the Cabinet. The president's the one who bears this responsibility."

Cheney said it was disingenuous of Obama "to say, 'Gee, I didn't have anything to do with it,' especially after he sat in the Oval Office and said this wouldn't happen. Then Holder decides he's going to do it. So now he's backed off and is claiming he's not responsible.

"I just think he's trying to duck the responsibility for what's going on here," Cheney concluded. "And I think it's wrong."

Cheney pointed out that the Justice Department already investigated all the cases in question during the Bush administration and decided to prosecute only one contractor, who received a jail sentence.

"The matter's been dealt with the way you would expect it to be dealt with by professionals," Cheney said. "Now we've got a political appointee coming back, and supposedly without the approval of the president, going to do a complete review, or another complete investigation, possible prosecution of CIA personnel."

He added: "A review is never going to be final anymore now. We can have somebody, some future administration, come along 10 years from now, 15 years from now, and go back and rehash all of these decisions by an earlier administration.

Cheney vigorously defended the CIA.

"In the intelligence arena, we ask those people to do some very difficult things, sometimes, that put their own lives at risk," he said. "They do so at the direction of the president. In this case, we had specific legal authority from the Justice Department. And if they are now going to be subject to being investigated and prosecuted by the next administration, nobody's going to sign up for those kinds of missions.

"It's a very, very devastating, I think, effect that it has on morale inside the intelligence community."
Posted By: Irwin Schwab Re: Obama lied again - 2009-08-31 1:24 AM
the only solution is for Obama to fire Holder. Obama fired the Air Force One flyover guy for authorizing the picture taking expedition. this is way more serious.




of course that assumes this is unauthorized, which it isnt.
Posted By: Irwin Schwab Re: McCain disappointed by ethics waiver - 2009-09-06 3:11 AM
MSN 20 minutes 46 seconds ago Reading a post
Forum: Politics and Current Events
Thread: Obama's Broken Promises
Posted By: Irwin Schwab Obama lied again - 2009-09-10 4:34 AM
http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2009/09/...g-hopes-senate/

 Quote:
As he laid out details of his plan, Obama backed a health insurance mandate, saying Americans should be required to get health insurance just as they are required to get auto insurance -- it was an idea he opposed during the presidential campaign.

"Improving our health care system only works if everybody does their part," the president said.
Posted By: Irwin Schwab Re: Obama lied again - 2009-09-10 4:36 AM
two lies in one, this is impressive even for Obama. first he said he wouldn't support mandatory insurance as a candidate and he said he wouldn't increase taxes on the middle class. this is essentially a insurance tax.
Posted By: Irwin Schwab Re: Obama lied again - 2009-09-10 4:37 AM
There is a huge fallacy in the everyone is forced to get auto insurance, they arent. people can show that they have enough assests to cover any damages, or they could in fact not own a vehicle, many many people live in cities and do not own a vehicle. the man is a compulsive liar.
Posted By: Pariah Re: Obama lied again - 2009-09-10 4:47 AM
The part where he said he was going to force me to choke down the public option infuriated me the most.

When I am no longer on military coverage, I will not opt for anymore insurance as I am an invincible. If they try to force coverage on me, I will do something very rash. Very rash indeed.
Posted By: Ultimate Jaburg53 Re: Obama lied again - 2009-09-10 4:56 AM
Shoot yourself.

That would show them.
Posted By: allan1 Re: Obama lied again - 2009-09-10 5:18 AM
He's right!
-PCG
Posted By: Pariah Re: Obama lied again - 2009-09-10 5:39 AM
 Originally Posted By: Ultimate Jaburg53
Shoot yourself.

That would show them.


Well, my thoughts do involve a gun.
Posted By: thedoctor Re: Obama lied again - 2009-09-10 5:59 AM
That's right. Put it all out on the internet just like the other crazies. That way the media can talk about all the warnings your posted online before finally snapping.
Posted By: Pariah Re: Obama lied again - 2009-09-10 7:06 AM
*sigh*
I love the way during his speech before Congress, in one last thrust to try and sell Obamacare, he wrapped up by whipping out the corpse of Ted Kennedy one last time, and that we should all do it for Ted and fulfill his dream.

The Kennedys, any of them, can pay healthcare costs out of pocket, and it's ridiculous for them to use Kennedy's example of caring for his son. There was never any struggle to pay for his son's bill, because he could pay the bill, whatever it was, out of his own pocket.

And then meanwhile, Obama and the other Dems want to sign a bill that gives the American public far inferior coverage to what members of the Senate and Congress have, superior health coverage they fail to give up, refusing to accept the same coverage they want to condemn the rest of us to.

I disagree with Pariah's comment that Obama should be shot.

1) Obama is not the head of the beast, only the figurehead. Others in the shadows are pulling Obama's strings. He has neither the experience or the political skill to be orchestrating this bold power-grab, with barely a year in the Senate before he announced his candidacy, and no doubt pre-occupied with his campaign long before the announcement. He was hand-picked as a PC figurehead, and hard-sold to a reluctant public. (Proven by the fact that Obama's campaign was out-spending McCain's by at least 4-to-1, and Obama still only won by a narrow majority.)

2) If Obama dies, those in the shadows are even more empowered. At best, we end up with Biden or Pelosi.

And most importantly:
3)Violence on Obama is exactly what the crazy-left (and those pulling their puppet-strings) want: an excuse to do a complete lockdown on all dissenting thought, and the justification to make mass arrests and consolidate power. In the model of Hitler consolidating power after burning of the Reichstag.

I agree that Obama is dangerous to our nation's economy, national security and very sovereignty as long as he is in office. And I pray we can survive till 2012.
But I draw inspiration from how much resistance and backlash Obama has raised, so early on.

If this healthcare bill passes in any form whatsoever, it is a beach-head for a single-payer system, and its passage will be used to get that Trojan Horse in the door, up and running, and eventually expanded to smother out private insurance over "10, 15, maybe 20 years...", providing healthcare to young Democrat voters (i.e., illegals) while depriving the largest block of Republican voters of coverage to hasten their deaths and declining numbers (i.e., retired voters).

Barney Frank and the President himself have said so repeatedly over the years, on videotape no less. Liberals have absolutely no margin to try to deny this obvious truth.
The chasm is visible, between what the Democrats say, and what they actually do.
Posted By: rex Re: Obama lied again - 2009-09-10 8:33 AM
I didn't read any of that.
 Originally Posted By: rex
I didn't read any of that.


Good for you.

It's no less true for your inability to read it.
Posted By: rex Re: Obama lied again - 2009-09-10 8:39 AM
Two things happen anytime the president speaks. One is that the average IQ of America drops about five points and the other is that is brings out all the right wing nut jobs who make obama look better than he is.
 Originally Posted By: rex
Two things happen anytime the president speaks. One is that the average IQ of America drops about five points and the other is that is brings out all the right wing nut jobs who make obama look better than he is.




Translated:
 Originally Posted By: rex
I've got nothin'.
Posted By: rex Re: Obama lied again - 2009-09-10 8:47 AM
{ppst! wondy! You're the right wing nut job I was talking about.)
Posted By: Pariah Re: Obama lied again - 2009-09-10 8:52 AM
 Originally Posted By: Wonder Boy
I disagree with Pariah's comment that Obama should be shot.


Not Obama.
Posted By: the G-man Re: Obama lied again - 2009-09-10 8:59 AM
I'm sure Pariah is saying that he'd take his gun and go into the woods to live "off the grid" and not that he'd threaten the lives of any federal employee or public official.
Posted By: Pariah Re: Obama lied again - 2009-09-10 9:34 AM
Not threatening anyone.
Posted By: Irwin Schwab Re: Obama lied again - 2009-09-22 4:47 AM
http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5iO0ET9fSB07VdMXAhllfBPvKNYyAD9AS1GKG0

 Quote:
WASHINGTON — Memo to President Barack Obama: It's a tax. Obama insisted this weekend on national television that requiring people to carry health insurance — and fining them if they don't — isn't the same thing as a tax increase. But the language of Democratic bills to revamp the nation's health care system doesn't quibble. Both the House bill and the Senate Finance Committee proposal clearly state that the fines would be a tax.

And the reason the fines are in the legislation is to enforce the coverage requirement.

"If you put something in the Internal Revenue Code, and you tell the IRS to collect it, I think that's a tax," said Clint Stretch, head of the tax policy group for Deloitte, a major accounting firm. "If you don't pay, the person who's going to come and get it is going to be from the IRS."

Democrats aren't the first to propose that individuals be required to carry health insurance and fined if they refuse. The conservative Heritage Foundation called for such a mandate in the 1990s' health care debate, although its proposal differed from the ones pending in Congress. Heritage has since dropped the idea and now favors using tax credits to encourage people to buy coverage — carrots and not sticks.

During the 2008 political campaign, Obama opposed making coverage mandatory because of the costs. His position has shifted now that it's becoming clear such a requirement will be part of any legislation that Congress sends him. Conservative activists are calling it a violation of his pledge not to raise taxes on the middle class.

"This is exactly what George Bush Sr. did when he said he wouldn't raise taxes, and it cost him the next election," said Grover Norquist, president of Americans for Tax Reform. "Obama is doing the same thing, but he's insulting people by telling them that if you don't call it a big purple banana, somehow it wouldn't be a tax."


In an interview that aired Sunday on ABC's "This Week," Obama insisted that the insurance requirement is not a tax.

"For us to say that you've got to take a responsibility to get health insurance is absolutely not a tax increase," the president said. "What it's saying is...that we're not going to have other people carrying your burdens for you anymore.

"Right now everybody in America, just about, has to get auto insurance," Obama added. "Nobody considers that a tax increase.

"You just can't make up that language and decide that that's called a tax increase," he added.

But a Democratic staff description of Sen. Max Baucus' bill calls the proposed fines an "excise tax." Initially, the Montana Democrat's plan called for penalties of up to $950 for individuals and $3,800 for families. But Sen. Kent Conrad, D-N.D., said Monday he expects the family penalty to be slashed in half to $1,900.

The House bill uses a complex formula to calculate the penalties, calling them a "tax on individuals without acceptable health care coverage." People would report their insurance coverage on their tax returns.

The coverage mandate is part of a political bargain in which the insurance industry would agree to take all applicants, regardless of prior medical history.

"If we're going to have coverage without regard to pre-existing conditions, it makes sense," said economist Roberton Williams of the Tax Policy Center. "Otherwise people will come in the door the day they get sick." He sees no distinction between the requirement to get coverage and the fines themselves.

"The fact that it is imposed on people and they have no choice in paying it, and the fact that it's administered through the tax system all make it look like a tax," Williams said. The center is a joint venture of the Urban Institute and the Brookings Institution.

It wouldn't be the first asterisk added to Obama's campaign pledge on taxes. Earlier this year, he signed a tobacco tax increase to pay for children's health insurance. Even that can be read as a violation of his expansive campaign promise.

"I can make a firm pledge," he said in Dover, N.H., on Sept. 12, 2008. "Under my plan, no family making less than $250,000 a year will see any form of tax increase. Not your income tax, not your payroll tax, not your capital gains taxes, not any of your taxes."
Posted By: Irwin Schwab Re: Obama lied again - 2009-09-22 4:48 AM
yknow I gotta say MEM was right when he called Obama a liar.
Posted By: thedoctor Re: Obama lied again - 2009-10-06 1:37 AM
Posted By: Irwin Schwab Re: Obama lied again - 2009-10-06 3:11 AM
\:lol\:


That guy used to talk like Obama, I wonder why he doesnt do the voice anymore?
Posted By: Pariah Re: Obama lied again - 2009-10-06 5:27 AM
The MADTV guy does Obama a lot better.
Posted By: thedoctor Re: Obama lied again - 2009-10-06 6:38 AM
 Originally Posted By: BASAMS The Plumber
\:lol\:


That guy used to talk like Obama, I wonder why he doesnt do the voice anymore?


I think he stopped after the election because he's a pussy.
Posted By: the G-man Re: Obama lied again - 2009-10-06 9:02 PM
 Originally Posted By: thedoctor
 Originally Posted By: BASAMS The Plumber
\:lol\:


That guy used to talk like Obama, I wonder why he doesnt do the voice anymore?


I think he stopped after the election because he's a pussy.


I think he stopped with this sketch because he's a liberal pussy. When they were kissing Obama's ass he had no problem doing the voice even after the election.
Posted By: the G-man Re: Obama lied again - 2009-10-07 12:07 AM
Speaking of liberal pussies...
Don't Laugh, CNN "fact checks" a "Saturday Night Live" sketch. Seriously!
  • Yesterday on Wolf Blitzer's "Situation Room," the network "fact checked" an SNL skit. No joke! The transcript is here, video is here. "How much truth is behind all the laughs?" Blitzer intoned as he teased the upcoming segment. "Stand by for our reality check."

    CNN interviews Bill Adair of the St. Petersburg Times's PolitiFact, one of those supposedly nonpartisan fact-checking outfits, which actually published a "study" of the "SNL" skit earlier yesterday.

    It's as if CNN and the St. Petersburg Times are trying to reinforce the impression that they are in the tank for Obama. Even Democratic operative Paul Begala, who appears on a panel after the "fact check," seems embarrassed by the exercise: "Come on. It's comedy. . . . I thought it was amusing that we actually went to people to fact-check a comedy sketch. It's comedy. It's supposed to be silly and funny."

    There's another way to look at it, though: If only we'd had CNN and PolitiFact back in the 1970s, we would have known that Gerald Ford wasn't really as clumsy as Chevy Chase's portrayal of him, that Dan Aykroyd and Steve Martin weren't really two wild and crazy guys from Czechoslovakia, and that Jane Curtin is not an ignorant slut.
Posted By: thedoctor Re: Obama lied again - 2009-10-07 12:15 AM
I actually got that video from Yahoo's fact check article.
Posted By: the G-man Re: Obama lied again - 2009-10-08 1:16 AM
CNNFactCheck: CNN butt of Twitter jokes for fact checking SNL skit. A small sampling of the best appear below:
  • Wayne’s World” was not really a public access cable show. #CNNfactcheck

    The superfans were not actually having heart attacks. #cnnfactcheck

    999,999 women do NOT think “D*** in a Box” is a good gift. Which proves the perfect woman really IS 1 in a million.

    After checking every river in America, we have not been able to find a motivational speaker living in a van. #CNNfactcheck

    Church Lady not particularly pious. Might not actually even be a lady. #CNNFactCheck

    “He is not, in fact, Brian Fellow. Despite his very loud proclamations, it’s just Tracy Morgan.” #CNNFactCheck

    “more cowbell” is never an appropriate cure for a fever. #CNNFactCheck

    "Toonces the driving cat" not real cat, can't even DRIVE! #CNNFactCheck
Posted By: Irwin Schwab Re: Obama lied again - 2009-10-08 2:07 AM
\:lol\:
Posted By: The YouTube video poster Re: Obama lied again - 2009-10-09 5:30 AM
Posted By: the G-man Re: Obama's Broken Promises - 2009-10-10 9:02 PM
ACLU Pres. Notes Obama Administration Violations: The mission-accomplished banner still cannot be raised in the strife for civil liberties in the U.S., said Susan Herman, president of the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), at a lecture yesterday titled “Civil Liberties in the Age of Obama.”
Posted By: Wonder Boy Re: Obama's Broken Promises - 2009-10-11 12:04 AM
CNN and the other liberal media are so wet in the panties for Obama that they feel the need to fly cover for him, even when he is spoofed on Saturday Night Live.

The irony just piles in sedimentary layers.

CNN did a "factcheck" of a Saturday Night Live comedy spoof !

Posted By: allan1 Re: Obama's Broken Promises - 2009-10-11 7:55 PM
Never heard of anyone who actually had to prove a comedy show wrong about their "facts" until now.
Posted By: MisterJLA Re: Obama's Broken Promises - 2009-10-11 9:49 PM
Unbelieveable.

Posted By: Pariah Re: Obama's Broken Promises - 2009-10-12 1:35 AM
I don't think they'd dare to try that with the Daily Show.
Posted By: Irwin Schwab Re: Obama's Broken Promises - 2009-10-12 8:10 PM
theyd have to start another network.
Posted By: PJP Re: Obama's Broken Promises - 2009-10-16 1:50 AM
Today in New Orleans....

A fourth-grade boy asked Obama his final question: "Why do people hate you? They're supposed to love you. And God is love."



Allah help us all.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/10/18/AR2009101802549_pf.html

 Quote:
BERLIN -- Midway through a propaganda video released last month by a group calling itself the German Taliban, a surprise guest made an appearance: a cleanshaven, muscular gunman sporting the alias Abu Ibrahim the American.

The gunman did not speak but wore military fatigues and waved his rifle as subtitles identified him as an American. The video contained a stream of threats against Germany if it did not withdraw its troops from the NATO-led mission in Afghanistan. Although the American's part in the film lasted only a few seconds, it has alarmed German and U.S. intelligence officials, who are still puzzling over his background, his real identity and how he became involved with the terrorist group.

U.S. and European counterterrorism officials say a rising number of Western recruits -- including Americans -- are traveling to Afghanistan and Pakistan to attend paramilitary training camps. The flow of recruits has continued unabated, officials said, in spite of an intensified campaign over the past year by the CIA to eliminate al-Qaeda and Taliban commanders in drone missile attacks.

Since January, at least 30 recruits from Germany have traveled to Pakistan for training, according to German security sources. About 10 people -- not necessarily the same individuals -- have returned to Germany this year, fueling concerns that fresh plots are in the works against European targets.

"We think this is sufficient to show how serious the threat is," said a senior German counterterrorism official who spoke on the condition of anonymity.

German security services have been on high alert since last month, when groups affiliated with the Taliban and al-Qaeda issued several videos warning that an attack on German targets was imminent if the government did not bring home its forces from Afghanistan.

