Thursday, October 30, 2008

McCain mailer to PA tries to cause Clinton/Obama split


http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2008/10/30/gop-mailer-mccain-is-inhe_n_139447.html

McCain sent a mailer around PA about Clinton's 18 million votes and how she did a lot for women, and how he will do a lot for women too if elected, attempting to steal Obama votes away from former Clinton supporters. Its disgusting, really.

McCain is not right to pick on HRC. She stands for the left, and she stands for it proudly because she knows its whats good and right in the world. To even compare Palin to her because they both wear skirts is quite frankly an insult. HRC is way smarter and more qualified than McPalin will ever be, and she fights for women more than Palin, who, remember, made rape victims pay for their own exams, ever will or can. Obama has had hard choices to make, and I respect that he didn't ask HRC to run on his ticket. My opinion, that HRC should have been on the top of the ticket, is known. However, she did what was in the best interest of the left and threw her support to Obama because seeing the liberal left lead the country is more important to her than her pride. I respect that and honor that humility it took after the primary to come out and support Obama.

"Pride cometh before the fall." Lets just see if we can make it one more week under the Christian right in America. I can't believe Obama is going to win the election until I see it to be true with my very own eyes. I continue to be grateful Obama is leading the left and am keeping my fingers crossed.

Tuesday, October 28, 2008

Many Republicans are for Obama!

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2008/10/24/mccain-adviser-endorses-o_n_137590.html

Joe McCain calls 911 about traffic!

Joe McCain was was stuck in traffic on October 21st in Alexandria, VA. Extremely upset by the traffic backup, the possible future president's brother decided he would call 911 to complain.

Here's how the first call went:
Operator: 911 state your emergency
Caller: Well, it's not an emergency but do you know why on one side at the damn drawbridge of 95, traffic is stopped for 15 minutes and yet traffic's coming the other way?
Operator: Sir, are you calling 911 to complain about traffic? (pause)
Caller: "Fuck you." (caller hangs up)

So then, the 911 Operator, apparently a bit confused and bothered that someone would call an emergency number to complain about traffic, called back the number that placed the 911 call.
And instead of an answer, got his voicemail instead.
McCain's voicemail said, "Hi this is Joe McCain I can't take this message now because I'm involved in a very (inaudible) important political project… I hope on Nov. 4th we have elected John."

After receiving the message on his phone, an even more upset McCain called 911 again to bitch. That conversation went as follows:

Caller: Somebody gave me this riot act about the violation of police.
Operator: Did you just call 911 in reference to this?
Caller: Yeah.
Operator: 911 is to be used for emergencies only, not just because you're sitting in traffic.

The McCain campaign refused to comment. Nice!

Even Alaskans are for Obama!

The top newspaper in the home state of Republican vice-presidential candidate Sarah Palin has endorsed Democratic candidate Barack Obama for president.
Alaska's Anchorage Daily News, said governor Mrs Palin was "too risky" to be one step away from the presidency.
In an editorial it says her nomination "captivated" Alaskans but that the focus should be on John McCain.
The paper has a liberal record and backed the Democratic candidate in the last three presidential elections.
It described Mr McCain as the "wrong choice".
'Stumbled badly'
The newspaper, which has a larger circulation than any other in the state, said many Alaskans were "proud to see their governor, and their state, so prominent on the national stage".
It also described Mrs Palin as a "force to be reckoned with".
"Passionate, charismatic and indefatigable, she draws huge crowds and sows excitement in her wake," the editorial reads.
However, it says that Republican presidential candidate John McCain has "stumbled and fumbled badly" in dealing with the economic crisis.
"[John McCain] embraces the extreme Republican orthodoxy he once resisted and cynically asks Americans to buy for another four years", it says.
By contrast, the Daily News suggests, Mr Obama "brings far more promise to the office".
It says: "In a time of grave economic crisis, he displays thoughtful analysis, enlists wise counsel and operates with a cool, steady hand."
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/us_elections_2008/7692731.stm

Saturday, October 25, 2008

Response to 1906 San Francisco Quake More Effective than Response to Katraina

Today the History Channel did a segment about the aftermath of the 1906 San Francisco earthquake. In addition to the damage to the buildings brought about by the quake and aftershocks, there were fires burning for 3 days that decimated over 50 blocks of the city. Many people lost their homes, and set up impromptu tents like the ones in the pic.
(If you want to read about the details of the aftermath, please see the links below.)
The death total has been estimated between 300 and 500 officially, but since the individual names of the people who passed away in the quake or the fires have not been recorded by the city officials, leaving many unanswered questions. A lot of the historians that talk about the quake seem to think that many more people than 400 died, likely at least 1000. No one appears to know for sure.

