My friend didn't say anything, but after I left, I realized I said things that didn't necessarily need to be said.
From now on, I'll stick with Michelle's clothes ...
Just a few of the things that make me wanna holler on a daily basis ...
The phrase “a hundred days” was coined by the Compte de Chabrol in 1815, referring to the time between Napoleon’s escape from Elba, and his defeat. Later, it was used to describe the 3-month honeymoon FDR enjoyed in 1933 with Congress, essentially dictating legislation from the Oval Office. Now, for better or for worse, we grade all of our Presidents on their First Hundred Days.
A lot can happen in a hundred days. Empires can be made and lost. It’s worth taking an early look at Obama’s first month to see what the first hundred could bring, even if the trends may be skewed by the learning-curve a one-term Senator might inevitably face in his new job:
- Joe Biden told the Russians we want to “hit the reset button” with them – ignoring a number of recent provocations on their part.
- Hillary Clinton tried showing off her intelligence – literally – by using sensitive information about North Korea as talking points during her current “listening tour” overseas.
- Secretary Gates and Ambassador Holbrooke publicly contradicted each other on what a rapprochement with the Taliban might mean for Pakistan and Afghanistan.
- Obama outsourced the rushed creation of a massive bill to his Party apparatchiks, and got handed a partisan and flawed result, whose final outcome depended on preserving the vote of a badly compromised Roland Burris, and hip-checking Judd Gregg with a Mephistophelian offer of a Cabinet position. In the meantime, the President’s campaign has failed to pay its debts.
- The Attorney General called Americans “cowards” for not addressing issues of race.
- The new Secretary of the Treasury got the Stock Market to plunge by revealing a mortgage bailout plan remarkable only for it’s lack of vision, theme, and details – which seems all too much a reflection of his own tax returns.
- The new Secretary of Transportation suggested a tax on the number of miles driven by car-owners, which the White House almost immediately repudiated.
- Numerous Democrat legislators warned darkly of resurrecting the Fairness Doctrine, which the President declined to support.
To any observer trying to decipher where this Administration is attempting to go, there’s no wonder that the only impression is incoherence and contradiction. Biden and Clinton seem intent on proving to our allies and adversaries that President Obama is not President Bush – but neither of them can say what that means. In the meantime, the Iranians are launching space vehicles, and building nukes. The Russians are flexing their muscle everywhere, and the Taliban is emerging from their caves.
At home, the only industry likely to be stimulated by the recent porkfest will be the lawyers who will file countless suits over whether the Federal government can force States to take money they don’t want, or whether a handwritten insert from a staffer or lobbyist truly constitutes “the intent of Congress” in the making of law.
Al Sharpton and North Carolina’s James Clyborn found new ways to feign outrage – Sharpton alleging a racial slur to the President as the writer of a bill with which he had almost nothing to do, and Clyborn alleging that refusing federal money (and the strings attached) was tantamount to racism. No wonder people are afraid to talk about race when even non-racial issues can turn up “the race card.”
Emboldened by the bailout of bad loans made by bad banks to bad credit risks, groups like ACORN are breaking into foreclosed homes and declaring squatter’s rights. The Stock Market continues to fall. What’s a leader to do?
Predictably, the President has embarked on the one thing he does best – hitting the road, shaking hands, and making promises. In short: he’s campaigning again, but this time Americans are asking for something more than vague promises of “change.” Several appearances have been annoyingly marred by dissent.
Karl Rove comments that, for as disciplined as the Obama campaign may have been in the past, his team is “winging it” on most issues now. In fact, nothing has really changed: no amount of discipline can offset the lack of a substantive message.
The time for campaign rhetoric is past, and the consequences of this lack of discipline and substance keep piling up. A lot can happen in a hundred days. Here’s hoping our President can figure out how to avoid marching all of us to Waterloo before the time is up.
By BEN EVANS – 23 hours ago
WASHINGTON (AP) — The economic stimulus signed by President Barack Obama will spread billions of dollars across the country to spruce up aging roads and bridges. But there's not a dime specifically dedicated to fixing leftover damage from Hurricane Katrina.
And there's no outrage about it.
Democrats who routinely criticized President George W. Bush for not sending more money to the Gulf Coast appear to be giving Obama the benefit of the doubt in his first major spending initiative. Even the Gulf's fiercest advocates say they're happy with the stimulus package, and their states have enough money for now to address their needs.