There are about 3,800 German troops in the country, the third-largest NATO contingent after those of the United States and Britain. German officials say Taliban and al-Qaeda leaders are trying to exploit domestic opposition in Germany to the war; surveys show that a majority of German voters favor a withdrawal of their soldiers.

The videos all featured German speakers who urged Muslims to travel to Afghanistan and Pakistan to join their cause.

"They're doing such good business that they are dropping a new video every week or so," said Ronald Sandee, a former Dutch military intelligence officer who serves as research director of the NEFA Foundation, a U.S. group that monitors terrorist networks. "If I were a young Muslim, I'd find them very convincing."

Last week, German officials disclosed that a 10-member cell from Hamburg had left for Pakistan earlier this year. The cell is allegedly led by a German of Syrian descent but also includes ethnic Turks, German converts to Islam and one member with Afghan roots.

Other European countries are also struggling to keep their citizens from going to Pakistan for paramilitary training.

In August, Pakistani officials arrested a group of 12 foreigners headed to North Waziristan, a tribal region near the Afghan border where many of the camps are located. Among those arrested were four Swedes, including Mehdi Ghezali, a former inmate of the U.S. military prison at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.

Meanwhile, three Belgians and a French citizen are facing trial in their respective home countries after they were arrested upon their return from Pakistani camps last year. The suspects deny they were part of a terrorist conspiracy or plotting attacks in Europe. But one defendant has admitted to French investigators that the group received explosives training while in Waziristan. Three other Belgian and French members of the alleged cell are still believed to be at large in Pakistan or Afghanistan.
Recruiting networks

European security officials have warned for many years of the threat posed by homegrown radicals who have gone to Afghanistan and Pakistan to wage jihad. Officials in some countries, such as Britain, said they have successfully cracked down on the number of would-be fighters going to South Asia. But others, such as Germany, are seeing a significant increase and struggling to contain it.

In the past, such volunteers were largely self-motivated and had to find their own way to South Asia. Today, however, al-Qaeda and its affiliates have developed extensive recruiting networks with agents on the ground in Europe, counterterrorism officials said. The agents provide guidance, money, travel routes and even letters of recommendation so the recruits can join up more easily.

In a recent report, the Dutch General Intelligence and Security Service said there were a "growing number of indications" that more Europeans were attending camps in the border region between Afghanistan and Pakistan.

The Obama administration has said that al-Qaeda's command structure and operations wing have become weaker in the past year because many of its leaders have been killed in drone missile attacks. But in its report, the Dutch intelligence agency offered a different assessment, saying that al-Qaeda's ability to carry out attacks has generally improved in recent years largely because it has successfully bolstered its alliances with other terrorist groups.

"With the jihadist agenda of those allies becoming more international, at least at the propaganda level, the threat to the West and its interests has intensified," the Dutch report found.

German officials said they have discovered multiple recruitment networks that work for al-Qaeda, the Taliban and other groups, such as the Islamic Jihad Union, which has been issuing many of the online threats against the German government. But they said the recruiting networks often operate independently, making it difficult for the security services to detect or disrupt them.

"In Germany, we don't have a uniform structure that recruits people," another senior German counterterrorism official said in an interview. "We have a wide variety of structures."
U.S. residents detained

Another sign of the internationalization of the recruitment networks is the small but growing participation of U.S. residents.

Abu Ibrahim the American, the gunman in last month's German Taliban video, is also being touted as a poster boy for jihadi recruitment on a Turkish-language Web site. The site, Sehadet Zamani, issues propaganda on behalf of the Islamic Jihad Union, an offshoot of an Uzbek terrorist group that now counts Turks, Germans, Arabs and Chechens among its members.

In July, U.S. officials announced that they had apprehended Bryant Neal Vinas, 25, a resident of Long Island, N.Y., who has confessed to traveling to al-Qaeda camps in Pakistan and firing rockets at a U.S. military base in Afghanistan.

Vinas, the son of immigrants from Peru and Argentina, is cooperating with U.S. and European authorities. He has testified about his interaction with the six-member cell of recruits from Belgium and France. Vinas has also told the FBI that he spent time in Pakistan with another New York resident, whose identity and whereabouts are unknown.

Last month, the FBI arrested yet another U.S. resident, Najibullah Zazi, and accused him of plotting a bombing in New York. Zazi, 24, an Afghan national who has lived in New York since he was a child, traveled to Pakistan last year.

U.S. intelligence officials have said that he made contact with a senior deputy to al-Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden and learned how to make homemade bombs. Zazi said he went to Pakistan to visit his wife but has denied going to a training camp.

Terrorism analysts said the CIA campaign to kill al-Qaeda and Taliban leaders had been generally effective, but warned that the strategy had its limitations and that missile attacks alone would not put an end to the training camps.

"The drone attacks seriously weaken these organizations, but you can't rely on that alone," said Guido Steinberg, a researcher at the German Institute for International and Security Affairs. "They obviously have no problem recruiting new members. In the long run, they won't have any problem replacing the leaders who have been killed."

On Saturday, the Pakistani military deployed 30,000 troops into South Waziristan as part of a broad offensive against the Taliban and other militant groups. U.S. and European officials have said they hope the mission will force many of the training camps to shut down.

But analysts said the camps, which offer basic lessons in homemade explosives and countersurveillance as well as weapons training, could easily relocate elsewhere in Pakistan or even back across the border in Afghanistan, where they operated before the U.S. invasion in 2001.

"We're talking about much smaller, much more mobile camps that don't train by the hundreds, but by the handful," said Bruce Hoffman, a terrorism expert at Georgetown University. "They can be repacked and set up again fairly easily and quickly."
During the campaign the Obamassiah promised his policy of engagement with terrorists would decrease recruiting. According to the post the opposite is happening. I'm not sure how much further he can go with this policy.
http://www.foxnews.com/opinion/2009/10/16/kevin-mccullough-obama-nobel-peace-prize-objected/

 Quote:
According to a report from the Agence France Press agency this week President Obama did not win the confidence of a majority of the five member panel before being awarded the Nobel Committee's Peace Prize late last week. Even though the committee's secretary told the press on Friday that the committee's decision had been unanimous, it appears that the members of the committee have a different recollection of how the decision unfolded.

The representatives of the Norwegian Conservative, Progress, and Socialist Left parties all objected to the Obama nomination. The two votes of support on the committee came from the nation's Labor Party.

The primary concerns of the objecting parties were Obama's lack of experience on issues related to the objectives of the prize, as well as his "inability to keep his promise."

As I noted in this editorial space only a few weeks ago, President Obama's inability to keep his promises will be one of the key reasons I believe his administration will implode this fall.

Presently the president faces opposition from the left for broken promises to the radical anti-war and homosexual activist communities. He faces opposition from the political right for his determination to break a "no tax increase" burdening families with health care reform, as well as cap-and-trade legislation, not to mention bailouts, stimulus, and budget concerns.

He's promised a public option for the uninsured, but then told politicians it would not be required for final passage.

He's promised to win the "right" war in Afghanistan but is wavering on his support for his own military adviser's request for resources.

He's promised to close Gitmo but it sits open today.

He's promised to create millions of jobs and not allow the unemployment rate to exceed 8%, but today it sits at higher than 15% in Detroit and is at nearly 10% nationally.

He's promised to be the most transparent president in history but is conducting the final rounds of talks in the push for health care reform entirely behind closed doors.

He's promised to put all legislation on the Internet for at least five days before he signs it into law but has not done this on any of the legislation he's signed in the first year of his administration.

I'm not sure why the majority of the Nobel Committee thought he wouldn't keep his promises, do you?

Which is just one more reason why we shouldn't be paying much if any attention to what five politicians from Norway have to say about the condition of world affairs anyway.

I promise you... it really is meaningless.
http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2009/oct/23/czar-war-escalates-between-congress-white-house/

 Quote:
The White House has told Congress it will reject calls for many of President Obama's policy czars to testify before Congress - a decision senators said goes against the president's promises of transparency and openness and treads on Congress' constitutional mandate to investigate the administration's actions.

Sen. Susan Collins, Maine Republican, said White House counsel Greg Craig told her in a meeting Wednesday that they will not make available any of the czars who work in the White House and don't have to go through Senate confirmation. She said he was "murky" on whether other czars outside of the White House would be allowed to come before Congress.

Miss Collins said that doesn't make sense when some of those czars are actually making policy or negotiating on behalf of Mr. Obama.

"I think Congress should be able to call the president's climate czar, Carol Browner, the energy and environment czar, to ask her about the negotiations she conducted with the automobile industry that led to very significant policy changes with regard to emissions standards," Miss Collins said at a hearing Thursday that examined the proliferation of czars.

The debate goes to the heart of weighty constitutional issues about separation of powers. The president argues that he should be allowed to have advisers who are free to give him confidential advice without having to fear being called to testify about it. Democrats and Republicans in Congress, though, argue that those in office who actually craft policy should be able to be summoned to testify because they do more than just give the president advice.

At issue are the 18 positions Miss Collins says Mr. Obama has created since he took office. Of those, she says 10 - the White House says eight - are in the executive office and not subject to Freedom of Information Act requests or requests for testimony.

Czar is an informal term given to the positions.

Sen. Joe Lieberman, Connecticut independent and chairman of the government affairs committee, asked the White House to provide a witness for Thursday's hearing but it did not send one.

In a letter last week to Miss Collins, though, Mr. Craig explained that the White House is not trying to circumvent Congress.

"We recognize that it is theoretically possible that a president could create new positions that inhibit transparency or undermine congressional oversight. That is simply not the case, however, in the current administration," Mr. Craig wrote.
Transparency promise is dead.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/comment/64244...-governing.html

 Quote:
Perhaps we should not be surprised that the land of the permanent campaign has produced a president like Barack Obama. During his White House bid, Mr Obama's staff argued that his masterful oversight of the machinery that ultimately got him elected was his highest achievement.

In many respects this was true, though Mr Obama was more chairman than CEO. Even Republican political operatives acknowledge that the Obama '08 campaign was a thing of beauty.

Essentially, however, Mr Obama won because of his persona – post-racial, healing, cool, articulate and inspirational. In a sense, therefore, his greatest achievement in life is being Barack Obama. Or the campaign version, at least.

Therein lies the problem. While campaigning could centre around soaring rhetoric, governing is altogether messier. It involves tough, unpopular choices and cutting deals with opponents. It requires doing things rather than talking about them, let alone just being.

Mr Obama is showing little appetite for this. Instead of being the commander-in-chief, he is the campaigner-in-chief.

After a disastrous summer that saw his approval rating drop more than any other president at the same stage since Harry Truman in 1953, Mr Obama has temporarily abandoned the campaign-style events promoting his stalled health-care reform initiative.

Now, he is stumping for Democratic candidates in states he won last year but which are now in danger. Last Wednesday in Hackensack, Mr Obama took to the stage to proclaim: "Your voice can change the world. Your voice can elect Jon Corzine, governor once again of New Jersey." Change the world? Mr Corzine is a former Goldman Sachs executive whose political career was launched when he spent $57 million of his own money on a Senate seat in 2000.

The rally was an attempted 2008 reprise. There was the spontaneous (or not) cry of "I love you!" bashfully acknowledged by Mr Obama with a "I love you back."

There were the Obama-led chants of "Fired up! Ready to go!" and the ubiquitous "Yes We Can" signs.

And as he always does, Mr Obama blamed every economic woe on the Bush years, conveniently forgetting that Republicans are no longer in office and it's been his mess for nine months now.

Campaigning and raising cash is what Mr Obama does best. Next week's fundraising events in Florida and Virginia will bring to 24 the number of such functions he had headlined since entering office in January. During his first year in office, Mr Bush attended just six fundraisers.

Just as instructive is Mr Obama's war on the cable channel Fox News.

Everyone knows that Fox leans Right and contains some of the most virulent critics of the president. Most prominent is Fox's weeping, ranting Glenn Beck, who fulminated bizarrely in July that Mr Obama "has a deep-seated hatred for white people".

Rather than ignoring or even repudiating Fox commentators, the White House has instead sought to marginalise Fox News in its entirety. Top Obama aide David Axelrod even lectured that Fox was not a news organisation and the rest of the media "ought not to treat them that way".

This was the same Mr Axelrod who advised Mr Obama in a 2006 campaign memo: "You care far too much what is written and said about you."

Also in the doghouse is the US Chamber of Commerce, which Obama aides have branded as representing "special interests" and a Bush agenda. Never mind that moderate Democratic candidates across the country proudly tout endorsements for the Chamber, which is hardly part of any radical Republican fringe.

All this says much about Mr Obama's priorities at a time when he is sitting on an urgent request for 40,000 more troops to Afghanistan, seemingly unsure about whether the counter-insurgency strategy he announced in March is the right one.

Late-night comics, although unabashedly liberal and at a loss last year as to how to poke fun at the rather humourless Mr Obama, are having a field day portraying him as a do-nothing prevaricator obsessed with his own image.

"President Obama agreed to commit an additional 40,000 troops to help fight Fox News," quipped NBC's Jay Leno. "Senior White House adviser David Axelrod told reporters that Fox News is just pushing a point of view. Well, yes, but at least they've got a point of view." Mr Obama was elected on a promise of being post-partisan to Washington and transforming the country. Thus far, he has won the support of only a single Republican for his health-care plan and has shown himself to be as aggressive a Democratic partisan in office as anyone in the fabled Clinton war room.

Beyond the grand announcements, fine speeches and his eager acceptance of the Nobel Peace Prize, Mr Obama has yet to achieve anything of substance. It is time for the campaign to end.
This column pretty much summs up my biggest gripe with Obama's broken promises. He had a huge capital of good will built up when he was elected. He could have really healed the partisan divide in the country but he never left campaign mode.

There are many issues moderate Democrats and moderate Republicans agree on. He should have tackled these issues first and the fringe would have been forced to come along for the ride.

He cam out shooting with fringe issues such as Gitmo and Universal healthcare. Healthcare is important but there are reform measures he could have tackled right away that would have swayed moderates in both parties. His constant attacks on the previous administration after winning election put the opposition party on the defensive right off the back.
Anonymous 47 seconds ago Reading a post
Forum: Politics and Current Events
Thread: Obama's Broken Promises

welcome back Jason Perkins!
Posted By: the G-man Re: Obama's Broken Promises - 2009-11-02 4:48 AM
Candidate Obama vs. President Obama: Obama made a lot of promises during his campaign for change, but how many of them has he kept
http://blog.newsweek.com/blogs/declassif....aspx?GT1=43002

 Quote:
Remember when Barack Obama was running for president and he promised that, unlike secrecy-obsessed George Bush and Dick Cheney, he would insist on a “transparent” administration that wouldn’t hide information from the American people unless it was absolutely necessary?

That would have been nice. But of course it turns out it was just talk. Obama has only been president for 10 months and already he is just as casual as his predecessors about demanding secrecy for things that have no good reason to be kept secret at all.

Why, for instance, is the Obama White House fighting so hard to prevent the release of documents about who lobbied Congress to give immunity to the telephone companies that cooperated with Bush’s warrantless wiretapping program?

A federal court concluded that there is no reason for the administration to keep that information from the public. It’s not classified. There aren’t precious national security secrets at stake. It’s a list of names of those who spent money to influence our elected officials into voting their way on the passage of a law.

The names on that list might somehow turn out to be politically embarrassing to some members of Congress, or even to some members of the Obama administration—remember, as a Senator Obama voted in favor of giving telecom companies immunity from prosecution. But embarrassment shouldn’t be a good enough reason to keep something secret, especially not in Obama’s new promised land of transparency.

Yet the administration has refused to obey the court’s order. First the White House asked for a 60-day delay. The court knocked that down. Then they tried for a 30-day delay. Again, the court said no. So they then filed an emergency motion to prevent the release of the documents. Once more, the court turned them away.

But this week, after administration lawyers tried yet again, the court finally caved and agreed to postpone the order to make the documents public.

A proud day for democracy. High fives all around at the White House.

Eventually, we’ll find out what’s going on here. Or, maybe we won’t. Cheney pulled all kinds of tricks like these to forever keep secret the names of the big oil lobbyists experts who dictated the outcome he consulted on his energy task force.

Back then, of course, Democrats were outraged that the Bush White House would try to hide that information from the public. One of the angriest was Rahm Emanuel, then a congressman and now Obama’s chief of staff.

“The vice president’s willingness to ignore the rules remains just as strong as ever,” Emanuel fumed. “Democrats are prepared to hold the vice president accountable and ensure that no one in our government is above the law.”

So why isn’t Rahm just as furious at his own boss, seeing how he is doing the same thing?
 Originally Posted By: BASAMS The Plumber
Anonymous 47 seconds ago Reading a post
Forum: Politics and Current Events
Thread: Obama's Broken Promises

welcome back Jason Perkins!




AFLAC!
Posted By: the G-man Re: Obama lied again - 2009-11-15 7:52 PM
Who assured the country that the 9/11 plotters would get "a full military trial"? Senator Barack Obama, during the floor debate on the Military Commissions Act of 2006.
Posted By: Irwin Schwab Re: Obama lied again - 2009-11-16 7:04 AM
Posted By: Irwin Schwab The $100 Million Health Care Vote? - 2009-11-21 2:12 PM
http://blogs.abcnews.com/thenote/2009/11/the-100-million-health-care-vote.html

 Quote:
What does it take to get a wavering senator to vote for health care reform?

Here’s a case study.

On page 432 of the Reid bill, there is a section increasing federal Medicaid subsidies for “certain states recovering from a major disaster.”

The section spends two pages defining which “states” would qualify, saying, among other things, that it would be states that “during the preceding 7 fiscal years” have been declared a “major disaster area.”