The donations for assistance and rebuilding efforts totaled $10 million in 1906 US dollars. My historical currency calculator says that $10 in 1906 dollars is today $244 in 2008 dollars, although I am not sure if that takes purchasing power into consideration, or inflation only. So, $244,000,000, or a quarter billion, dollars was certainly generous to the people in San Francisco.
Since food was not coming into the city and many residents didn't have the means to feed themselves as they did prior to the disaster, the Federal gov't set up a food station where people who needed meals could come enjoy for free. The line stretched for blocks. The private sector was also very useful. Women from as far away as Utah put freshly baked loaves of bread onto trains going to San Francisco. One reason there are so many pics of the damage is because Kodak was selling a popular camera in 1905 that a lot of people possessed, and used to record the many scenes.

The tent cities were useful in helping people who had lost their homes yet wanted to stay in town. Building codes were adjusted to more closely resemble their modern state during the rebuilding process to acknowledge the possibility of future quakes. The city is on the San Andreas fault, and the possibility of the Golden Gate Bridge being toppled by quake higher than 8 on the Richter scale exists today. One of the things that caught my attention was that after the quake, the Southern Pacific Railroad company transported 300K people into and out of the city for 9 post quake days FOR FREE. The citizens of San Francisco helped each other as best they could, the Federal gov't stepped up, the private sector provided greatly needed aid, and Southern Pacific selflessly transported people and cargo in a time of crisis without mandating payment.

Why was such a response, relatively orderly, done at at time where telephones aren't a given the way they are now, not possible after Hurricane Katrina? Why was there not Federal government camps set up with food & meds for the people in need? The FEMA people/ Feds had to know that the trucks that normally brought food into the city wouldn't be doing so with the town underwater, and those who stayed behind with a home under water might need food to eat?

The private sector did assist after Katrina, and my remarks are not aimed at the thousands of people that traveled to New Orleans on their own dime to help those in need. I am very proud of those Americans, as I am of the additional thousands unable to travel who selflessly donated money and supplies. My digs, as usual, are directed right at the Bush admin for the failure of the post Katrina assistance that was so badly needed in New Orleans. Reviewing the national response to the San Francisco quake & aftermath in 1906 reminds me of how disasters SHOULD be responded to. Given the gap in technology between 1906 and 2006, I am very impressed with the efforts after the quake and disappointed by those following Katrina. In my opinion, part of the job of the Federal gov't is to attend to those effected by natural disasters, part of why we all pay taxes, in an efficient and effective way. Again, I do not understand why the Bush administration failed so miserably in responding to Katrina, and why nothing has been done to prevent such a poor federal reaction from happening again. Thoughts? Responses?
http://www.history.com/this-day-in-history.do?action=Article&id=4493
http://www.sfgate.com/greatquake/
http://strangemaps.wordpress.com/2007/08/05/161-map-of-the-san-francisco-quake-and-fire-1906/
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1906_San_Francisco_earthquake

Wednesday, October 22, 2008

What Is Wrong With This Country

http://www.nytimes.com/2008/10/22/nyregion/22cops.html

Its is horrible that Raul Nunez felt so scared that he would be deported that he acted out in this way. The 2006 laws that make small infractions deportable have to be reversed. Its creating incidents like this. Also, the article doesn't explain why the police assumed Mr. Nunez couldn't be a student with the student metrocard. So what if a student that he knows lent it to him? Its still not "turnstile jumping," as he did pay, just an unauthorized reduced rate.