"I'm not saying there won't be a need in the future, but right now the focus is not on more money, it's on using what we have," said Sen. Mary Landrieu, D-La., who has criticized Democrats and Republicans alike over Katrina funding.
It's a significant change in tone from the Bush years, when any perceived slight of Katrina victims was met with charges that the Republican president who bungled the initial response to the disaster continued to callously ignore the Gulf's needs years later.
Just last summer, Democrats accused Bush of putting Iraq before New Orleans when he sought to block Gulf Coast reconstruction money from a $162 billion war spending bill. Bush was pilloried for not mentioning the disaster in back-to-back State of the Union addresses.
Former Rep. Jim McCrery, R-La., who helped lead the fight for Gulf aid before retiring last year, said he was surprised over the lack of Katrina money in the bill, but figures lawmakers may be granting Obama leniency due to the magnitude of the country's current economic challenges.
"Any new president is going to have a little honeymoon," said McCrery, who is now a lobbyist. "I'd like to think that the tone would have been the same with any new president."
Thomas Langston, a Tulane University political scientist, said Democrats may be "playing nice" to keep in good favor. But dire needs remain, he said.
"Hopefully they've gotten some promises behind the scenes about longer-term commitments," Langston said. "Like most people down here, I would hate for anybody to get the impression that, 'We're good, thank you.'"
The federal government has devoted more than $175 billion to the region since Katrina ripped through New Orleans in 2005, and billions remain unspent. It's unclear how much more money will be needed, but nearly everyone agrees that the federal government should continue investing heavily in the region's levees and other infrastructure to prevent a repeat of Katrina's devastation.
Under the $787 billion stimulus bill, states will share more than $90 billion in infrastructure money. Gulf states such as Louisiana, Mississippi and Alabama can use their funds for Katrina-related projects, but they'll get the same formula-based share that other states receive.
There was hardly a complaint as Obama and other Democratic leaders pieced together the package. Members of the all-Democratic Congressional Black Caucus, who have called Bush's Katrina funding a moral failure, said they were thrilled with the stimulus. Landrieu won several provisions that do not allocate new money but are aimed at cutting through red tape to free up existing funds.
"I think people looked at how generous Congress has been in the past," said Rep. Bennie Thompson, a Mississippi Democrat who chairs the House Homeland Security Committee. "(The states) have to demonstrate that they can be good custodians of the money."
Thompson and others say new funding wasn't necessary in the stimulus largely because billions of federal dollars remain bogged down in bureaucracy or tied up in planning. As a result, they said, Katrina funding doesn't fit with the quick-spending purpose of the stimulus bill, which is aimed at kick-starting the economy.
Ironically, Bush made similar arguments in recent years as Gulf advocates latched on to nearly any legislation they could find to pursue reconstruction money. For example, he routinely argued that Katrina funding didn't belong in war spending bills and that new funding wasn't urgent because unspent billions were already in the pipeline.
In part, the lack of criticism this year could reflect a stronger trust by fellow Democrats that Obama will follow through with his campaign pledge to rebuild levees and "keep the broken promises" to the Gulf.
Whether the grace period continues could hinge on how Obama addresses the issue in future spending bills.
Without discussing specific funding plans, White House spokeswoman Gannet Tseggai said Obama is "dedicated to rebuilding New Orleans and the Gulf Coast and looks forward to working with Congress to ensure they get the help they so desperately need."
Today, I was at my beauty shop, getting my hair done. I took doughnuts to the beauty shop, something I rarely do, as I figured I would have to bribe my way in.
<smile>
Not really. Tuesday's been doing my hair every other week for twenty years come this September. She was the first black person I met in Austin, she was the first person to do my hair here in Austin, and in nearly twenty years my hair's been done by someone else only twice. She and I are friends, and we have been debating politics at least since she had her first shop. She's religious, she's conservative, she votes Democrat, despite my best efforts <smile>.
We're friends.
So, anyway, she had one other customer in the shop when I arrived on Inauguration Day, a woman who I had seen a time or two before, but whose name I still don't know. Tuesday said I could watch the Inauguration with them, as long as I didn't boo.
I dissed Feinswine and made Tuesday and the other lady laugh. We critiqued Michelle's dress, and I figured out why Malia always dresses too "grown" for her age.