I am told the section applies to exactly one state: Louisiana, the home of moderate Democrat Mary Landrieu, who has been playing hard to get on the health care bill.

In other words, the bill spends two pages describing would could be written with a single world: Louisiana. (This may also help explain why the bill is long.)

Senator Harry Reid, who drafted the bill, cannot pass it without the support of Louisiana’s Mary Landrieu.

How much does it cost? According to the Congressional Budget Office: $100 million.

Here’s the incredibly complicated language:

SEC. 2006. SPECIAL ADJUSTMENT TO FMAP DETERMINATION FOR CERTAIN STATES RECOVERING FROM A MAJOR DISASTER.

Section 1905 of the Social Security Act (42 U.S.C. 1396d), as amended by sections 2001(a)(3) and
2001(b)(2), is amended— (1) in subsection (b), in the first sentence, by striking ‘‘subsection (y)’’ and inserting ‘‘subsections (y) and (aa)’’; and (2) by adding at the end the following new subsection:

‘‘(aa)(1) Notwithstanding subsection (b), beginning January 1, 2011, the Federal medical assistance percentage for a fiscal year for a disaster-recovery FMAP adjustment State shall be equal to the following:
‘(A) In the case of the first fiscal year (or part of a fiscal year) for which this subsection applies to the State, the Federal medical assistance percentage determined for the fiscal year without regard to this subsection and subsection (y), increased by 50 percent of the number of percentage points by which the Federal medical assistance percentage determined for the State for the fiscal year without regard to this subsection and subsection (y), is less than the Federal medical assistance percentage determined for the State for the preceding fiscal year after the application of only subsection (a) of section 5001 of Public Law 111–5 (if applicable to the preceding fiscal year) and without regard to this subsection, subsection (y), and subsections (b) and (c) of section 5001 of Public Law 111–5.

‘‘(B) In the case of the second or any succeeding fiscal year for which this subsection applies to the State, the Federal medical assistance percentage determined for the preceding fiscal year under this subsection for the State, increased by 25 percent of the number of percentage points by which the Federal medical assistance percentage determined for the State for the fiscal year without regard to this subsection and subsection (y), is less than the Federal medical assistance percentage determined for the State for the preceding fiscal year under this subsection.

‘‘(2) In this subsection, the term ‘disaster-recovery FMAP adjustment State’ means a State that is one of
the 50 States or the District of Columbia, for which, at any time during the preceding 7 fiscal years, the President has declared a major disaster under section 401 of the Robert T. Stafford Disaster Relief and Emergency Assistance Act and determined as a result of such disaster that every county or parish in the State warrant individual and public assistance or public assistance from the Federal Government under such Act and for which— ‘‘(A) in the case of the first fiscal year (or part of a fiscal year) for which this subsection applies to the State, the Federal medical assistance percentage determined for the State for the fiscal year without regard to this subsection and subsection (y), is less than the Federal medical assistance percentage determined for the State for the preceding fiscal year after the application of only subsection (a) of section 5001 of Public Law 111–5 (if applicable to the preceding fiscal year) and without regard to this subsection, subsection (y), and subsections (b) and (c) of section 5001 of Public Law 111–5, by at least 3 percentage points; and ‘‘(B) in the case of the second or any succeeding fiscal year for which this subsection applies to the State, the Federal medical assistance percentage determined for the State for the fiscal year without regard to this subsection and subsection (y), is less than the Federal medical assistance percentage determined for the State for the preceding fiscal year under this subsection by at least 3 percentage points.

‘‘(3) The Federal medical assistance percentage determined for a disaster-recovery FMAP adjustment State under paragraph (1) shall apply for purposes of this title (other than with respect to disproportionate share hospital payments described in section 1923 and payments under this title that are based on the enhanced FMAP described in 2105(b)) and shall not apply with respect to payments under title IV (other than under part E of title IV) or payments under title XXI.’’.
Posted By: Irwin Schwab Re: The $100 Million Health Care Vote? - 2009-11-21 2:13 PM
($100 million in)Change we can believe in!
Posted By: the G-man Where did Obama's moral clarity go? - 2009-11-25 6:59 PM
Richard Cohen: Where did Obama's moral clarity go?


Cohen is a liberal and Obama supporter (though I'm sure that Zick is frantically editing the wikipedia page to make him some sort of republican thug even as we speak).
Lobbyists Find Door Open At Obama White House: Visitor records show top aides met with health care heavyweights while piecing together overhaul of system
Fox News altered the White House visitor records.
-MEM
Wonder Boy content User rex's personal obsession
4000+ posts 6 seconds ago Reading a post
Forum: Politics and Current Events
Thread: Obama's Broken Promises
Posted By: the G-man Re: another broken promise - 2009-12-04 9:11 PM
McCain Blasts Obama for Reneging on C-SPAN Promise:
  • Sen. John McCain, speaking on the Senate floor, took aim at President Obama for reneging on his pledge that health care negotiations would be broadcast on C-SPAN.

    “A year ago last October, then candidate for president said, ‘It’s all going to be on C-SPAN,” McCain said mockingly of his election opponent, pointing his finger in the air. “The C-SPAN cameras are still waiting outside of Sen. Reid's office to go in and film these negotiations so that, as President Obama said then, ‘all Americans can see who’s on the side of the pharmaceutical companies, and who’s on the side of the American people.'”

    McCain jested, “C-SPAN, keep waiting, we’re going to try and get you in.”
Posted By: allan1 Re: another broken promise - 2009-12-04 9:23 PM
Huh....if only McCain had been that ballsy during the campaign.
Posted By: Irwin Schwab Re: another broken promise - 2009-12-05 1:53 AM
 Originally Posted By: allan1
Huh....if only McCain had been that ballsy during the campaign.
 Originally Posted By: rex
Wonder Boy content User rex's personal obsession
4000+ posts 6 seconds ago Reading a post
Forum: Politics and Current Events
Thread: Obama's Broken Promises




AFLAC!
The AFLAC Duck User 200+ posts 12/07/09 09:49 PM Reading a post
Forum: Politics and Current Events
Thread: Obama's Broken Promises
\:lol\:
 Originally Posted By: MisterJLA
The AFLAC Duck User 200+ posts 12/07/09 09:49 PM Reading a post
Forum: Politics and Current Events
Thread: Obama's Broken Promises




AFLAC!
Posted By: Irwin Schwab Obama's Big Sellout - 2009-12-13 1:35 AM
http://www.rollingstone.com/politics/story/31234647/obamas_big_sellout

 Quote:
Barack Obama ran for president as a man of the people, standing up to Wall Street as the global economy melted down in that fateful fall of 2008. He pushed a tax plan to soak the rich, ripped NAFTA for hurting the middle class and tore into John McCain for supporting a bankruptcy bill that sided with wealthy bankers "at the expense of hardworking Americans." Obama may not have run to the left of Samuel Gompers or Cesar Chavez, but it's not like you saw him on the campaign trail flanked by bankers from Citigroup and Goldman Sachs. What inspired supporters who pushed him to his historic win was the sense that a genuine outsider was finally breaking into an exclusive club, that walls were being torn down, that things were, for lack of a better or more specific term, changing.

Then he got elected.

What's taken place in the year since Obama won the presidency has turned out to be one of the most dramatic political about-faces in our history. Elected in the midst of a crushing economic crisis brought on by a decade of orgiastic deregulation and unchecked greed, Obama had a clear mandate to rein in Wall Street and remake the entire structure of the American economy. What he did instead was ship even his most marginally progressive campaign advisers off to various bureaucratic Siberias, while packing the key economic positions in his White House with the very people who caused the crisis in the first place. This new team of bubble-fattened ex-bankers and laissez-faire intellectuals then proceeded to sell us all out, instituting a massive, trickle-up bailout and systematically gutting regulatory reform from the inside.

How could Obama let this happen? Is he just a rookie in the political big leagues, hoodwinked by Beltway old-timers? Or is the vacillating, ineffectual servant of banking interests we've been seeing on TV this fall who Obama really is?

Whatever the president's real motives are, the extensive series of loophole-rich financial "reforms" that the Democrats are currently pushing may ultimately do more harm than good. In fact, some parts of the new reforms border on insanity, threatening to vastly amplify Wall Street's political power by institutionalizing the taxpayer's role as a welfare provider for the financial-services industry. At one point in the debate, Obama's top economic advisers demanded the power to award future bailouts without even going to Congress for approval — and without providing taxpayers a single dime in equity on the deals.

How did we get here? It started just moments after the election — and almost nobody noticed.

Advertisement

'Just look at the timeline of the Citigroup deal," says one leading Democratic consultant. "Just look at it. It's fucking amazing. Amazing! And nobody said a thing about it."

Barack Obama was still just the president-elect when it happened, but the revolting and inexcusable $306 billion bailout that Citigroup received was the first major act of his presidency. In order to grasp the full horror of what took place, however, one needs to go back a few weeks before the actual bailout — to November 5th, 2008, the day after Obama's election.

That was the day the jubilant Obama campaign announced its transition team. Though many of the names were familiar — former Bill Clinton chief of staff John Podesta, long-time Obama confidante Valerie Jarrett — the list was most notable for who was not on it, especially on the economic side. Austan Goolsbee, a University of Chicago economist who had served as one of Obama's chief advisers during the campaign, didn't make the cut. Neither did Karen Kornbluh, who had served as Obama's policy director and was instrumental in crafting the Democratic Party's platform. Both had emphasized populist themes during the campaign: Kornbluh was known for pushing Democrats to focus on the plight of the poor and middle class, while Goolsbee was an aggressive critic of Wall Street, declaring that AIG executives should receive "a Nobel Prize — for evil."

But come November 5th, both were banished from Obama's inner circle — and replaced with a group of Wall Street bankers. Leading the search for the president's new economic team was his close friend and Harvard Law classmate Michael Froman, a high-ranking executive at Citigroup. During the campaign, Froman had emerged as one of Obama's biggest fundraisers, bundling $200,000 in contributions and introducing the candidate to a host of heavy hitters — chief among them his mentor Bob Rubin, the former co-chairman of Goldman Sachs who served as Treasury secretary under Bill Clinton. Froman had served as chief of staff to Rubin at Treasury, and had followed his boss when Rubin left the Clinton administration to serve as a senior counselor to Citigroup (a massive new financial conglomerate created by deregulatory moves pushed through by Rubin himself).

Incredibly, Froman did not resign from the bank when he went to work for Obama: He remained in the employ of Citigroup for two more months, even as he helped appoint the very people who would shape the future of his own firm. And to help him pick Obama's economic team, Froman brought in none other than Jamie Rubin, a former Clinton diplomat who happens to be Bob Rubin's son. At the time, Jamie's dad was still earning roughly $15 million a year working for Citigroup, which was in the midst of a collapse brought on in part because Rubin had pushed the bank to invest heavily in mortgage-backed CDOs and other risky instruments.

Now here's where it gets really interesting. It's three weeks after the election. You have a lame-duck president in George W. Bush — still nominally in charge, but in reality already halfway to the golf-and-O'Doul's portion of his career and more than happy to vacate the scene. Left to deal with the still-reeling economy are lame-duck Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson, a former head of Goldman Sachs, and New York Fed chief Timothy Geithner, who served under Bob Rubin in the Clinton White House. Running Obama's economic team are a still-employed Citigroup executive and the son of another Citigroup executive, who himself joined Obama's transition team that same month.

So on November 23rd, 2008, a deal is announced in which the government will bail out Rubin's messes at Citigroup with a massive buffet of taxpayer-funded cash and guarantees. It is a terrible deal for the government, almost universally panned by all serious economists, an outrage to anyone who pays taxes. Under the deal, the bank gets $20 billion in cash, on top of the $25 billion it had already received just weeks before as part of the Troubled Asset Relief Program. But that's just the appetizer. The government also agrees to charge taxpayers for up to $277 billion in losses on troubled Citi assets, many of them those toxic CDOs that Rubin had pushed Citi to invest in. No Citi executives are replaced, and few restrictions are placed on their compensation. It's the sweetheart deal of the century, putting generations of working-stiff taxpayers on the hook to pay off Bob Rubin's fuck-up-rich tenure at Citi. "If you had any doubts at all about the primacy of Wall Street over Main Street," former labor secretary Robert Reich declares when the bailout is announced, "your doubts should be laid to rest."

It is bad enough that one of Bob Rubin's former protégés from the Clinton years, the New York Fed chief Geithner, is intimately involved in the negotiations, which unsurprisingly leave the Federal Reserve massively exposed to future Citi losses. But the real stunner comes only hours after the bailout deal is struck, when the Obama transition team makes a cheerful announcement: Timothy Geithner is going to be Barack Obama's Treasury secretary!

Geithner, in other words, is hired to head the U.S. Treasury by an executive from Citigroup — Michael Froman — before the ink is even dry on a massive government giveaway to Citigroup that Geithner himself was instrumental in delivering. In the annals of brazen political swindles, this one has to go in the all-time Fuck-the-Optics Hall of Fame.

Wall Street loved the Citi bailout and the Geithner nomination so much that the Dow immediately posted its biggest two-day jump since 1987, rising 11.8 percent. Citi shares jumped 58 percent in a single day, and JP Morgan Chase, Merrill Lynch and Morgan Stanley soared more than 20 percent, as Wall Street embraced the news that the government's bailout generosity would not die with George W. Bush and Hank Paulson. "Geithner assures a smooth transition between the Bush administration and that of Obama, because he's already co-managing what's happening now," observed Stephen Leeb, president of Leeb Capital Management.

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Left unnoticed, however, was the fact that Geithner had been hired by a sitting Citigroup executive who still had a big bonus coming despite his proximity to Obama. In January 2009, just over a month after the bailout, Citigroup paid Froman a year-end bonus of $2.25 million. But as outrageous as it was, that payoff would prove to be chump change for the banker crowd, who were about to get everything they wanted — and more — from the new president.

The irony of Bob Rubin: He's an unapologetic arch-capitalist demagogue whose very career is proof that a free-market meritocracy is a myth. Much like Alan Greenspan, a staggeringly incompetent economic forecaster who was worshipped by four decades of politicians because he once dated Barbara Walters, Rubin has been held in awe by the American political elite for nearly 20 years despite having fucked up virtually every project he ever got his hands on. He went from running Goldman Sachs (1990-1992) to the Clinton White House (1993-1999) to Citigroup (1999-2009), leaving behind a trail of historic gaffes that somehow boosted his stature every step of the way.

As Treasury secretary under Clinton, Rubin was the driving force behind two monstrous deregulatory actions that would be primary causes of last year's financial crisis: the repeal of the Glass-Steagall Act (passed specifically to legalize the Citigroup megamerger) and the deregulation of the derivatives market. Having set that time bomb, Rubin left government to join Citi, which promptly expressed its gratitude by giving him $126 million in compensation over the next eight years (they don't call it bribery in this country when they give you the money post factum). After urging management to amp up its risky investments in toxic vehicles, a strategy that very nearly destroyed the company, Rubin blamed Citi's board for his screw-ups and complained that he had been underpaid to boot. "I bet there's not a single year where I couldn't have gone somewhere else and made more," he said.

Despite being perhaps more responsible for last year's crash than any other single living person — his colossally stupid decisions at both the highest levels of government and the management of a private financial superpower make him unique — Rubin was the man Barack Obama chose to build his White House around.

There are four main ways to be connected to Bob Rubin: through Goldman Sachs, the Clinton administration, Citigroup and, finally, the Hamilton Project, a think tank Rubin spearheaded under the auspices of the Brookings Institute to promote his philosophy of balanced budgets, free trade and financial deregulation. The team Obama put in place to run his economic policy after his inauguration was dominated by people who boasted connections to at least one of these four institutions — so much so that the White House now looks like a backstage party for an episode of Bob Rubin, This Is Your Life!

At Treasury, there is Geithner, who worked under Rubin in the Clinton years. Serving as Geithner's "counselor" — a made-up post not subject to Senate confirmation — is Lewis Alexander, the former chief economist of Citigroup, who advised Citi back in 2007 that the upcoming housing crash was nothing to worry about. Two other top Geithner "counselors" — Gene Sperling and Lael Brainard — worked under Rubin at the National Economic Council, the key group that coordinates all economic policymaking for the White House.

As director of the NEC, meanwhile, Obama installed economic czar Larry Summers, who had served as Rubin's protégé at Treasury. Just below Summers is Jason Furman, who worked for Rubin in the Clinton White House and was one of the first directors of Rubin's Hamilton Project. The appointment of Furman — a persistent advocate of free-trade agreements like NAFTA and the author of droolingly pro-globalization reports with titles like "Walmart: A Progressive Success Story" — provided one of the first clues that Obama had only been posturing when he promised crowds of struggling Midwesterners during the campaign that he would renegotiate NAFTA, which facilitated the flight of blue-collar jobs to other countries. "NAFTA's shortcomings were evident when signed, and we must now amend the agreement to fix them," Obama declared. A few months after hiring Furman to help shape its economic policy, however, the White House quietly quashed any talk of renegotiating the trade deal. "The president has said we will look at all of our options, but I think they can be addressed without having to reopen the agreement," U.S. Trade Representative Ronald Kirk told reporters in a little-publicized conference call last April.

The announcement was not so surprising, given who Obama hired to serve alongside Furman at the NEC: management consultant Diana Farrell, who worked under Rubin at Goldman Sachs. In 2003, Farrell was the author of an infamous paper in which she argued that sending American jobs overseas might be "as beneficial to the U.S. as to the destination country, probably more so."