Sunday, October 19, 2008

First cold evening

Temps are supposed to be in the 40s tonight east of the Mississippi and north of the Mason-Dickson line, and so tonight will be the first night many will turn on their heat. One thing that the CNBC talking heads spout repeatedly is that the reduction in the price of crude from $147 this summer to $70 this past week is some kind of "stimulus" to the American consumer. I don't know too many people who re did their family budgets this summer expecting to pay $147 for crude and the equivalents for refined products. With crude at $147, wholesale heating oil was $4.20 a gallon, roughly the same price as retail gasoline in the state of NJ. Last week, heating oil sold for about $2.40 on the commodity exchanges, so retail heating oil is likely to be around $3/gallon, and over the weekend I saw gasoline at $2.95 for regular in NJ.
To me, that is expensive still. From what I have read, filling up a tank of 250 gallons of heating oil costs about $750 and lasts 2 to 3 months, depending on use & temps, in a single family home. Given that wages haven't increased in the past 8 years for many middle income people, that $750 is likely to strain many budgets. The price of nat gas, for consumers, is likely to be $12-$14/mcf this winter, with the cost of heating a home with nat gas for the winter averaging $1000-$1200 for a single family home, again, depending on temps and usage. Better than paying for oil, but not cheap.
The price of energy is the single long term issue that America has to deal with. Obama said exactly that at the third debate. While the price of oil is down, downside demand destruction won't last forever. People can only drive less so much, and come heating time, unless the winter is unusually mild (which is not predicted) homes will likely be kept warm. I expect prices for energy to stabilize soon. The emerging markets are cooling, however, they do not know cheap oil the way America does, and so at a certain price oil is cheap enough again to encourage demand. If the American consumer thinks that $147 for crude is a fluke, he or she is sadly mistaken. I hope that people remain vocal about the large parts of their budgets energy consumes, and remain vigilant that we as a nation need to take steps to secure an energy future. Any kind will do. This is as important to the election as any other issue, and I hope its something that people take with them when they mark their ballots in November.

Colin Powell to vote for Obama!

Colin Powell's interview on "Meet The Press" on NBC with Tom Brokaw in which he illustrates his support for Obama. His reasons, as he explains them:
1. He knows both candidates well, both are qualified
2. Both are dedicated Americans
3. Over the past few years, the Republican party has moved too far to the right for him
4. McCain is unsure on economics, and when dealing with the nation's economic crisis, seems to have a new strategy each day.
5. Choice of Palin, who is not ready to be President, says a lot about McCain's judgement
6. Obama is an intellectual and his judgment is steady
7. The McCain campaign is divisive, focusing on Bill Ayers, not something that effects Americans, the focus is very small and limited, goes too far with Bill Ayers focus
8. Obama is concerned with all American values: big city, small city, small town; not just small towns have values, crossing lines: ethnic, generational, etc.
9. Gov Palin has indicated a further right wing shift of the Republican party. The Republican party says "Obama is a Muslim. No, he is a Christian. But what if Obama is a Muslim? That's not America. There is nothing wrong with being a Muslim. "

10. Got to stop polarizing ourselves, and McCain's campaign is too polarizing
11. Obama reaches all across America, has style and substance, transformational figure, inclusive to all people.
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/3032608

Face the Nation on CBS

Republicans are treading in deep water and drowning!
http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2008/10/19/ftn/main4531219.shtml

Opinion Piece from Maureen Dowd

http://www.nytimes.com/2008/10/19/opinion/19dowd.html?em

Obama Campaign Raises $150M in September!

Obama campaign raised $150M in the month of September, 2008!!
This record breaks the previous record, set in August, 2008 of $66M! A majority of the donations were small dollar donors, which is how most people think campaigns should be financed. Small donor contributions (people giving less than $200) often do not expect anything in return from the candidate, helping to break the cycle of corporations giving large donations and then expecting favorable legislation in return.

Colon Powell to vote Obama!