The three of us prayed that Aretha would be completely covered up when she was announced, and we were all loving that hat! She made all three of us cry ... Lord, thank you kindly for voices like Aretha's, that lift our hearts and our spirits.
Tuesday and the other customer went into the shampoo room, while I stayed outside to let them know when the oath started. I was digging Itzhak and Yo-Yo and the others, and digging the reaction of the children to classical music --- the expressions on some of the kindergardener's faces were wondrous.
Tuesday and the other customer came back out in time to see the swearing-in. They were all agog because of his skin color --- Tuesday even said, "I'm proud of my blackness today!" (Which shocked me.) Me, I was heart-full, as I always am, at the peaceful exchange of power. It wasn't done undercover, at midnight, but in the light, at the stroke of noon; it wasn't enforced by a gun or a bayonet, but by the rule of law and custom.
The color on his skin was, of course, wonderful to see ... but, truly, it's the content of his character that matters most to me, and should to everyone.
As I told the ladies at the beauty shop, it's wonderful to see a black man take the oath ... but it's the wrong black man.
The command's "Joint Operating Environment (JOE 2008)" report, which contains projections of global threats and potential next wars, puts Pakistan on the same level as Mexico. "In terms of worse-case scenarios for the Joint Force and indeed the world, two large and important states bear consideration for a rapid and sudden collapse: Pakistan and Mexico.
"The Mexican possibility may seem less likely, but the government, its politicians, police and judicial infrastructure are all under sustained assault and press by criminal gangs and drug cartels. How
The U.S. Joint Forces Command, based in Norfolk, Va., is one of the Defense Departments combat commands that includes members of the different military service branches, active and reserves, as well as civilian and contract employees. One of its key roles is to help transform the U.S. military's capabilities.
In the foreword, Marine Gen. J.N. Mattis, the USJFC commander, said "Predictions about the future are always risky ... Regardless, if we do not try to forecast the future, there is no doubt that we will be caught off guard as we strive to protect this experiment in democracy that we call America."
The report is one in a serious focusing on Mexico's internal security problems, mostly stemming from drug violence and drug corruption. In recent weeks, the Department of Homeland Security and former U.S. drug czar Barry McCaffrey issued similar alerts about Mexico.
Despite such reports, El Pasoan Veronica Callaghan, a border business leader, said she keeps running into people in the region who "are in denial about what is happening in Mexico."
Last week, Mexican President Felipe Calderon instructed his embassy and consular officials to promote a positive image of Mexico.
The U.S. military report, which also analyzed economic situations in other countries, also noted that China has increased its influence in places where oil fields are present.
Diana Washington Valdez may be reached at dvaldez@elpasotimes.com; 546-6140.
Andrew Jackson's whole blended family --- his dead wife's brother's three kids, his dead wife's great-nephew, and the three kids he and his wife took in when they were orphaned, his daughter-in-law (married to one of the nephew-in-laws Jackson adopted) --- fell in on the White House when Jackson served as President from 1829-1837.
U.S. Grant's father in law, Patrick Dent, a Southern sympathizer, hung around the White House for years.
FDR's
thirteen grandchildren were around so often that Eleanor had a playground put in on
the South Lawn.
Truman's MIL lived with her daughter and son-in-law
when he was VP (and VP Truman had a five-room apartment then, not an
official residence); she went to the White House with the rest of the
family. from all accounts, she was hell on wheels.
Eisenhower's MIL lived at 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue.
Tipper
Gore's mother lived in a pool house on the grounds of the Naval
Observatory when Al was VP.
Laura Bush's mother stayed at the White
House for weeks at a time around the holidays.
And now, apparently, one more in-law is about to move in. some conservatives would have it be the ruination of the nation. Could it be the color of this woman's skin that makes all the difference?


Powered by ScribeFire.
By
Caroline Graham
Last updated at 11:40 PM on 11th October 2008
She is the self-styled ‘Pitbull in Lipstick’ – but vice presidential
candidate Sarah Palin has become the subject of a fierce debate about
whether her lip-liner is really a tattoo.
The discussion was
started by Left-wing pundit Arianna Huffington, who claimed in a blog
that the 44-year-old governor of Alaska had had her lip-liner
permanently tattooed on.
The claim has prompted huge speculation on the internet and within the mainstream media about Palin’s beauty habits.
Tight-lipped: Sarah Palin's camp won't discuss claims that her lip-liner is permanent
One detractor said: ‘She’s so vain and this is just another example of that.’