Joining Summers, Furman and Farrell at the NEC is Froman, who by then had been formally appointed to a unique position: He is not only Obama's international finance adviser at the National Economic Council, he simultaneously serves as deputy national security adviser at the National Security Council. The twin posts give Froman a direct line to the president, putting him in a position to coordinate Obama's international economic policy during a crisis. He'll have help from David Lipton, another joint appointee to the economics and security councils who worked with Rubin at Treasury and Citigroup, and from Jacob Lew, a former Citi colleague of Rubin's whom Obama named as deputy director at the State Department to focus on international finance.

Over at the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, which is supposed to regulate derivatives trading, Obama appointed Gary Gensler, a former Goldman banker who worked under Rubin in the Clinton White House. Gensler had been instrumental in helping to pass the infamous Commodity Futures Modernization Act of 2000, which prevented regulation of derivative instruments like CDOs and credit-default swaps that played such a big role in cratering the economy last year. And as head of the powerful Office of Management and Budget, Obama named Peter Orszag, who served as the first director of Rubin's Hamilton Project. Orszag once succinctly summed up the project's ideology as a sort of liberal spin on trickle-down Reaganomics: "Market competition and globalization generate significant economic benefits."

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Taken together, the rash of appointments with ties to Bob Rubin may well represent the most sweeping influence by a single Wall Street insider in the history of government. "Rather than having a team of rivals, they've got a team of Rubins," says Steven Clemons, director of the American Strategy Program at the New America Foundation. "You see that in policy choices that have resuscitated — but not reformed — Wall Street."
While Rubin's allies and acolytes got all the important jobs in the Obama administration, the academics and progressives got banished to semi-meaningless, even comical roles. Kornbluh was rewarded for being the chief policy architect of Obama's meteoric rise by being outfitted with a pith helmet and booted across the ocean to Paris, where she now serves as America's never-again-to-be-seen-on-TV ambassador to the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development. Goolsbee, meanwhile, was appointed as staff director of the President's Economic Recovery Advisory Board, a kind of dumping ground for Wall Street critics who had assisted Obama during the campaign; one top Democrat calls the panel "Siberia."

Joining Goolsbee as chairman of the PERAB gulag is former Fed chief Paul Volcker, who back in March 2008 helped candidate Obama write a speech declaring that the deregulatory efforts of the Eighties and Nineties had "excused and even embraced an ethic of greed, corner-cutting, insider dealing, things that have always threatened the long-term stability of our economic system." That speech met with rapturous applause, but the commission Obama gave Volcker to manage is so toothless that it didn't even meet for the first time until last May. The lone progressive in the White House, economist Jared Bernstein, holds the impressive-sounding title of chief economist and national policy adviser — except that the man he is advising is Joe Biden, who seems more interested in foreign policy than financial reform.

The significance of all of these appointments isn't that the Wall Street types are now in a position to provide direct favors to their former employers. It's that, with one or two exceptions, they collectively offer a microcosm of what the Democratic Party has come to stand for in the 21st century. Virtually all of the Rubinites brought in to manage the economy under Obama share the same fundamental political philosophy carefully articulated for years by the Hamilton Project: Expand the safety net to protect the poor, but let Wall Street do whatever it wants. "Bob Rubin, these guys, they're classic limousine liberals," says David Sirota, a former Democratic strategist. "These are basically people who have made shitloads of money in the speculative economy, but they want to call themselves good Democrats because they're willing to give a little more to the poor. That's the model for this Democratic Party: Let the rich do their thing, but give a fraction more to everyone else."

Even the members of Obama's economic team who have spent most of their lives in public office have managed to make small fortunes on Wall Street. The president's economic czar, Larry Summers, was paid more than $5.2 million in 2008 alone as a managing director of the hedge fund D.E. Shaw, and pocketed an additional $2.7 million in speaking fees from a smorgasbord of future bailout recipients, including Goldman Sachs and Citigroup. At Treasury, Geithner's aide Gene Sperling earned a staggering $887,727 from Goldman Sachs last year for performing the punch-line-worthy service of "advice on charitable giving." Sperling's fellow Treasury appointee, Mark Patterson, received $637,492 as a full-time lobbyist for Goldman Sachs, and another top Geithner aide, Lee Sachs, made more than $3 million working for a New York hedge fund called Mariner Investment Group. The list goes on and on. Even Obama's chief of staff, Rahm Emanuel, who has been out of government for only 30 months of his adult life, managed to collect $18 million during his private-sector stint with a Wall Street firm called Wasserstein-Perella.

The point is that an economic team made up exclusively of callous millionaire-assholes has absolutely zero interest in reforming the gamed system that made them rich in the first place. "You can't expect these people to do anything other than protect Wall Street," says Rep. Cliff Stearns, a Republican from Florida. That thinking was clear from Obama's first address to Congress, when he stressed the importance of getting Americans to borrow like crazy again. "Credit is the lifeblood of the economy," he declared, pledging "the full force of the federal government to ensure that the major banks that Americans depend on have enough confidence and enough money." A president elected on a platform of change was announcing, in so many words, that he planned to change nothing fundamental when it came to the economy. Rather than doing what FDR had done during the Great Depression and institute stringent new rules to curb financial abuses, Obama planned to institutionalize the policy, firmly established during the Bush years, of keeping a few megafirms rich at the expense of everyone else.

Obama hasn't always toed the Rubin line when it comes to economic policy. Despite being surrounded by a team that is powerfully opposed to deficit spending — balanced budgets and deficit reduction have always been central to the Rubin way of thinking — Obama came out of the gate with a huge stimulus plan designed to kick-start the economy and address the job losses brought on by the 2008 crisis. "You have to give him credit there," says Sen. Bernie Sanders, an advocate of using government resources to address unemployment. "It's a very significant piece of legislation, and $787 billion is a lot of money."

But whatever jobs the stimulus has created or preserved so far — 640,329, according to an absurdly precise and already debunked calculation by the White House — the aid that Obama has provided to real people has been dwarfed in size and scope by the taxpayer money that has been handed over to America's financial giants. "They spent $75 billion on mortgage relief, but come on — look at how much they gave Wall Street," says a leading Democratic strategist. Neil Barofsky, the inspector general charged with overseeing TARP, estimates that the total cost of the Wall Street bailouts could eventually reach $23.7 trillion. And while the government continues to dole out big money to big banks, Obama and his team of Rubinites have done almost nothing to reform the warped financial system responsible for imploding the global economy in the first place.

The push for reform seemed to get off to a promising start. In the House, the charge was led by Rep. Barney Frank, the outspoken chair of the House Financial Services Committee, who emerged during last year's Bush bailouts as a sharp-tongued critic of Wall Street. Back when Obama was still a senator, he and Frank even worked together to introduce a populist bill targeting executive compensation. Last spring, with the economy shattered, Frank began to hold hearings on a host of reforms, crafted with significant input from the White House, that initially contained some very good elements. There were measures to curb abusive credit-card lending, prevent banks from charging excessive fees, force publicly traded firms to conduct meaningful risk assessment and allow shareholders to vote on executive compensation. There were even measures to crack down on risky derivatives and to bar firms like AIG from picking their own regulators.

Then the committee went to work — and the loopholes started to appear.

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The most notable of these came in the proposal to regulate derivatives like credit-default swaps. Even Gary Gensler, the former Goldmanite whom Obama put in charge of commodities regulation, was pushing to make these normally obscure investments more transparent, enabling regulators and investors to identify speculative bubbles sooner. But in August, a month after Gensler came out in favor of reform, Geithner slapped him down by issuing a 115-page paper called "Improvements to Regulation of Over-the-Counter Derivatives Markets" that called for a series of exemptions for "end users" — i.e., almost all of the clients who buy derivatives from banks like Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley. Even more stunning, Frank's bill included a blanket exception to the rules for currency swaps traded on foreign exchanges — the very instruments that had triggered the Long-Term Capital Management meltdown in the late 1990s.

Given that derivatives were at the heart of the financial meltdown last year, the decision to gut derivatives reform sent some legislators howling with disgust. Sen. Maria Cantwell of Washington, who estimates that as much as 90 percent of all derivatives could remain unregulated under the new rules, went so far as to say the new laws would make things worse. "Current law with its loopholes might actually be better than these loopholes," she said.

An even bigger loophole could do far worse damage to the economy. Under the original bill, the Securities and Exchange Commission and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission were granted the power to ban any credit swaps deemed to be "detrimental to the stability of a financial market or of participants in a financial market." By the time Frank's committee was done with the bill, however, the SEC and the CFTC were left with no authority to do anything about abusive derivatives other than to send a report to Congress. The move, in effect, would leave the kind of credit-default swaps that brought down AIG largely unregulated.

Why would leading congressional Democrats, working closely with the Obama administration, agree to leave one of the riskiest of all financial instruments unregulated, even before the issue could be debated by the House? "There was concern that a broad grant to ban abusive swaps would be unsettling," Frank explained.

Unsettling to whom? Certainly not to you and me — but then again, actual people are not really part of the calculus when it comes to finance reform. According to those close to the markup process, Frank's committee inserted loopholes under pressure from "constituents" — by which they mean anyone "who can afford a lobbyist," says Michael Greenberger, the former head of trading at the CFTC under Clinton.

This pattern would repeat itself over and over again throughout the fall. Take the centerpiece of Obama's reform proposal: the much-ballyhooed creation of a Consumer Finance Protection Agency to protect the little guy from abusive bank practices. Like the derivatives bill, the debate over the CFPA ended up being dominated by horse-trading for loopholes. In the end, Frank not only agreed to exempt some 8,000 of the nation's 8,200 banks from oversight by the castrated-in-advance agency, leaving most consumers unprotected, he allowed the committee to pass the exemption by voice vote, meaning that congressmen could side with the banks without actually attaching their name to their "Aye."

To win the support of conservative Democrats, Frank also backed down on another issue that seemed like a slam-dunk: a requirement that all banks offer so-called "plain vanilla" products, such as no-frills mortgages, to give consumers an alternative to deceptive, "fully loaded" deals like adjustable-rate loans. Frank's last-minute reversal — made in consultation with Geithner — was such a transparent giveaway to the banks that even an economics writer for Reuters, hardly a far-left source, called it "the beginning of the end of meaningful regulatory reform."

But the real kicker came when Frank's committee took up what is known as "resolution authority" — government-speak for "Who the hell is in charge the next time somebody at AIG or Lehman Brothers decides to vaporize the economy?" What the committee initially introduced bore a striking resemblance to a proposal written by Geithner earlier in the summer. A masterpiece of legislative chicanery, the measure would have given the White House permanent and unlimited authority to execute future bailouts of megaconglomerates like Citigroup and Bear Stearns.

Democrats pushed the move as politically uncontroversial, claiming that the bill will force Wall Street to pay for any future bailouts and "doesn't use taxpayer money." In reality, that was complete bullshit. The way the bill was written, the FDIC would basically borrow money from the Treasury — i.e., from ordinary taxpayers — to bail out any of the nation's two dozen or so largest financial companies that the president deems in need of government assistance. After the bailout is executed, the president would then levy a tax on financial firms with assets of more than $10 billion to repay the Treasury within 60 months — unless, that is, the president decides he doesn't want to! "They can wait indefinitely to repay," says Rep. Brad Sherman of California, who dubbed the early version of the bill "TARP on steroids."

The new bailout authority also mandated that future bailouts would not include an exchange of equity "in any form" — meaning that taxpayers would get nothing in return for underwriting Wall Street's mistakes. Even more outrageous, it specifically prohibited Congress from rejecting tax giveaways to Wall Street, as it did last year, by removing all congressional oversight of future bailouts. In fact, the resolution authority proposed by Frank was such a slurpingly obvious blow job of Wall Street that it provoked a revolt among his own committee members, with junior Democrats waging a spirited fight that restored congressional oversight to future bailouts, requires equity for taxpayer money and caps assistance to troubled firms at $150 billion. Another amendment to force companies with more than $50 billion in assets to pay into a rainy-day fund for bailouts passed by a resounding vote of 52 to 17 — with the "Nays" all coming from Frank and other senior Democrats loyal to the administration.

Even as amended, however, resolution authority still has the potential to be truly revolutionary legislation. The Senate version still grants the president unlimited power over equity-free bailouts, and the amended House bill still institutionalizes a system of taxpayer support for the 20 to 25 biggest banks in the country. It would essentially grant economic immortality to those top few megafirms, who will continually gobble up greater and greater slices of market share as money becomes cheaper and cheaper for them to borrow (after all, who wouldn't lend to a company permanently backstopped by the federal government?). It would also formalize the government's role in the global economy and turn the presidential-appointment process into an important part of every big firm's business strategy. "If this passes, the very first thing these companies are going to do in the future is ask themselves, 'How do we make sure that one of our executives becomes assistant Treasury secretary?'" says Sherman.

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On the Senate side, finance reform has yet to make it through the markup process, but there's every reason to believe that its final bill will be as watered down as the House version by the time it comes to a vote. The original measure, drafted by chairman Christopher Dodd of the Senate Banking Committee, is surprisingly tough on Wall Street — a fact that almost everyone in town chalks up to Dodd's desperation to shake the bad publicity he incurred by accepting a sweetheart mortgage from the notorious lender Countrywide. "He's got to do the shake-his-fist-at-Wall Street thing because of his, you know, problems," says a Democratic Senate aide. "So that's why the bill is starting out kind of tough."

The aide pauses. "The question is, though, what will it end up looking like?"

He's right — that is the question. Because the way it works is that all of these great-sounding reforms get whittled down bit by bit as they move through the committee markup process, until finally there's nothing left but the exceptions. In one example, a measure that would have forced financial companies to be more accountable to shareholders by holding elections for their entire boards every year has already been watered down to preserve the current system of staggered votes. In other cases, this being the Senate, loopholes were inserted before the debate even began: The Dodd bill included the exemption for foreign-currency swaps — a gift to Wall Street that only appeared in the Frank bill during the course of hearings — from the very outset.

The White House's refusal to push for real reform stands in stark contrast to what it should be doing. It was left to Rep. Paul Kanjorski in the House and Bernie Sanders in the Senate to propose bills to break up the so-called "too big to fail" banks. Both measures would give Congress the power to dismantle those pseudomonopolies controlling almost the entire derivatives market (Goldman, Citi, Chase, Morgan Stanley and Bank of America control 95 percent of the $290 trillion over-the-counter market) and the consumer-lending market (Citi, Chase, Bank of America and Wells Fargo issue one of every two mortgages, and two of every three credit cards). On November 18th, in a move that demonstrates just how nervous Democrats are getting about the growing outrage over taxpayer giveaways, Barney Frank's committee actually passed Kanjorski's measure. "It's a beginning," Kanjorski says hopefully. "We're on our way." But even if the Senate follows suit, big banks could well survive — depending on whom the president appoints to sit on the new regulatory board mandated by the measure. An oversight body filled with executives of the type Obama has favored to date from Citi and Goldman Sachs hardly seems like a strong bet to start taking an ax to concentrated wealth. And given the new bailout provisions that provide these megafirms a market advantage over smaller banks (those Paul Volcker calls "too small to save"), the failure to break them up qualifies as a major policy decision with potentially disastrous consequences.

"They should be doing what Teddy Roosevelt did," says Sanders. "They should be busting the trusts."

That probably won't happen anytime soon. But at a minimum, Obama should start on the road back to sanity by making a long-overdue move: firing Geithner. Not only are the mop-headed weenie of a Treasury secretary's fingerprints on virtually all the gross giveaways in the new reform legislation, he's a living symbol of the Rubinite gangrene crawling up the leg of this administration. Putting Geithner against the wall and replacing him with an actual human being not recently employed by a Wall Street megabank would do a lot to prove that Obama was listening this past Election Day. And while there are some who think Geithner is about to go — "he almost has to," says one Democratic strategist — at the moment, the president is still letting Wall Street do his talking.

Morning, the National Mall, November 5th. A year to the day after Obama named Michael Froman to his transition team, his political "opposition" has descended upon the city. Republican teabaggers from all 50 states have showed up, a vast horde of frowning, pissed-off middle-aged white people with their idiot placards in hand, ready to do cultural battle. They are here to protest Obama's "socialist" health care bill — you know, the one that even a bloodsucking capitalist interest group like Big Pharma spent $150 million to get passed.

These teabaggers don't know that, however. All they know is that a big government program might end up using tax dollars to pay the medical bills of rapidly breeding Dominican immigrants. So they hate it. They're also in a groove, knowing that at the polls a few days earlier, people like themselves had a big hand in ousting several Obama-allied Democrats, including a governor of New Jersey who just happened to be the former CEO of Goldman Sachs. A sign held up by New Jersey protesters bears the warning, "If You Vote For Obamacare, We Will Corzine You."

I approach a woman named Pat Defillipis from Toms River, New Jersey, and ask her why she's here. "To protest health care," she answers. "And then amnesty. You know, immigration amnesty."

I ask her if she's aware that there's a big hearing going on in the House today, where Barney Frank's committee is marking up a bill to reform the financial regulatory system. She recognizes Frank's name, wincing, but the rest of my question leaves her staring at me like I'm an alien.

"Do you care at all about economic regulation?" I ask. "There was sort of a big economic collapse last year. Do you have any ideas about how that whole deal should be fixed?"

"We got to slow down on spending," she says. "We can't afford it."

"But what do we do about the rules governing Wall Street . . ."

She walks away. She doesn't give a fuck. People like Pat aren't aware of it, but they're the best friends Obama has. They hate him, sure, but they don't hate him for any reasons that make sense. When it comes down to it, most of them hate the president for all the usual reasons they hate "liberals" — because he uses big words, doesn't believe in hell and doesn't flip out at the sight of gay people holding hands. Additionally, of course, he's black, and wasn't born in America, and is married to a woman who secretly hates our country.

These are the kinds of voters whom Obama's gang of Wall Street advisers is counting on: idiots. People whose votes depend not on whether the party in power delivers them jobs or protects them from economic villains, but on what cultural markers the candidate flashes on TV. Finance reform has become to Obama what Iraq War coffins were to Bush: something to be tucked safely out of sight.