Retired Army General and former Secretary of State Colon Powell told Tom Brokaw this morning that he will vote for Barak Obama. Reasons include:

1. McCain campaign too polarizing
2. Choice of Palin questions McCain's judgment
3. McCain campaign's attempts to tie Obama to Vietnam protester Bill Ayers is inappropriate

Sunday, October 12, 2008

CBS's Sunday Morning Segment on Race

This morning on CBS's Sunday Morning news show, Bill Whitaker did a segment on Obama and race. The segment did a minor historical comparison about the 1982 Governor of California Bradley that lost the election despite a strong lead in the polls, the so called "Bradley effect" suggesting that voters are secretly biased against minorities. (link at the bottom)

Personally, I felt this segment missed the point. The point that Bush appointed blacks to high level positions doesn't mean that he cares about the black community. I hope this picture of people post Hurricane Katrina outside of the Convention Center in New Orleans suffering is an accurate illustration about how Bush concerns himself with the urban poor. After all, while these people were suffering, Bush was celebrating John McCain's birthday with him, ironically enough, instead of doing his job.
Obama is the child of a white woman and black man. For his parents to be together and having children was a breakthrough in the late 1950s and early 1960s. To me, what Obama represents about race is America at its best, working through difficulties and learning to love each other. In relation to the election, Obama was able to take on and defeat Hillary Clinton in the primary despite all of the Clinton's connections and powerful political experience. Obama did this by going to the heart of the matter- Americans are hurting in the current political and economic conditions and want something different- change. In defeating Clinton, Obama stood for what is possible when America is at its best, a politician striking a chord with the electorate over issues that matter most. Obama is just as American as anyone else who is not a Native American Indian. Both of his parents came here at some point from somewhere else. What Obama has accomplished in his life, Harvard, Illinois Senator, U.S. Senator, is what is important about his background, not what color his skin is. What matters is what his service to the country can do for us, not the race of his parents. In my opinion, focusing on Obama's race is a step backwards, not forwards.

Republicans Are Disgusting

From the party that claims the Democrats "tax and spend" have done what I call "borrow and spend" since Reagan. On Face the Nation this morning, host Bob Schieffer was talking to Republican Senator Lindsey Graham from South Carolina about the election. Now, of course, Graham starts talking about how now is the time to cut investor's taxes, dividend, capital gains, etc, and how Obama wants to raise those taxes and how horrible that would be. To him I say, "STOP DEFICIT SPENDING!" If you want to spend, you have to tax. The future of our children shouldn't be compromised because the Republicans WILL NOT RAISE TAXES, EVER.
The Republicans want to wage wars on credit. The Republicans want to borrow and hope that the American people don't care. McCain wants individuals to be taxed on the health care premiums paid for by their employers. WTF? These people cannot be trusted. They have not collectively admitted that their policies over the past 8 years have miserably failed. What pisses me off the most about Graham's comments is that WALL STREET JUST GOT $700B in BAILOUT MONEY FROM THE TAXPAYER yet of course, investor related taxes can't rise AT ALL, even to help pay for the $700B bailout. Of course, the rich should have their liabilities paid for by everyone else. That is how the right presents their policies.

McCain has admitted that he doesn't understand the economy. Prior to the shit hitting the fan he was saying that the American economy was "fundamentally sound" and then banks and brokerages failed. He doesn't know what to do to fix our country. Yet my issue isn't with just McCain. My issue is with the right and their ridiculous positions on this crap. Instead of admitting that his party, the Republicans, wrecked our country with their borrowing and spending on a war that was based on lies, violated Americans' 4th Amendment rights with the NSA spying, deregulated our economy so industry was free to loot enterprises and pay themselves handsomely for their trouble while the middle class worked harder for the same money that bought less goods, all Lindsey Graham does is fear monger. That is his only card left to play, that what Obama MIGHT do regarding taxes MIGHT be bad for someone somewhere. Guess what, he is right. Obama might do something bad for someone somewhere. Yet, what Bush and the legislature has done has been bad for A LOT of someones and until Graham admits that, I don't want to hear his bullshit on taxes. Borrow and spend is NOT better than tax and spend. If you want to defend the "homeland" with your military adventures, tax. Don't mortgage the futures of unborn Americans with huge borrowing to finance bullshit activities without accountability.
I have one thing to say to you, Lindsey Graham: TAKE RESPONSIBILITY FOR YOUR FAILED POLICIES BEFORE YOU SPECULATE ABOUT OBAMA'S POLICIES AND HOW THEY MIGHT BE BAD.
http://www.cbsnews.com/sections/opinion/schieffer/main500158.shtml
http://www.cbsnews.com/sections/ftn/main3460.shtml
(The links for this week from Face The Nation aren't up yet, these are the links from last week.)
McCain is swimming an uphill battle and is getting desperate. Thankfully, American know they have worked harder for less purchasing power, and don't care what the Republicans say at this point. They know they care mainly about the rich. Obama wants to help all, as fairly as he can, not just helping the rich get richer.