A
pro-Palin supporter shot back: ‘She’s a busy working mother and her
make-up always looks impeccable. People love to attack her.’
In Palin’s hometown of Wasilla, Alaska, population 8,700,
Jessica Steele, owner of the town’s Beehive Beauty Shop, said she had
not noticed if Palin had tattooed lip-liner but added: ‘She was very
concerned about her sexy image.
'We talked a lot about how, if she looked too pretty or too sexy, people wouldn’t listen to her.’
Dr Laura Reed, who runs Artistic Cosmetic Solutions in Garden Grove, California, said: ‘I think she may well have had it done.’
And Lisa Sims, a make-up tattoo artist from Anchorage, Alaska, said: ‘I believe it is tattooed on. One hundred per cent.’
Permanent lip-liner saves wearers the time and trouble of having to constantly apply lipstick and liner.
Last night a Palin spokesman said: ‘We’re not going to comment.’
Palin became embroiled in another furore last night after she was found guilty of abuse of power.
An
inquiry into a long-running scandal – dubbed Troopergate – in Alaska
found that she had acted improperly by trying to get her former
brother-in-law fired from his job as a state trooper while he was in
the middle of a bitter divorce from her sister in 2006.
A Democratic Party spokesman said: ‘Governor Palin has violated the trust of people in Alaska.’
Powered by ScribeFire.
'Cause, y'know, Sarah's too dumb stupid female to be the Governor of Alaska!
According to the really sexist dipschizzts --- dipschizzts, Reporters, Reporterettes, all the same thing --- over at CNN, Todd is Alaska's "shadow governor." According to these chatterheads, Todd:
When a wife supports her husband the elected official, he's considered lucky if she does what Todd purportedly does for her spouse. Why should Todd be any different?
And, hey, Reporterette Randi! So what if Todd is his wife's fixer? Whatever happened to "two for the price of one?" Bet you liked the concept of an unelected spouse having governmental privileges when said unelected spouse was Hillary Clinton! Bet Bill copied Hill on lots and lots of correspondence ... and I'll bet she BCC'ed him on a lot of email during her run at the Presidency.
And if you think Bill isn't Hill's enforcer, think again!
Didn't Rosalyn Carter used to sit in on Jimmah's cabinet meetings with her knitting?
Fight the liberal lies whenever and however you can! And contribute to the Dinosaur Media Death Spiral at every opportunity!
Powered by ScribeFire.
Yeah, yeah, we all know the rapist's favorite excuse ... "If she hadn't been wearing that skirt and being so nice, I never would've touched her, but she looked so fine I had to rape her. It's her own d*mn fault!"
Apparently, being in the public eye and having an email account is enough to justify having said email hacked ... if you're Sarah Palin. This from AP reporter Ted Bridis, with a hat tip to Michelle Malkin:
From: “Bridis, Ted” TBridis@ap.org
Subject: RE: Palin’s email theft
If Gov. Palin hadn’t been using a consumer-level Yahoo! account (more than one, actually) this crime wouldn’t have happened because the hacker exploited the service’s “forgot-my-password” mechanism, which is inherently insecure.
Previously disclosed e-mails indicate her administration embraced Yahoo! Accounts, among other reasons, because of questions over whether personal e-mail accounts are covered under Alaska’s Open Records Act. Palin’s critics in Alaska were poring over records they had obtained from the governor’s office of official internal e-mail communications and causing political hay.
The issues are inextricably linked.
Hey, Reporter Bridis! (No polite honorific from me, dipschizz.) Maybe you don't know that rape isn't about sex, it's about power, exercised at the expense of the innocent. You probably weren't around a lot of computer people at the dawn of the computer age, but I was. I saw the first hackers up close. Hacking isn't about reading the (possible) contents of the email account, it's about disrupting the system; i.e., it's an egregious exercise of power.
You know all about that, don't you? Revealing damaging information, like Todd Palin's email address and license plate, is a nasty exercise of power at the expense of innocents, Reporter!
Powered by ScribeFire.
Powered by ScribeFire.
Apparently not a hoax ...
Powered by ScribeFire.
Despite her efforts to portray herself as an average, small-town,
"folksy" American, Sarah Palin's political views - ardently pro-gun,
pro-censorship, antichoice and antigay - make John McCain's
conservative credentials pale in comparison. What few observers have
said, however, is these beliefs are not just extreme - they are
radical, and even bear a comparison with some of the most notorious
"rural radicals" of our time.