Around the same time that finance reform was being watered down in Congress at the behest of his Treasury secretary, Obama was making a pit stop to raise money from Wall Street. On October 20th, the president went to the Mandarin Oriental Hotel in New York and addressed some 200 financiers and business moguls, each of whom paid the maximum allowable contribution of $30,400 to the Democratic Party. But an organizer of the event, Daniel Fass, announced in advance that support for the president might be lighter than expected — bailed-out firms like JP Morgan Chase and Goldman Sachs were expected to contribute a meager $91,000 to the event — because bankers were tired of being lectured about their misdeeds.

"The investment community feels very put-upon," Fass explained. "They feel there is no reason why they shouldn't earn $1 million to $200 million a year, and they don't want to be held responsible for the global financial meltdown."

Which makes sense. Shit, who could blame the investment community for the meltdown? What kind of assholes are we to put any of this on them?

This is the kind of person who is working for the Obama administration, which makes it unsurprising that we're getting no real reform of the finance industry. There's no other way to say it: Barack Obama, a once-in-a-generation political talent whose graceful conquest of America's racial dragons en route to the White House inspired the entire world, has for some reason allowed his presidency to be hijacked by sniveling, low-rent shitheads. Instead of reining in Wall Street, Obama has allowed himself to be seduced by it, leaving even his erstwhile campaign adviser, ex-Fed chief Paul Volcker, concerned about a "moral hazard" creeping over his administration.

"The obvious danger is that with the passage of time, risk-taking will be encouraged and efforts at prudential restraint will be resisted," Volcker told Congress in September, expressing concerns about all the regulatory loopholes in Frank's bill. "Ultimately, the possibility of further crises — even greater crises — will increase."

What's most troubling is that we don't know if Obama has changed, or if the influence of Wall Street is simply a fundamental and ineradicable element of our electoral system. What we do know is that Barack Obama pulled a bait-and-switch on us. If it were any other politician, we wouldn't be surprised. Maybe it's our fault, for thinking he was different.
Posted By: Irwin Schwab Re: Obama's Big Sellout - 2009-12-13 1:36 AM
Readers Digest version:

Obama lied, and liberals cried.
Posted By: rex Re: Obama's Big Sellout - 2009-12-13 2:11 AM
If rolling stone turned against them then 2010 will be the year of the obama backlash.
Posted By: Irwin Schwab Re: Obama's Big Sellout - 2009-12-28 5:29 PM
http://yidwithlid.blogspot.com/2009/12/obamas-big-earmark-lie.html

 Quote:
During the presidential campaign, earmark reform was a major theme for John McCain, who would point out the earmark's requested by other candidates. During the first presidential debate on Sept. 26, 2008, Barack Obama made a brilliant political move when he co-opted John McCain's Earmark Issue. He said he stopped requesting earmarks as a senator and that he shared McCain's desire for earmark reform and the elimination of wasteful projects.

Obama replied, "John, nobody is denying that $18 billion is important. And, absolutely, we need earmark reform . And when I'm president, I will go line by line to make sure that we are not spending money unwisely."




But like most of the President's Promises this one comes with an expiration date, within his first few months a president, the President Obama signed a $780+ billion stimulus bill so loaded with earmarks and pork barrel spending that it was affectionately renamed porkulus. He quickly followed up by signing a $410 billion Omnibus bill for 2009 which had upwards of 9,000 earmarks included.



And that was just start. On both sides of the aisle members of Congress are complaining about the President ignoring his earmark pledge:

Sen. Russ Feingold (D-Wis.) said Obama made earmark reform "a very big part of [his] campaign" but still signed this month two massive spending measures that both included approximately $4 billion in earmarks.

Feingold, who broke with his party to oppose both the $447 billion 2010 omnibus spending bill and the $636 billion 2010 Pentagon spending bill, said the president could have used his veto pen to reject the measures and force lawmakers to cut earmark funding.


"We've got to have a fresh start next year, and I've signaled that if they want my vote, they've got to stop just signing onto huge numbers of earmarks," Feingold said.

....Obama also called for cutting earmarks down to their levels in 1994, when they took up less than $8 billion of the federal discretionary budget....


"It's important that we get this done to ensure that the budget process works better, that taxpayers are protected, and that we save billions of dollars that we so desperately need to right our economy and address our fiscal crisis," Obama said in announcing his earmark reform plans in March.

Just wait to see what happens to earmarks if Obamacare gets passed, that's a 2+ trillion dollar earmark opportunity.

So far, only his pledge to increase disclosure of earmarks has been fully honored by Congress.


Both senators and House members listed their earmark requests on their web sites this year. But even that decision was made without much of Obama's input. House Appropriations Committee Chairman David Obey (D-Wis.) and Senate Appropriations Committee Chairman Daniel Inouye (D-Hawaii) said in January they would require that earmark requests be posted online.


Even with the online postings, the requests aren't easily accessed or sorted, and the earmarks actually awarded are still tucked into the text of legislation that usually isn't released until hours before congressional markups on the bills. That makes it makes it difficult for the public to track earmarks and for lawmakers to hold hearings scrutinizing them, which Obama hoped would happen, said Steve Ellis, vice president of Taxpayers for Common Sense.


"It's almost impossible to have hearings on them because you don't see the bill until they're voting on it," Ellis said.

When he outlined his earmark reforms in March, Obama said, "Each earmark must be open to scrutiny at public hearings, where members will have to justify their expense to the taxpayer."


Obama's pledge to subject earmarks for private companies to the competitive bidding process has been adopted by the House but not the Senate. Congress also didn't comply with Obama's request for an "orderly" appropriations process, clearing the bulk of the appropriations measures in its final days before the Christmas break, long after the Oct. 1 start of fiscal 2010.


Lawmakers who see the earmark process as a waste of taxpayer dollars and the root of potential corruption said Obama and Congress have not instituted real reforms.

The Obamacare debate brought attention to a different kind of earmark, also known as bribery.

Sen. Jim DeMint (R-S.C.) said the White House and Democratic leaders use earmarks to "buy off" key votes to pass major legislation. DeMint and other earmark hawks have blasted deals by Senate leaders to give $300 million for disaster aid to Louisiana and $100 million in Medicaid funding to Nebraska in order to win the support of Sens. Mary Landrieu (D-La.) and Ben Nelson (D-Neb.) on the landmark healthcare reform bill. Though those may not fit Congress's technical definition of earmarks, critics said they accomplish the same sordid goal. "The overt vote-buying using earmarks is now out of control," DeMint said.

Inouye's spokesman, John Bray, noted that earmarks are now subject to "an unprecedented level of transparency." Since Democrats took control of Congress in 2007, earmark requests have been posted online and earmark awards have been listed in the text of [most] spending bills made available to the public at the same time the legislation is considered in public appropriation subcommittee hearings.

Not that they get stopped, its just now we know about things such as John Murtha's airport project that gets 3 flights per day, or the money going to Charlie Rangel' Center for Public Service, Or Harry Reid's Disney World to Las Vegas train, and Nancy Pelosi's money to protect the endangered salt marsh harvest mouse.
Posted By: the G-man Re: Obama's Big Sellout - 2009-12-31 12:30 AM
 Originally Posted By: rex
If rolling stone turned against them then 2010 will be the year of the obama backlash.


Worst case scenario: they'll be pissed at Obama until 2012 and then they'll start kissing his ass again rather than let some Republican get elected president.
Posted By: the G-man Re: Obama's Big Sellout - 2010-01-01 8:39 PM
 Originally Posted By: the G-man
 Originally Posted By: rex
If rolling stone turned against them then 2010 will be the year of the obama backlash.


Worst case scenario: they'll be pissed at Obama until 2012 and then they'll start kissing his ass again rather than let some Republican get elected president.



Case in point. For all the slight MSM bitchery about this Obama fuckup or that, they're still kissing his ass and waxing rhaspodic over him:
  • Diabetic or not, you might want to have a dose of insulin handy while watching this morning's video clip. The Early Show's review of the past year was one sicky-sweet adoration—in overtly religious terms—of Barack Obama.

    Harry Smith set the tone with his opening comments:
    "Politics, and patriotism and the presidency: it is the place where the secular and the religious merge. One of the sacraments of our national religion is the inauguration. So it was that as many as two million pilgrims made their way to Washington and the Mall to witness this most sacred event."

    Back to the studio for the personal testimonies of the emotional Early Show crew

    SMITH: As profound a moment as I have ever experienced [inaudible].

    RUSS MITCHELL: [Turning to Debbye Turner Bell] I hope you don't mind me saying this: you got emotional just watching this.

    DEBBYE TURNER BELL: Yeah, I was able to go as a citizen; I didn't have to work that day. Many of my family came to town. I'm getting emotional just thinking about it. I come from parents who in many cases had to go to segregated schools. My father integrated the university that I eventually attended. So, it's hard to separate the emotion.

    MITCHELL: And as I was [inaudible] I thought of the same thing: my parents, the things they went through, things my grandparents, and yet that day, then that day, and yet that today here was an African-American being sworn in as President of the United States.

    Even the pallid Dave Price got into the spirit, saying something that brought Lourdes to mind.

    DAVE PRICE: You were sitting in that crowd, and you looked around and you saw people who had made it in wheelchairs and walkers on this bitter cold day: the young, the old, every race and creed and sexual orientation there. And on that day, you felt this overwhelming sense of hope and promise, and I think it didn't matter what party you were a member of, it was the fact that this is a day when America came together --

    TURNER BELL: Yes, yes.

    PRICE: And celebrated something historic.

    SMITH: On the other hand, it didn't last long.

    TURNER BELL: The honeymoon was short.

    PRICE: Politics takes over.

    Damn those sacrilegious Republicans!

    But seriously, can anyone imagine that these people, who admit to finding it difficult to "separate the emotion" are capable of fair-'n-balanced coverage of this president?

    Note: as if that weren't enough, the next segment was devoted to the story of an adoring photographer who followed Obama throughout the campaign and has produced a photo book imaginatively entitled: "Yes, We Can".


Posted By: the G-man C-SPAN calls out Obama - 2010-01-05 8:42 PM


TV network uses Obama's own words against him, calling for Congress to open closed-door health care talks and televise them as the president pledged on campaign trail.

"C-SPAN is obviously a partisan right wing network, probably owned by Faux News."
--Sincerely,
Nambla Zick
Posted By: MisterJLA Re: C-SPAN calls out Obama - 2010-01-05 9:43 PM
Corporations and banks run this country. The Republican and Democratic parties are fictious.

When it comes to voting, or even staying active in politics, "the only winning move is not to play".

End of story.
Posted By: Irwin Schwab Re: C-SPAN calls out Obama - 2010-01-06 12:59 AM
was that a novella story?
Posted By: MisterJLA Re: C-SPAN calls out Obama - 2010-01-06 7:49 AM
3/4 of a story.
Posted By: the G-man Re: C-SPAN calls out Obama - 2010-01-06 5:10 PM
In the form of a graphic novel.
Posted By: wannabuyamonkey Re: C-SPAN calls out Obama - 2010-01-09 10:25 PM
What the hell's going on here?
Posted By: rex Re: C-SPAN calls out Obama - 2010-01-09 10:30 PM
whoa
Posted By: the G-man Re: C-SPAN calls out Obama - 2010-01-09 10:31 PM
Holy shit. WBAM lives!

Welcome back, big guy.
Posted By: Pariah Re: C-SPAN calls out Obama - 2010-01-09 10:31 PM
What the motherfuck!?
Posted By: wannabuyamonkey Re: C-SPAN calls out Obama - 2010-01-09 10:32 PM
Answer the damn question!
Posted By: Pariah Re: C-SPAN calls out Obama - 2010-01-09 10:34 PM
Go to hell!
Posted By: Pariah Re: C-SPAN calls out Obama - 2010-01-09 10:35 PM
I mean....You've been in a coma for quite some time.
Posted By: the G-man Re: C-SPAN calls out Obama - 2010-01-09 10:36 PM
Things are pretty much the same, actually. Except all the people who were posting "dissent is the highest form of patriotism" before you left are now screaming that we need to blindly obey the president.
Posted By: wannabuyamonkey Re: C-SPAN calls out Obama - 2010-01-09 10:37 PM
Good to see you. How have you all been for the past *murmur* years?
Posted By: Pariah Re: C-SPAN calls out Obama - 2010-01-09 10:41 PM
We've been making sure to keep up to date on Abe Vigoda's condition.
Posted By: iggy Re: C-SPAN calls out Obama - 2010-01-10 12:03 AM
 Originally Posted By: the G-man
Things are pretty much the same, actually. Except all the people who were posting "dissent is the highest form of patriotism" before you left are now screaming that we need to blindly obey the president.


Save Whomod who is now so afraid of "internet bullying" that he no longer posts here. Still, somewhere in the deepest locked depths of the internet, he is probably saying the same thing.
Posted By: the G-man Re: C-SPAN calls out Obama - 2010-01-16 7:25 AM
Watch Gibbs squirm and stutter as he tries to defend Captain Transparency and the C-SPAN pledge:

\:lol\:

Posted By: thedoctor Re: C-SPAN calls out Obama - 2010-01-16 10:11 AM
Gibbs's stammering reminded me of something.


Posted By: Irwin Schwab Re: C-SPAN calls out Obama - 2010-01-16 5:44 PM
 Originally Posted By: the G-man
Watch Gibbs squirm and stutter as he tries to defend Captain Transparency and the C-SPAN pledge:

\:lol\:



\:lol\:

these guys had all the political capital in the world a year ago and theyve pissed it all away!
Posted By: Irwin Schwab The Fall of Obama - 2010-01-16 6:06 PM
http://www.realclearpolitics.com/articles/2010/01/15/one_year_out_the_fall_99907.html

 Quote:
WASHINGTON -- What went wrong? A year ago, he was king of the world. Now President Obama's approval rating, according to CBS, has dropped to 46 percent -- and his disapproval rating is the highest ever recorded by Gallup at the beginning of an (elected) president's second year.

A year ago, he was leader of a liberal ascendancy that would last 40 years (James Carville). A year ago, conservatism was dead (Sam Tanenhaus). Now the race to fill Ted Kennedy's Senate seat in bluest of blue Massachusetts is surprisingly close, with a virtually unknown state senator bursting on the scene by turning the election into a mini-referendum on Obama and his agenda, most particularly health care reform.
A year ago, Obama was the most charismatic politician on earth. Today the thrill is gone, the doubts growing -- even among erstwhile believers.

Liberals try to attribute Obama's political decline to matters of style. He's too cool, detached, uninvolved. He's not tough, angry or aggressive enough with opponents. He's contracted out too much of his agenda to Congress.

These stylistic and tactical complaints may be true, but they miss the major point: The reason for today's vast discontent, presaged by spontaneous national Tea Party opposition, is not that Obama is too cool or compliant but that he's too left.

It's not about style; it's about substance. About which Obama has been admirably candid. This out-of-nowhere, least-known of presidents dropped the veil most dramatically in the single most important political event of 2009, his Feb. 24 first address to Congress. With remarkable political honesty and courage, Obama unveiled the most radical (in American terms) ideological agenda since the New Deal: the fundamental restructuring of three pillars of American society -- health care, education and energy.

Then began the descent -- when, more amazingly still, Obama devoted himself to turning these statist visions into legislative reality. First energy, with cap-and-trade, an unprecedented federal intrusion into American industry and commerce. It got through the House, with its Democratic majority and Supreme Soviet-style rules. But it will never get out of the Senate.

Then, the keystone: a health care revolution in which the federal government will regulate in crushing detail one-sixth of the U.S. economy. By essentially abolishing medical underwriting (actuarially based risk assessment) and replacing it with government fiat, Obamacare turns the health insurance companies into utilities, their every significant move dictated by government regulators. The public option was a sideshow. As many on the right have long been arguing, and as the more astute on the left (such as The New Yorker's James Surowiecki) understand, Obamacare is government health care by proxy, single-payer through a facade of nominally "private" insurers.

At first, health care reform was sustained politically by Obama's own popularity. But then gravity took hold, and Obamacare's profound unpopularity dragged him down with it. After 29 speeches and a fortune in squandered political capital, it still will not sell.

The health care drive is the most important reason Obama has sunk to 46 percent. But this reflects something larger. In the end, what matters is not the persona but the agenda. In a country where politics is fought between the 40-yard lines, Obama has insisted on pushing hard for the 30. And the American people -- disorganized and unled but nonetheless agitated and mobilized -- have put up a stout defense somewhere just left of midfield.

Ideas matter. Legislative proposals matter. Slick campaigns and dazzling speeches can work for a while, but the magic always wears off.

It's inherently risky for any charismatic politician to legislate. To act is to choose and to choose is to disappoint the expectations of many who had poured their hopes into the empty vessel -- of which candidate Obama was the greatest representative in recent American political history.

Obama did not just act, however. He acted ideologically. To his credit, Obama didn't just come to Washington to be someone. Like Reagan, he came to Washington to do something -- to introduce a powerful social democratic stream into America's deeply and historically individualist polity.

Perhaps Obama thought he'd been sent to the White House to do just that. If so, he vastly over-read his mandate. His own electoral success -- twinned with handy victories and large majorities in both houses of Congress -- was a referendum on his predecessor's governance and the post-Lehman financial collapse. It was not an endorsement of European-style social democracy.

Hence the resistance. Hence the fall. The system may not always work, but it does take its revenge.
Posted By: Pariah Re: The Fall of Obama - 2010-01-16 11:14 PM
 Quote:
To his credit, Obama didn't just come to Washington to be someone.


Bullshit. He came to Washington because he wanted to be glorified as the next FDR.
Posted By: Irwin Schwab Re: The Fall of Obama - 2010-01-17 6:22 PM
i think your wrong. all his anti-American policies lead me to believe he thinks he is setting himself up to be an international statesman. the US aristocrats are in love with the way the European union is taking rights from the individuals and giving them to the elites. i think he wants to wreck our economy so we are forced into a similar situation.
Posted By: Irwin Schwab Revolving door spins at Obama's IRS - 2010-01-18 5:20 AM
http://www.washingtonexaminer.com/opinio...3-81549747.html

 Quote:
Mark Ernst, in December 2007, was chief executive officer of H&R Block, the nation's largest tax-preparation company. Thirteen months later, once President Obama took office, Ernst was named a deputy commissioner at the Internal Revenue Service, where he would spend his first year drafting new regulations for tax preparers -- regulations that H&R Block welcomes and market analysts say will benefit the company.

With Ernst in mind, recall Barack Obama's campaign pledge: "No political appointees in an Obama administration will be permitted to work on regulations or contracts directly and substantially related to their prior employer for two years."

This campaign pledge manifested itself in an executive order requiring "every appointee in every executive agency" to pledge, "I will not for a period of 2 years from the date of my appointment participate in any particular matter involving specific parties that is directly and substantially related to my former employer or former clients, including regulations and contracts."

Ernst obviously didn't follow these rules, but the IRS tells me that Ernst is not covered by these rules. "Mark Ernst is a civil servant at the IRS; he is not a political appointee," according to an e-mail IRS statement by an agency spokesman.

The statement continues: "The Presidential Executive order on Ethics Commitments by Executive Branch Personnel only applies to political appointees. ... [T]he extended two year Revolving Door Ban in the order does not apply [to Ernst]."

By the common understanding of the words, it's hard to swallow that Ernst is a "career" government employee, or a "civil servant" as opposed to an appointee or a political hire. First of all, he is clearly political: He contributed $9,900 to federal candidates in the last election -- with 90 percent going to Democrats, including the maximum contribution to Hillary Clinton.

Also, he is a retired CEO. He is not making a career as an IRS bureaucrat. And unlike most civil servants, Ernst came in with the new president, being named deputy commissioner in the first days of the Obama administration.

But for nearly every executive branch position, it's up to the administration whom to dub an "appointee" and who is a "civil servant." Had Obama hired Ernst as an "appointee" as opposed to a "civil servant," Ernst clearly would have violated Obama's rule prohibiting appointees from writing up regulations affecting recent employees.

Ernst was driven from H&R Block at the end of 2007 after a shareholder revolt spurred by the company's losses in the subprime mortgage industry.

In late January, less than 13 months after his last day at H&R Block, Ernst joined the IRS as deputy commissioner for operations. In that role, according to an IRS spokesman, Ernst acted as a "co-leader" in the process of drafting new regulations for paid tax preparers -- the industry led by H&R Block.

Investment bank UBS issued an analysis concluding: "The new regulations should help Block" by crowding out smaller competitors and granting the company a government stamp of approval.

To recap: A recent H&R Block CEO wrote regulations that help H&R Block, and this doesn't clash with the White House's "unprecedented" ethics rules.

These facts don't prove that Ernst was helping his former employer -- he may not even be in the good graces of H&R Block any more. The facts also don't prove that the regulation is bad.

The story of Ernst, however, does bring to light the worthlessness of Obama's ethics rules. There are other examples, too: Raytheon lobbyist William Lynn received a waiver to become deputy defense secretary. Mark Patterson, a Goldman Sachs lobbyist until April 2008, is the chief of staff at the Treasury Department, and hasn't even been given a waiver from the rules.

There's good reason to hire aides, like Lynn, Patterson, and Ernst, with experience in the industry they'll be regulating or dealing with. But it was Obama who decided to trumpet his restrictions on people entering the administration from the private sector. Now we can see that the ethics rules, like much of Obama's good-government talk, is more style than substance.


Posted By: Irwin Schwab The Once-Appealing Barack Obama - 2010-01-19 3:40 PM
http://www.commentarymagazine.com/blogs/index.php/wehner/218526

 Quote:
Wednesday marks the one-year anniversary of Barack Obama’s inauguration. It has been, by almost any measure, a difficult and disappointing year for him and his party.

Mr. Obama now has the highest disapproval rating in Gallup’s history for a president entering his second year in office. According to a new Washington Post–ABC News poll, among independents, only 49 percent approve — the lowest of any of his recent predecessors at this point in their presidencies. (Obama has lost a stunning 18 points among independents in just a year’s time.) In November, Democrats suffered crushing defeats in the New Jersey and Virginia gubernatorial campaigns — and if Republican Scott Brown prevails in his race against Martha Coakley in tomorrow’s Senate election in Massachusetts, it will rank among the most important non-presidential elections in our lifetime.

It has been a staggering collapse by a president who entered office with enormous support and an unprecedented amount of goodwill.

The reasons for this slide include unemployment rates that are much higher than the Obama administration predicted, job growth that never materialized despite the president’s promises, a record-setting spending binge, a massive and hugely unpopular health-care proposal, and an agenda that is far too liberal for most Americans.

But there is another, and I think quite important, explanation that was reinforced to me while reading John Heilemann and Mark Halperin’s book, Game Change, which is a fascinating (and very well-written) account of the 2008 presidential campaign.

One is reminded once again of how the core of Obama’s popularity was an appeal not to policy or to a governing agenda; instead it was an appeal to thematics and narrative. “Obama cast himself as a figure uncorrupted and unco-opted by evil Washington,” the authors write. He was the candidate who “promised to be a unifier and not a polarizer; someone nondogmatic and uncontaminated by the special-interest cesspool that Washington had become.” Obama’s appeal was romantic and aesthetic, built on the rhetoric of hope and change, on his “freshness and sense of promise.” A cult of personality built up around Obama — not because of what he had achieved but because of what he seemed to embody. (”Maybe one day he’ll do something to merit all this attention,” Michelle Obama dryly told a reporter.)

“We have something very special here,” Obama’s top political aide Axelrod is quoted as saying. “I feel like I’ve been handed a porcelain baby.” Axelrod tells Obama — dubbed by his aides as the “Black Jesus” — that voters were looking for “a president who can bring the country together, who can reach beyond partisanship, and who’ll be tough on special interests.”

That was what we were promised. What we got instead is a president who increased the divisions in our nation, the most partisan and polarizing figure in the history of polling, one who is dogmatic and has been as generous to special interests as any we have seen. The efforts to buy votes in pursuit of the Obama agenda has added sewage to the cesspool.

This would hurt any president under any circumstances; for Barack Obama, whose allure was based almost entirely on his ability to convince the public that he embodied a “new politics,” it has been doubly damaging. It was Hillary Clinton of all people who understood Obama best when she said during the campaign, “We have to make people understand that he’s not real.”

Not real indeed. Obama’s stirring call for Americans to reject the “politics of cynicism” was itself deeply cynical. Perhaps none of this should come as a surprise. After all, Heilemann and Halperin write, Axelrod was “a master of the dark arts of negative campaigning.” The first major profile of him, more than 20 years ago, was titled, “Hatchet Man: The Rise of David Axelrod.”

Obama and Axelrod might have been able to get away with this if Obama’s presidency had been viewed as successful and skilled. But it’s not. And when combined with the growing realization that Obama is not up to the task of governing, that he is pursuing policies that exacerbate our problems and takes us down a wrong and even perilous path, it is poison. The toxicity is such that what was once unthinkable now seems more likely than not: Democrats losing the Senate seat held by Ted Kennedy for almost half a century. And even if they don’t, 2010 is shaping up to be a perfectly awful year for Democrats. It’s a safe bet that in response they and their allies will lash out in rage, angry at the perceived injustice of it all, furious at the fate that has befallen them. They will blame Obama’s predecessor, Republicans in Congress, the conservative movement, angry white males, Fox News, Sarah Palin’s tweets, and the wrong alignment of the stars. It won’t work.

Having created a myth, they must now live with its unmasking.
Posted By: Irwin Schwab Re: The Once-Appealing Barack Obama - 2010-01-19 3:44 PM
 Quote:
Mr. Obama now has the highest disapproval rating in Gallup’s history for a president entering his second year in office. According to a new Washington Post–ABC News poll, among independents, only 49 percent approve — the lowest of any of his recent predecessors at this point in their presidencies. (Obama has lost a stunning 18 points among independents in just a year’s time.)


this really stuck out to me watching the mainstream coverage of the Mass senate race yesterday. they all keep saying while Obama's policies arent popular he remains very popular. this goes against common sense and any polling data. theyll even show polls where he is unpopular and then blame it on his policies. its as if his idiotic policies came from thin air in the press' eyes and not him.
Posted By: PJP Re: The Once-Appealing Barack Obama - 2010-01-20 6:32 AM
The Republic Lives!
Hallelujah.


Another of Obama's broken promises:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eQsIBtwUh6Q

Hopefully Sen. Brown's election last night --in the one of the previously most pro-Obama states-- sends a strong message that will stop the ramming through of cap-and-trade, of a second stimulus porkfest, of amnesty for illegals, and other Obama plans that polls indicate an overwhelming percentage of Americans oppose.

Although one commentator last night described Reid and Pelosi as having a Thelma and Louise mentality, pushing healthcare through anyway even without a 60-vote majority, essentially driving Obamacare suicidally over a cliff in one final blaze of glory, guns blazing.
But that would just increase the trouncing Democrats will get in the November mid-term elections.
If not have taxpayers storm their castle with torches and pitchforks.
Posted By: Irwin Schwab Jack Cafferty On Obama: ‘He Lied!’ - 2010-01-22 10:04 PM
Posted By: the G-man Re: Obama declares spending freeze idiotic - 2010-01-27 4:59 PM
At this rate, all U.S. currency will have "e pluribus unum" replaced by "a republican did it first" as the national motto.
Posted By: Wonder Boy Re: Obama declares spending freeze idiotic - 2010-01-27 6:05 PM
http://www.slick.com/barack_obama_john_mccain.asp





These could have been better, but make the point regardless.
Rachael Mancow was furious at the One last night she said why did everyone vote for him just for him to turnaround and institute the guy who losts economic campaign promises!

\:lol\:
Posted By: the G-man Obama versus Obama - 2010-01-27 7:35 PM
Obama versus Obama: With every new position Obama takes,
he opposes a position taken by... Obama.
Posted By: Wonder Boy Re: Obama versus Obama - 2010-01-27 7:43 PM
"I was for it before I was against it"
--John Kerry
http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2010/01/30/cancels-bid-contract-afghan-work-democractic-donor/

 Quote:
The U.S. canceled a $25 million federal contract for working in Afghanistan to a company owned by a Democratic campaign contributor that was awarded without entertaining competitive bids.

The U.S. has canceled a $25 million federal contract for work in Afghanistan awarded to a company owned by a Democratic campaign contributor without entertaining competitive bids.

The cancellation comes after Fox News first reported on the details of the contract last week, prompting lawmakers to make inquiries into the deal. State Department Spokesman P.J. Crowley told Fox News that USAID terminated the award and is now working on an appropriate resolution.

The contract had been awarded on Jan. 4 to Checchi & Company Consulting, a Washington-based firm owned by economist and Democratic donor Vincent V. Checchi that was hired to provide "rule of law stabilization services" in war-torn Afghanistan.

A synopsis of the contract published on the USAID Web site said Checchi & Company would "train the next generation of legal professionals" throughout the Afghan provinces and thereby "develop the capacity of Afghanistan's justice system to be accessible, reliable, and fair."

The legality of the arrangement as a "sole source," or no-bid, contract was made possible by virtue of a waiver signed by the USAID administrator.

When Checchi was contacted by Fox News for its earlier report, he confirmed that his company had indeed received the nearly $25 million contract but declined to say why it had been awarded on a no-bid basis, referring a reporter to USAID.

Asked if he or his firm had been aware that the contract was awarded without competitive bids, Checchi replied: "After it was awarded to us, sure. Before, we had no idea."

Joseph A. Fredericks, director of public information at USAID, told Fox News the Checchi deal was actually a renewal of an existing contract, awarded in 2004 by the Bush administration after a competitive bid process.

Rep. Darrell Issa, R-Calif., the ranking Republican on the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee, told Fox News the no-bid contract in this case "disturbed" him.

Issa had written to USAID Administrator Rajiv Shah requesting that the agency "produce all documents related to the Checchi contract" on or before Feb. 5. Citing the waiver that enabled USAID to award the contract on a no-bid basis, Issa noted that the exemption was intended to speed up the provision of services in a crisis environment.

Sen. Claire McCaskill, D-Mo., who chairs the Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee's Subcommittee on Contracting Oversight, told Fox News she, too, was seeking answers about the Checchi contract.

As a candidate for president in 2008, Obama, then a senator, frequently derided the Bush administration for the awarding of federal contracts without competitive bidding.

Less than two months after he was sworn into office, President Obama signed a memorandum that he claimed would "dramatically reform the way we do business on contracts across the entire government."

Federal campaign records show Checchi has been a frequent contributor to liberal and Democratic causes and candidates in recent years, including to Obama's presidential campaign. The records show Checchi has given at least $4,400 to Obama dating back to March 2007, close to the maximum amount allowed.
http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2010/01/...mpaign-pledges/

 Quote:
he recent awarding of a lucrative federal contract to a company owned by a financial contributor to the Obama presidential campaign -- without competitive bidding -- "violated" President Obama's many campaign pledges to crack down on the practice, a top State Department official told Fox News.

Assistant Secretary of State P.J. Crowley, familiar to many Americans from his erudite delivery of the State Department's daily press briefings, made the admission in a telephone interview Saturday night.

Reminded of Obama's many pledges during the 2008 campaign to crack down on the use of no-bid contracts, and of the memorandum the president signed last March instructing the Office of Management and Budget to curb the practice, Crowley said: "You make a valid point. If you want to say this violates the basis on which this administration came into office and campaigned, fair enough."
Posted By: the G-man Re: Obama versus Obama - 2010-02-02 9:09 AM
Obama: 'I Don't Think I Said That.' In Exactly Those Words. In That Particular Speech.
  • When Rep. Tom Price (R-Ga.) complained that "you have repeatedly said, most recently at the State of the Union, that Republicans have offered no ideas and no solutions," Obama replied:

    I don't think I said that. What I said was within the context of health care—I remember that speech pretty well. It was only two days ago.

    I said I'd welcome ideas that you might provide. I didn't say that you haven't provided ideas. I said I'd welcome those ideas that you'll provide.


    Saying that you're waiting to hear ideas strongly implies that you haven't heard them yet, doesn't it? But never mind that. The president and his underlings have directly stated what he only implied in the State of the Union address. Most conspicuously, there was the September 2009 speech to which Peter referred last week:

    I've got a question for all those folks [opponents of his plan]: What are you going to do? What's your answer? What's your solution? And you know what? They don't have one. Their answer is to do nothing. Their answer is to do nothing.

    PolitiFact.com found three other examples:

    • A White House blog post attacking the Republican health care plan said it offered "no ideas." (The posting appears to have a typo. It reads: "The Republican bill offers new no ideas.")

    • White House chief of staff Rahm Emanuel on April 19, 2009, described the Republicans as "the party of never...the party of no new ideas." (He was referring not just to health care, but also to fiscal discipline.)

    • At a White House briefing April 28, 2009, press secretary Robert Gibbs made a similar comment: "I think you heard me and others say that you can't just be the party of no or the party of no new ideas."
Posted By: Irwin Schwab Re: Obama breaks ANOTHER Promise - 2010-02-13 4:07 PM
Google 2 seconds ago Reading a post
Forum: Politics and Current Events
Thread: Obama's Broken Promises
Posted By: the G-man Re: Obama's Broken Promises - 2010-02-15 4:20 PM
Assessing Obama’s Promises: Barack Obama will have to delay many of the promises he made on the campaign trail in order to focus on the economy.
Posted By: the G-man Re: Obama's Broken Promises - 2010-02-22 5:58 PM
Obama tops Bush at ducking reporters: President Obama, who pledged to establish the most open and transparent administration in history, on Monday surpasses his predecessor's record for avoiding a full-fledged question-and-answer session with White House reporters in a formal press conference.
Posted By: the G-man Re: Obama's Broken Promises - 2010-03-31 9:29 PM
Obama's Health Care Bill Is Not What He Promised

Obama Breaks His Word, Pursues Offshore Drilling in Alaska
Posted By: Glacier16 Re: Obama's Broken Promises - 2010-03-31 11:20 PM
Drill baby drill!

\:lol\:
Posted By: rex Re: Obama's Broken Promises - 2010-04-01 12:03 AM
Has obama passed anything that he hasn't apologized for the next week?
Posted By: the G-man Re: Obama's Broken Promises - 2010-04-01 1:47 AM
Socialized medicine, unfortunately.
Posted By: rex Re: Obama's Broken Promises - 2010-04-01 1:50 AM
Earlier today he said it wasn't the perfect bill but it will eventually lead to something better. That's an apology.
Posted By: the G-man Re: Obama's Broken Promises - 2010-04-01 2:15 AM
Damn. And I think we all know that "something better" means "further ruination of America"
Posted By: Son of Mxy Re: Obama's Broken Promises - 2010-04-01 5:03 AM
something better...FOR THE TERRORISTS.
KBR to Get No-Bid Army Work

 Quote:
KBR Inc. was selected for a no-bid contract worth as much as $568 million through 2011 for military support services in Iraq, the Army said.