It has been years since groups such as the Montana Militia, the
Posse Comitatus and the Sagebrush Rebels, and individuals such as Terry
Nichols and Ted Kaczynski have made us wonder why so many "angry white
men" populated our rural regions. Many of us have forgotten the threat
once posed by domestic terrorists and instead have turned our attention
to foreign terrorists. But we should never forget that in the late 20th
century, ultra-Christian, antistatist and white-supremacist groups
flourished in the states of the Pacific Northwest - called by many the
"Great White Northwest" - the very region that Sarah Palin and her
family call home.
Demographics most basically define this geographic region. In the
six states that make up the Pacific Northwest - Washington, Oregon,
Idaho, Montana, Wyoming and Alaska - only six counties are more than 5
percent African American. Not by coincidence, each of these counties is
also near an important military installation with many African American
men and women. Even so, barely more than 3,000 blacks lived in all of
Idaho in 2000.
Although home to tens of thousands of native peoples, Alaska is not
much different in terms of diversity from the other states of the
region. African Americans live in areas near important military
installations in Anchorage and Fairbanks and almost nowhere else.
Wasilla, where Sarah Palin was mayor, makes the census' list of the top
10 Alaskan communities with the largest number of African Americans
because they make up a full 1 percent of the population. Rough
calculations suggest that 65 blacks lived in the town.
But the region also must be defined by its history of intolerance,
resentment, antistatism and violence. Appearing in the region in the
1980s and 1990s were some of the most notorious "hate radicals" of our
time: militia groups, survivalists, Identity Christians, secessionists,
white supremacists and others.
Some simply hated the federal government, like Randy Weaver of Ruby
Ridge, Idaho, a survivalist whose wife and child died when their
compound was fired upon by FBI agents attempting to arrest him on gun
charges. "Whether we live or whether we die," Weaver said, "we will not
obey this lawless government."
Other groups, like the Aryan Nation, with headquarters in Hayden
Lake, Idaho, actively planned to rid the United States of African
Americans, Jews, and other "non-Aryan" peoples. A few carried out their
plans, murdering Jewish radio host Alan Berg in Denver, the Goldmark
family in Seattle, an African American state trooper in Arkansas, Fish
and Wildlife officials and FBI agents in Wyoming, North Dakota and
Montana, and more than 160 federal employees and their children in
Oklahoma City.
There is no evidence that Palin was ever affiliated with
white-supremacist groups during her years in Idaho or at home in
Alaska. On the other hand, the beliefs of ultraconservative,
evangelical churches like her family's come dangerously close to those
of the Christian Identity movement of those years. Likewise, Palin's
husband was a member of a political party whose members favored
secession for Alaska, suggesting an affiliation with radical
antistatism.
Perhaps somewhere on the record, Palin has publicly condemned the
radical politics of her region. But it is hard to know where she stands
on issues of race, equality and diversity. Thus it is high time to
review the cultural ideals and models of the radical rurals from the
Great White Northwest and find out for sure where Gov. Palin stands.
Powered by ScribeFire.
Powered by ScribeFire.
Another quiz, with a tip of the petal to BlackFive:
81% John McCain
77% Fred Thompson
76% Mitt Romney
75% Mike Huckabee
72% Tom Tancredo
65% Ron Paul
55% Rudy Giuliani
46% Bill Richardson
36% Chris Dodd
34% Hillary Clinton
33% John Edwards
32% Barack Obama
23% Joe Biden
22% Mike Gravel
16% Dennis Kucinich
2008 Presidential Candidate Matching Quiz
Who's Your Candidate?
This is a really cool quiz, and quite accurate, at least in my case.
I have a couple of ringers. I don't approve of a federal Constitutional amendment defining marriage; I believe that's a state's prerogative.
| Duncan Hunter Score: 47 | Agree Iraq Immigration Taxes Stem-Cell Research Health Care Abortion Energy Death Penalty Gun Control | Disagree Social Security Line-Item Veto Marriage Environment Education | |
| Mitt Romney Score: 47 | Agree Iraq Immigration Taxes Health Care Abortion Social Security Energy Death Penalty Education | Disagree Stem-Cell Research Line-Item Veto Marriage Gun Control Environment | |
-- Take the Quiz! -- | |||