The Army announced its decision yesterday only hours after the Justice Department said it will pursue a lawsuit accusing the Houston-based company of taking kickbacks from two subcontractors on Iraq-related work. The Army also awarded the work to KBR over objections from members of Congress, who have pushed the Pentagon to seek bids for further logistics contracts.
Posted By: the G-man Re: Obama's Broken Promises - 2010-06-06 4:00 AM
Obama Breaks Whale Promise: Environmentalists are accusing Obama of breaking campaign pledge to end the slaughter of whales
Posted By: Arthur Digby Sellers Re: Obama's Broken Promises - 2010-06-06 5:52 PM
Oprah is safe!
Posted By: the G-man 'Hope' artist down on Obama - 2010-06-08 3:34 PM
'Hope' artist Shepard Fairey down on Obama
  • Shepard Fairey was credited with helping President Obama win the election with his iconic "Hope" poster, which showed the Democrat look ing heroically into the distance. But Fairey -- now being sued by the AP for appropriating the agency's photograph for his poster -- isn't so keen on Obama anymore. Fairey, who recently opened a show at the Deitch Projects gallery, told Angeleno magazine, "Some of the works are about gridlock in Washington. Washington is too intertwined with corporate America . . . I had a lot of hope for Obama, but it's not panning out. He's not pushing hard enough."
Posted By: Arthur Digby Sellers Re: 'Hope' artist down on Obama - 2010-06-09 4:52 AM
I am really surprised this hope strategy didn't fix the economy.
Posted By: the G-man Re: 'Hope' artist down on Obama - 2010-06-09 4:54 AM
Didn't you read MEM's post? An economic policy succeeds when unemployment goes UP.
Posted By: the G-man Re: Obama lied again - 2010-06-18 12:05 AM
 Originally Posted By: Irwin Schwab
Obama insisted this weekend on national television that requiring people to carry health insurance — and fining them if they don't — isn't the same thing as a tax increase. But the language of Democratic bills to revamp the nation's health care system doesn't quibble. Both the House bill and the Senate Finance Committee proposal clearly state that the fines would be a tax.


Obama Admin. Argues in Court That Individual Mandate Is a Tax:
  • In order to protect the new national health care law from legal challenges, the Obama administration has been forced to argue that the individual mandate represents a tax -- even though Obama himself argued the exact opposite while campaigning to pass the legislation.

    Late last night, the Obama Department of Justice filed a motion to dismiss the Florida-based lawsuit against the health care law, arguing that the court lacks jurisdiction and that the State of Florida and fellow plaintiffs haven't presented a claim for which the court can grant relief. To bolster its case, the DOJ cited the Anti-Injunction Act, which restricts courts from interfering with the government's ability to collect taxes.

    The Act, according to a DOJ memo supporting the motion to dismiss, says that "no suit for the purpose of restraining the assessment or collection of any tax shall be maintained in any court by any person, whether or not such person is the person against whom such tax was assessed." The memo goes on to say that it makes no difference whether the disputed payment it is called a "tax" or "penalty," because either way, it's "assessed and collected in the same manner" by the Internal Revenue Service.

    But this is a characterization that Democrats, and specifically Obama, angrily denounced during the health care debate. Most prominently, in an interview with ABC's George Stephanopoulos, Obama argued that the mandate was "absolutely not a tax increase," and he dug into his view even after being confronted with a dictionary definition
Posted By: Arthur Digby Sellers Re: Obama's Broken Promises - 2010-06-19 4:32 AM
Pres. Obama Breaks His Word to Gov. Brewer

 Quote:
Here is video of Arizona Gov. Jan Brewer on with Greta Van Susteren last night, where she said she is disappointed that President Obama has not kep his word to her about making it clear their position on the Arizona anti-Illegal Immigration Law. Instead, Brewer heard yesterday that the Obama Justice Department is going to challenge the Arizona Law in the courts through an interview given by Secretary of State Hillary Clinton.

Brewer also said she is “disappointed” that President Obama did not keep his word in promising to send officials to Arizona within two weeks to let her know how many troops will be sent to help secure the U.S. Border with Mexico. Obama had made that promise when he met with Brewer at the White House two weeks ago.

Brewer said “we will meet them in court, and we will win.”

Posted By: Arthur Digby Sellers Re: Obama's Broken Promises - 2010-06-21 4:32 AM
http://www.thedailyshow.com/watch/tue-june-15-2010/respect-my-authoritah
Posted By: Arthur Digby Sellers Re: Obama's Broken Promises - 2010-06-23 4:26 AM
Barack Obama Offers Cut-'n-Paste Rhetoric For The Base

 Quote:
After a while, all presidents get boring. It's the nature of the job. You go out there once, twice or three times a day to deliver a message that rarely changes, in a language that is so massaged by focus groups and polling that it inspires about as much as an algebraic equation. There are good reasons for this. Repetition works in politics. Most people aren't paying attention anyway. One step off message can ruin weeks of consistency.

But what happens when the boring president is still trying to be inspiring? I ask because today Organizing for America released "An Update for the President On The BP Oil Spill," a YouTube message from the president to the activists that Democrats hope will defy expectations this fall, turn out in big numbers, and help Obama keep his allies in the House and Senate leaderships. This is a message to the political troops, a rallying cry, an appeal, and it is about as exciting as mud-caked sandpaper. All the Obama typical cliches are here: "make no mistake," "we will do whatever is necessary," "seize this moment," "I'm asking you to stand with me today," "together we can make it happen," "rebuild our economy on a new foundation," and he does the pointing with his thumb thing. Pretty much everything he says here he has said somewhere else, and with more feeling.


As presidential rhetoric, this is perfectly passable stuff. Presidents are boring. People get that. But as political organizing rhetoric, this stuff seems deadly to me. What exactly should the Obama activists be excited about? What does it mean, exactly, to "rebuild our economy on a new foundation"? Does that mean Obama is pushing for a tax on carbon? For a strong cap and trade system? (Not clear, doubtful.) What special interests does he want to take on? None of this is clear. Instead of specifics, Obama provides platitudes. Again, that is standard stuff for a president. But thin gruel for an activist base--both because the rhetoric is dry and the details mostly lacking.

Back during the 2008 campaign, Obama found a way to keep his rhetoric fresh and interesting. Of course, his speeches then were mostly platitudes as well, but there was a measure of intellectual engagement in them, an energy, a promise, which really did get voters excited. Watch that video above one more time; it's striking how far Obama has come.



Posted By: Arthur Digby Sellers Re: Obama's Broken Promises - 2010-06-23 4:26 AM
I'm surprised Time Magazine is catching on.
Posted By: the G-man Re: Obama's Broken Promises - 2010-06-26 6:46 PM
Closing Guantánamo Fades as a Priority: the Obama administration has sidelined efforts to close the Guantánamo prison, making it unlikely that President Obama will fulfill his promise to close it before his term ends in 2013.

 Originally Posted By: the G-man

\:lol\:

All you liberals who called Bush a "war criminal" over Gitmo when do you start calling for Obama's impeachment/trial at the Hague?
Posted By: Arthur Digby Sellers Re: Obama's Broken Promises - 2010-06-26 7:50 PM
\:lol\:

Liberals are such tools.
Posted By: Wonder Boy Re: Obama's Broken Promises - 2010-07-08 6:03 AM

National Review: "Obama's Broken Promises, with expiration dates"
Posted By: the G-man Re: Obama's Broken Promises - 2010-07-08 6:12 AM
That list is over three months old. It must be twice as long by now.
Posted By: the G-man Re: Obama's Broken Promises - 2010-09-23 7:12 PM

Barack Obama on what to expect from him, June, 2008: "I am absolutely certain that generations from now, we will be able to look back and tell our children that this was the moment when we began to provide care for the sick and good jobs to the jobless; this was the moment when the rise of the oceans began to slow and our planet began to heal."

Walter Mondale on public's unfair expectations of Barack Obama, September, 2010: "People think the President is the only one who can fix their problems. And, if he doesn’t produce solutions, I’m telling you—when a person loses a job, or can’t feed his family, or can’t keep his house, he is no longer rational. They become angry, they strike out—and that’s what we have now. If you’re President, they say, ‘Do something!’...The public’s expectations are so outsized"
Posted By: Prometheus Re: Obama's Broken Promises - 2010-09-23 8:29 PM
 Originally Posted By: the G-man

Barack Obama on what to expect from him, June, 2008: "I am absolutely certain that generations from now, we will be able to look back and tell our children that this was the moment when we began to provide care for the sick and good jobs to the jobless; this was the moment when the rise of the oceans began to slow and our planet began to heal; this was when individual freedom was finally eliminated, and the rich and worthy were able to claim their rightful place as human masters; an age where we, the wealthy and immoral elite, are given all the profits we are owed due to our general heritage; an age of the New World Order."
Posted By: iggy Re: Obama's Broken Promises - 2010-10-13 8:07 AM
Posted By: Grimm Re: Obama's Broken Promises - 2010-10-14 9:41 PM
 Originally Posted By: iggy

Posted By: Prometheus Re: Obama's Broken Promises - 2010-10-14 10:01 PM
\:lol\:
Posted By: Son of Mxy Re: Obama's Broken Promises - 2010-11-21 6:44 AM
http://whatthefuckhasobamadonesofar.com

Instant replies for Obamanauts who want to get into online debates and need ready-made factoids.

Kind of lacking though, there's no explanation for most of the answers. Everything just flew over my head (except for the ones that I've already seen being discussed by the RKMB leftists and rightists).
Posted By: Son of Mxy Re: Obama's Broken Promises - 2010-11-21 6:46 AM
I just noticed, the health care bill and the stimulus package gets thrown around a lot in the site. That's kind of like cheating, I guess. Makes it look like he's done more even though a large number of items on the list are just variations on one thing.
Posted By: Irwin Schwab Re: Obama's Broken Promises - 2010-11-21 11:52 AM
 Originally Posted By: Son of Mxy
http://whatthefuckhasobamadonesofar.com

Instant replies for Obamanauts who want to get into online debates and need ready-made factoids.

Kind of lacking though, there's no explanation for most of the answers. Everything just flew over my head (except for the ones that I've already seen being discussed by the RKMB leftists and rightists).



what about stuff discussed by moderates like me?
Posted By: Son of Mxy Re: Obama's Broken Promises - 2010-11-21 4:20 PM
I have you on ignore, damnit.
Posted By: Irwin Schwab Re: Obama's Broken Promises - 2010-11-21 8:51 PM
moderate-phobic!
Posted By: Captain Sammitch Re: Obama's Broken Promises - 2010-11-21 11:04 PM
hater of moderates!


"When there's a bill that ends up on my desk as President, you, the public, will have five days to look on-line and find out what's in it, before I sign it. So that you know what your government's doing."
\:lol\:
Time passes faster in the realm of the gods.
\:lol\:
http://washingtonexaminer.com/politics/2...erm=feedTwitter

 Quote:
President Obama's latest recess appointment is a corporate lawyer, hailing from a leading Democratic lobbying firm where he represented defense contractors and health care companies.

The nomination of James M. Cole, now deputy attorney general, never made it to the Senate floor thanks to questions about his time as a compliance monitor at AIG, and his views on fighting terrorism.

Cole embodies two typical Obama practices: The president often flouts his tough, anti-lobbyist talk, and he uses recess appointments so that his party's senators don't have to vote on nominees with tainted backgrounds.

Cole was never a registered lobbyist, but he was a partner for years at Bryan Cave LLP, a prominent lobbying firm with strong connections to the Democratic Party and a client list that included Walmart, Microsoft, Peabody Energy, the Biotechnology Industry Organization, Blue Cross Blue Shield, and Ford Motor.

Bryan Cave's lobbyists and lawyers include veterans of the Obama campaign and former top Hill staffers, White House aides, and former lawmakers. The firm's political action committee gave 62 percent of its contributions to Democrats.

BryanCave.com says Cole's job included "representation of corporations and individuals before grand juries, in congressional hearings, in court proceedings, and before federal agencies." One might think that "representation of corporations ... in congressional hearings ... and before federal agencies" might count as lobbying, but Cole has never registered under the Lobbying Disclosure Act.

Cole represented weapons giant McDonnell Douglas, and his Web site says he has also represented "individuals and companies in the health care field concerning disputes concerning billing fraud and abuse and FDA regulatory issues." Drugmaker AstraZeneca is a Bryan Cave lobbying client.

Cole is also a generous Democratic donor, having given the maximum to Obama in 2008 and more than $17,000 to political action committees and candidates since 2000.

The fact that Obama's ethics rules "barring" lobbyists don't apply to Cole -- a Democratic donor and corporate lawyer working at a lobbying firm and representing corporations before Congress -- shows how toothless those rules are. As further evidence, look at Cole's colleagues at his new job.

The Justice Department's antitrust chief, Christine Varney, and Associate Attorney General Tom Perrelli, are both former K Street lobbyists. Office of Legal Counsel lawyer Karl Thompson was a lobbyist for Hess and Occidental Petroleum when Obama plucked him from K Street's O'Melveny & Myers.

And the man they all work for -- Attorney General Eric Holder -- was a registered lobbyist at the storied Covington & Burling.

In other words, it's been clear for two years that Obama's "war on lobbyists" was hot air. Tapping "non-lobbyist lobbyist" Cole is just icing.

Two issues held up Cole's nomination. Many Republicans objected to Cole's views in a 2002 op-ed painting the fight against al Qaeda as a criminal prosecution more than a military one, and calling on then-Attorney General John Ashcroft to protect the rights of accused terrorists.

But a handful of Republican lawmakers said they were unhappy with Cole's answers about his stint at AIG. As part of a legal settlement with the U.S. government, AIG was required to hire an independent monitor who would keep an eye on the insurer's regulatory compliance, and report back to the Securities and Exchange Commission and Justice Department. From 2004 to 2006, that was Cole.

The Government Accountability Project, a self-described "whistleblower protection organization," has repeatedly criticized Cole for not answering more questions about his time at AIG -- specifically about his interactions with other AIG/K Street types, such as Kathleen Chagnon and Fannie Mae alumna Anastasia Kelly.

With all of this baggage, Republicans placed a "hold" on Cole's nomination after it cleared committee, spurring charges of "unacceptable delay" from Democrats and the Washington Post. But were it important enough, Majority Leader Harry Reid could have moved the nomination to the floor, invoked cloture, and confirmed him. The Republican "hold" didn't block a vote: It merely forced debate. Top Judiciary Committee Republican Jeff Sessions said Cole would be confirmed if Reid moved the nomination.

So why the recess appointment?

Cole's past as a lobbyist-in-all-but-name and the his AIG stint both made him an inconvenient character for Senate Democrats this past year, especially as they campaigned on phony populism and charges of GOP coziness with K Street, Wall Street, and corporate America.

Enter an Obama innovation in presidential power: While George W. Bush used recess appointments to install officials who couldn't clear a Democratic filibuster, Obama -- with the Cole appointment and that of Donald Berwick as Medicare chief -- uses recess appointments to avoid embarrassing floor debates and spare his party's senators from embarrassing votes.

Obama promised to be a trailblazer. What he didn't mention was that he would blaze trails around public accountability.

 Originally Posted By: from the above linked article

The fact that Obama's ethics rules "barring" lobbyists don't apply to Cole -- a Democratic donor and corporate lawyer working at a lobbying firm and representing corporations before Congress -- shows how toothless those rules are. As further evidence, look at Cole's colleagues at his new job.

The Justice Department's antitrust chief, Christine Varney, and Associate Attorney General Tom Perrelli, are both former K Street lobbyists. Office of Legal Counsel lawyer Karl Thompson was a lobbyist for Hess and Occidental Petroleum when Obama plucked him from K Street's O'Melveny & Myers.

And the man they all work for -- Attorney General Eric Holder -- was a registered lobbyist at the storied Covington & Burling.

In other words, it's been clear for two years that Obama's "war on lobbyists" was hot air. Tapping "non-lobbyist lobbyist" Cole is just icing.



That cuts to the core of Obama's hypocrisy.

A representative example of the Orwellian spin of his administration's rhetoric vs. their true actions and intent at every turn for the last three years.

Whether the action of his administration discussed is the BP oil spill, the 6-month ban on offshore drilling, ramming through an unpopular Obamacare that raises (not lowers) the cost of care while diminishing quality of care, a paper-victory START treaty, taking federa government control over healthcare and the auto industry and other huge sectors of the economy, his connection to ACORN and its corruption, you name it.

There is a huge chasm between what Obama says, and what he does.

And the stated intent is usually the polar opposite of the actual intent.



I've got no problem with Obama making recess appointments. That's his right as president. What I find ironic is the lefties who had a fit when Bush did it who now don't care, coupled with the fact that it sure looks like another broken Obama promise.
http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20110108/pl_nm/us_obama_guantanamo_detainees

 Quote:
WASHINGTON (Reuters) – President Barack Obama, in a setback to hopes for the quick closing of the Guantanamo Bay prison, reluctantly signed a bill on Friday barring suspects held there from being brought to the United States for trial.

Making plain he would fight to repeal language in the law obstructing civilian U.S. trials for Guantanamo terrorism suspects, Obama said he was left with no choice but to sign the defense authorization act for fiscal 2011.
Note to Rob. We are only two years into this current administration, you may want to add an additional server for this thread.
Oh how I wish Ray Adler, and Whomod were here(posting I know they still lurk). I remember fondly how they said Gitmo was illegal and a violation of international law. Now Obama signs into law the preservation of it as a detention center. How the heads must esplode.

MEM I don't worry about, whatever the daily spin is on this is he will gladly line up behind. He doesn't really have a horse int he race, his beliefs change based on the latest memo.
http://thehill.com/blogs/blog-briefing-r...-were-necessary

 Quote:
President Obama has “learned from experience” that some of the Bush administration’s decisions on terrorism issues were necessary, according to former Vice President Dick Cheney.

In his first interview since undergoing major heart surgery last July, Cheney said he thinks Obama has been forced to rethink some of his national security positions now that he sits in the Oval Office.

"I think he's learned that what we did was far more appropriate than he ever gave us credit for while he was a candidate. So I think he's learned from experience. And part of that experience was the Democrats having a terrible showing last election."

Cheney also asserted that Obama has learned that the prison at Guantanamo Bay simply cannot be closed, despite the promises he made while campaigning for the White House.

"I think he's learned that he's not going to be able to close Guantanamo," Cheney said. "That it's — if you didn't have it, you'd have to create one like that. You've got to have some place to put terrorists who are combatants who are bound and determined to try to kill Americans."

Cheney made the comments about Obama in an interview that is set to air Tuesday on NBC’s “Today.” The interview was Cheney's first since before he underwent heart surgery in July. Doctors introduced a device into his heart that pumps blood from the ventricle chamber to his aorta.

The former vice president cited the Obama administration’s expanded use of drones in Pakistan as more evidence of continuity from the policies of the Bush White House.

"As I say, I think he's found it necessary to be more sympathetic to the kinds of things we did," Cheney said. "They've gotten active, for example, with the drone program, using Predator and the Reaper to launch strikes against identified terrorist targets in the various places in the world."

Cheney also weighed in during the interview on the Arizona shooting that left six people dead and injured 13, including Rep. Gabrielle Giffords (D-Ariz.). Cheney was cautious about what role heated political rhetoric played in the shooting.

"I think the event was caused by a deranged individual. And — that's where we ought to look in terms of trying to assess guilt," Cheney said.

But Cheney also said that it was important not to squelch spirited political debate in the shooting’s aftermath.

"I don't think we should anticipate that we can somehow take a system that was designed for political combat, if you will, between the parties, between ideas, between principles and set that aside. I wouldn't want to do that," Cheney said. "That's the heart and soul of our political system. And that's basically a good thing."

Cheney also confirmed an account from President George W. Bush's recently released memoir, “Decision Points,” that he had offered to resign multiple times during his administration.

"I didn't wanna stand in the way if, in fact, that kind of decision would enhance the president's prospects of winning reelection in 2004 when he was up against John Kerry," Cheney said. "And I thought he ought to have the freedom to change anybody he wanted, including me."
I think Cheney gives Obama too much credit I don't think he learned anything. He knew when he was in Congress Bush was right and used all the rhetoric to get elected. Proof of that is all his Congressional buddies have pretty muched backed Bush's policies when they had the chance to over turn them from taxes, Gitmo, on and on.
http://www.stripes.com/news/gates-u-s-troops-could-stay-in-iraq-for-years-1.140502


 Quote:
MOSUL, Iraq — Obama's Defense Secretary Robert Gates said U.S. troops could remain in Iraq for years to come.

It would depend, he said, on what the Iraqis want.



not a good month for Obamanauts....
But, I saw a big special on all the troops leaving Iraq on MSNBC due to Obama's new policies a few months ago.

Sincerely,
Stupid Liberal Douche
\:lol\:
Posted By: MisterJLA Re: Obama Broken Promises: Bin Laden - 2011-05-02 7:28 AM
 Originally Posted By: the G-man
Barack Obama, Democratic National Convention speech, Aug. 28, 2008:
  • "When John McCain said we could just 'muddle through' in Afghanistan, I argued for more resources and more troops to finish the fight against the terrorists who actually attacked us on 9/11, and made clear that we must take out Osama bin Laden and his lieutenants if we have them in our sights. John McCain likes to say that he'll follow bin Laden to the gates of hell--but he won't even go to the cave where he lives."

Barack Obama, CBS News interview, Jan. 14, 2009:
  • "I think that we have to so weaken his infrastructure that, whether he is technically alive or not, he is so pinned down that he cannot function. My preference obviously would be to capture or kill him. But if we have so tightened the noose that he's in a cave somewhere and can't even communicate with his operatives, then we will meet our goal of protecting America."




reset
Posted By: Pariah Re: Obama Broken Promises: Bin Laden - 2011-05-02 7:30 AM
Bin Laden was in Pakistan...
Posted By: Pariah Re: Obama Broken Promises: Bin Laden - 2011-05-02 7:31 AM
Good to know that Obama's your hero now JLA.

You've finally come full circle.
Posted By: MisterJLA Re: Obama Broken Promises: Bin Laden - 2011-05-02 7:32 AM
 Originally Posted By: Pariah


\:lol\:
Posted By: Pariah Re: Obama Broken Promises: Bin Laden - 2011-05-02 7:35 AM
 Originally Posted By: MisterJLA
Indeed I have Pariah. I understand now that it was Obama's policies that brought us to this point in the middle east. It was truly through Obama's sole effort that Osama got his just dessert!


That's true I guess. It's not as thought he was wanted to pull out of the Middle East entirely or anything...
Posted By: MisterJLA Re: Obama Broken Promises: Bin Laden - 2011-05-02 7:39 AM
 Originally Posted By: Pariah

That's true I guess. It's not as thought he was wanted to pull out of the Middle East entirely or anything...


"Not as thought he was wanted"?

Whoa, dude.

Post again when you've calmed down.

bin Laden is dead, you should be happy.
Posted By: Pariah Re: Obama Broken Promises: Bin Laden - 2011-05-02 7:49 AM
Obviously I'm delirious with joy or I wouldn't have carelessly made a typo in my excitement.
Posted By: Irwin Schwab Re: Obama Broken Promises: Bin Laden - 2011-05-02 7:52 AM
It's sad that JLA has tried to make such a joyous occasion by the American people a political argument.
Posted By: MisterJLA Re: Obama Broken Promises: Bin Laden - 2011-05-02 7:52 AM
 Originally Posted By: Pariah
Obviously I'm melting down because JLA is kicking my ass. It's like the PSN threads all over again.
Posted By: MisterJLA Re: Obama Broken Promises: Bin Laden - 2011-05-02 7:53 AM
 Originally Posted By: Irwin Schwab
Someone, please make it stop.
Posted By: Pariah Re: Obama Broken Promises: Bin Laden - 2011-05-02 7:55 AM
 Originally Posted By: Irwin Schwab
It's sad that JLA has tried to make such a joyous occasion by the American people a political argument.


That's to be expected now that he worships Obama.

I'm more concerned about the fact that he was unaware that Obama wanted to pull out of the Middle East entirely despite not having killed Osama.
Posted By: Pariah Re: Obama Broken Promises: Bin Laden - 2011-05-02 7:56 AM
 Originally Posted By: MisterJLA
NU-UH! I knew that! I just didn't care....Er...I mean--PARIAH'S MELTING!
Posted By: MisterJLA Re: Obama Broken Promises: Bin Laden - 2011-05-02 7:59 AM
I don't know why you are getting so mad about this?

The PSN threads I can understand to a certain point, I'd be upset if my personal information was hacked, but why this?
Posted By: Irwin Schwab Re: Obama Broken Promises: Bin Laden - 2011-05-02 8:00 AM
 Originally Posted By: Pariah
 Originally Posted By: Irwin Schwab
It's sad that JLA has tried to make such a joyous occasion by the American people a political argument.


That's to be expected now that he worships Obama.

I'm more concerned about the fact that he was unaware that Obama wanted to pull out of the Middle East entirely despite not having killed Osama.



Maybe he's hopped up on Oxycotins or something.
Posted By: Pariah Re: Obama Broken Promises: Bin Laden - 2011-05-02 8:00 AM
It's okay JLA. No need to be defensive. Just go back to deifying Obama.
Posted By: MisterJLA Re: Obama Broken Promises: Bin Laden - 2011-05-02 6:46 PM
 Originally Posted By: Pariah
Posted By: Wonder Boy Re: Obama Broken Promises: Bin Laden - 2011-05-02 9:23 PM
And Obama's participation in the strike to kill Bin Ladin was basically saying "Yeah, okay, go ahead."

The CIA and military have been tracking Bin Ladin for that long, and the search under Obama went on pretty much as it did under W. Bush.

Bin Ladin was estimated to be holed up in this mansion where he was killed for four or more years.

 Originally Posted By: Irwin Schwab
This column pretty much summs up my biggest gripe with Obama's broken promises. He had a huge capital of good will built up when he was elected. He could have really healed the partisan divide in the country but he never left campaign mode.

There are many issues moderate Democrats and moderate Republicans agree on. He should have tackled these issues first and the fringe would have been forced to come along for the ride.

He cam out shooting with fringe issues such as Gitmo and Universal healthcare. Healthcare is important but there are reform measures he could have tackled right away that would have swayed moderates in both parties. His constant attacks on the previous administration after winning election put the opposition party on the defensive right off the back.


Yes.

Obama won the election because he said "there is no blue America, there is no red America, there is only the United States of America". He campaigned as a uniter, "finding the middle", building a common ground.

And then has governed more divisively, race-baiting, class warfare and other partisan rhetoric, than any president ever has.
Posted By: Prometheus Re: Obama Broken Promises: Bin Laden - 2011-11-02 9:11 PM
 Originally Posted By: MisterJLA
 Originally Posted By: Pariah
Posted By: the G-man Re: Obama Breaks Signing Statement Promise - 2012-01-05 8:47 PM
 Originally Posted By: Friendly Neighborhood Ray-man
Bush has resorted to issuing constitutionally dubious "signing statements," which declare, by fiat, how he will interpret and execute the law in question, even when that interpretation flagrantly violates the will of Congress. Earlier presidents, including Jackson, raised hackles by offering their own view of the Constitution in order to justify vetoing congressional acts. Bush doesn't bother with that: He signs the legislation (eliminating any risk that Congress will overturn a veto), and then governs how he pleases -- using the signing statements as if they were line-item vetoes.




 Originally Posted By: the G-man
WASHINGTON — President Obama on Wednesday issued his first signing statement, reserving a right to bypass dozens of provisions in a $410 billion government spending bill even as he signed it into law.

In the statement — directions to executive-branch officials about how to carry out the legislation — Mr. Obama instructed them to view most of the disputed provisions as merely advisory and nonbinding, saying they were unconstitutional intrusions on his own powers.

Mr. Obama’s instructions followed by two days his order to government officials that they not rely on any of President George W. Bush’s provision-bypassing signing statements without first consulting Attorney General Eric H. Holder Jr. In that order, Mr. Obama said he would continue the practice of issuing signing statements


Obama Embraces Signing Statements After Knocking Bush for Using Them: Candidate Barack Obama criticized President Bush for using ‘signing statements’ to ignore the will of Congress. But Obama’s done the same thing 20 times since taking office, and his latest effort is rankling lawmakers.
Posted By: the G-man Obama Breaks Stimulus Promise - 2012-06-02 4:37 PM
Miserable May jobs report suggests U.S. in recession red zone: The current 8.2% unemployment rate is 2.5 percentage points above where Obama said it would be right now if Congress passed his trillion-dollar stimulus plan.
Posted By: Prometheus G-Pussy: "I'LL GET PRO!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!" - 2012-06-02 7:44 PM
\:lol\: \:lol\: \:lol\: \:lol\: \:lol\:

Why are you constantly posting the same "source" (i.e. progressive Conservative blogs) in every thread? Who do you think you're fooling, old man? No matter how many times you post it, it doesn't make the SPIN actually, factually true...

Do people wonder why you never became an actual attorney?
Posted By: the G-man Re: Obama Breaks Stimulus Promise - 2012-06-02 8:00 PM
Reuters: the millions of "green jobs" Obama promised have been slow to sprout, disappointing many who had hoped that the $90 billion earmarked for clean-energy efforts in the recession-fighting federal stimulus package would ease unemployment - still above 8 percent.
 Originally Posted By: Prometheus
\:lol\: \:lol\: \:lol\: \:lol\: \:lol\:

Why are you constantly posting the same "source" (i.e. progressive Conservative blogs) in every thread? Who do you think you're fooling, old man? No matter how many times you post it, it doesn't make the SPIN actually, factually true...

Do people wonder why you never became an actual attorney?
 Originally Posted By: Prometheus
 Originally Posted By: Prometheus
\:lol\: \:lol\: \:lol\: \:lol\: \:lol\:

Why are you constantly posting the same "source" (i.e. progressive Conservative blogs) in every thread? Who do you think you're fooling, old man? No matter how many times you post it, it doesn't make the SPIN actually, factually true...

Do people wonder why you never became an actual attorney?


Says the dipshit who routinely posts MSNBC vitriolic diatribes, and (in OWS topic) undisguised communist blogs.


And by the way Reuters is not a right wing blog.
 Originally Posted By: Wonder Boy

And by the way Reuters is not a right wing blog.


Reuters: Bleak jobs report spells trouble for Obama re-election
Posted By: the G-man Re: Obama's Broken Promises - 2012-07-12 11:50 PM
White House Flip-Flops on Use Of Presidential Seal in Obama Campaign: After former Obama press secretary says White House would not be using official seal at 'strictly political events,' President Obama and Vice President Biden begin using it at campaign stops.
Posted By: Ultimate Jaburg53 Re: Obama's Broken Promises - 2012-07-13 1:33 AM
Isn't a campaign stop a political event?
Posted By: Ultimate Jaburg53 Re: Obama's Broken Promises - 2012-07-13 1:33 AM
Also, isn't Obama the President?
Posted By: the G-man Re: Obama's Broken Promises - 2012-07-13 6:08 AM
 Originally Posted By: Ultimate Jaburg53
Isn't a campaign stop a political event?



That would be the point. He said he wouldnt do that.
Posted By: the G-man Re: Obama's Broken Promises - 2012-08-28 2:59 PM
http://www.breitbart.com/Big-Government/...From-the-Podium

If, as George Orwell once observed, the greatest enemy of any left-wing government is its previous propaganda, then Barack Obama’s most fearsome enemy is a small volume his campaign published in 2008: Change We Can Believe In: Barack Obama's Plan to Renew America's Promise. I bought it after Obama won the presidency that November, and it makes for very entertaining--and somewhat sad--reading nearly four years later.

Among the many promises Obama makes are the following: “Send Rebate Checks of $1,000 to American Families,” “Staff the Government Based on Talent, Not Political Loyalties,” and “Eliminate North Korea’s Nuclear Weapons Programs.”

Some of the pledges combine hubris with bad policy: “Create Five Million New Green Jobs,” “Create Automatic Workplace Pensions.” Others are just silly: “Create a ‘Craigslist’ for Service.”

No matter who you are, there’s a broken promise in this book for you. Seniors? Obama promised to “Preserve Social Security” and “Put Medicare on Solid Footing.” Greens? Obama said he would “Rally the World to Stop Global Warming.” Chicago residents? Obama pledged to “End the Dangerous Cycle of Youth Violence.”

The scale of Obama’s cult of personality can be measured by the wide scope of his disappointments today.

There is one promise, however, that stands out among the others, and best defines the failure of the Obama presidency: the promise to “Jump-start our economy with a $50 billion stimulus plan that would put money directly in the pockets of families struggling with rising food and mortgage payments.” The actual stimulus, as passed in early 2009, was nearly 18 times as big and did little to help struggling families or the economy itself.

That broken promise stands out more than all the others--more than the promise to cut health care costs by $2,500 per family, more than the promise to keep a residual force in Iraq to ensure stability, more than the laughable assurance that Obama would fight corruption--because it represents a colossal abuse of the public trust and Obama’s fiduciary duty to the nation. It makes a mockery of policy arguments about Keynesian stimulus or the multiplier effect of increased government spending. It is simply obscene.
Posted By: Wonder Boy Re: Obama's Broken Promises - 2012-08-28 3:24 PM
That was a nice concise overview of the failures and blatant hypocrisy of the Obama administration, and the huge chasm between what was promised and what was delivered.

 Originally Posted By: from article


The scale of Obama’s cult of personality can be measured by the wide scope of his disappointments today.


That pretty much sums it up.


I doubt most Obama supprters read or watch the news, or have any familarity with the facts. They just pull the "D" lever when they vote, out of pure undying ideological loyalty. And for many they are too politically blind to even have ideological loyalty.
They've just been herded by fear through empty DNC propaganda.

Such as Sandra Fluke and other Democrats saying Republicans want to take away their birth control rights.
Such as exploiting of the Trayvon Martin case to say Republicans "want to put y'all back in chains".
And out of tyrannical presidential fiat rather than rule of law issuing an executive order to give 1.2 million (for openers) illegals amnesty, and putting virtually all the rest of their extended illegal family on that path through the anchor of their children's amnesty.

It comes down to Obama and the Democrats buying votes with perks funded by taxpayer dollars, to advance things that a majority of Americans have repeatedly been polled as strongly opposing (Obamacare, Amnesty, state-funded abortion, etc.)
Posted By: Wonder Boy Re: Obama's Broken Promises - 2013-03-16 11:01 AM
Add to that drone attacks on U.S. citizens.

And legislation to restrict the 2nd amendment right to bear arms.

And attempts to control the news media and restrict freedom of the press.

And undermining border security, furloughing border guards, and thousands of criminal illegal aliens.

Posted By: the G-man Re: Obama's Broken Promises - 2013-10-29 8:12 PM
Posted By: Wonder Boy Re: Obama's Broken Promises - 2013-10-29 8:39 PM
Despite Marilyn Tavenner being responsible for the 600-plus million-dollar failure of the healthcare.gov website, she'll probably be "disciplined" with a promotion to a better job.

Like Susan Rice.
Like the key people responsible in the IRS scandal.
Like the Obama staffers responsible for the Benghazi attack, and ongoing cover-up.
Like the ATF and Justice Dept staffers involed in "Fast and Furious" sale of guns to Mexican drug cartels.

What's most infuriating is not that they've done these things, but that they have absolutely no accountability for what they've done. And that Democrats --both in Washington and at the grassroots level-- still support them and make excuses for them!

Posted By: Wonder Boy Re: Obama's Broken Promises - 2013-10-30 1:37 AM
The look of a liar:


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