Tuesday, October 7, 2008

One can dream

A US Army brigade has been assigned to the "Homeland"

http://www.armytimes.com/news/2008/09/army_homeland_090708w/
Read first article, then read this one:
Selections:

..."beginning Oct. 1 for 12 months, the [1st Brigade Combat Team of the 3rd Infantry Division] will be under the day-to-day control of U.S. Army North" -- "the first time an active unit has been given a dedicated assignment to NorthCom, a joint command established in 2002 to provide command and control for federal homeland defense efforts and coordinate defense support of civil authorities"

They may be called upon to help with civil unrest and crowd control or to deal with potentially horrific scenarios such as massive poisoning and chaos in response to a chemical, biological, radiological, nuclear or high-yield explosive, or CBRNE, attack. . . .

"For more than 100 years -- since the end of the Civil War -- deployment of the U.S. military inside the U.S. has been prohibited under The Posse Comitatus Act (the only exceptions being that the National Guard and Coast Guard are exempted, and use of the military on an emergency ad hoc basis is permitted, such as what happened after Hurricane Katrina). Though there have been some erosions of this prohibition over the last several decades (most perniciously to allow the use of the military to work with law enforcement agencies in the "War on Drugs"), the bright line ban on using the U.S. military as a standing law enforcement force inside the U.S. has been more or less honored -- until now. And as the Army Times notes, once this particular brigade completes its one-year assignment, "expectations are that another, as yet unnamed, active-duty brigade will take over and that the mission will be a permanent one."

The Defense Authorization Act of 2006, passed on Sept. 30, empowers President George W. Bush to impose martial law in the event of a terrorist "incident," if he or other federal officials perceive a shortfall of "public order," or even in response to antiwar protests that get unruly as a result of government provocations. . . .

It only took a few paragraphs in a $500 billion, 591-page bill to raze one of the most important limits on federal power. Congress passed the Insurrection Act in 1807 to severely restrict the president's ability to deploy the military within the United States. The Posse Comitatus Act of 1878 tightened these restrictions, imposing a two-year prison sentence on anyone who used the military within the U.S. without the express permission of Congress. But there is a loophole: Posse Comitatus is waived if the president invokes the Insurrection Act.

Section 1076 of the John Warner National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2007 changed the name of the key provision in the statute book from "Insurrection Act" to "Enforcement of the Laws to Restore Public Order Act." The Insurrection Act of 1807 stated that the president could deploy troops within the United States only "to suppress, in a State, any insurrection, domestic violence, unlawful combination, or conspiracy." The new law expands the list to include “natural disaster, epidemic, or other serious public health emergency, terrorist attack or incident, or other condition" -- and such "condition" is not defined or limited. . . .
The story of how Section 1076 became law vivifies how expanding government power is almost always the correct answer in Washington. Some people have claimed the provision was slipped into the bill in the middle of the night. In reality, the administration clearly signaled its intent and almost no one in the media or Congress tried to stop it . . . .
Section 1076 was supported by both conservatives and liberals. Sen. Carl Levin (D-Mich.), the ranking Democratic member on the Senate Armed Services Committee, co-wrote the provision along with committee chairman Sen. John Warner (R-Va.). Sen. Ted Kennedy openly endorsed it, and Rep. Duncan Hunter (R-Calif.), then-chairman of the House Armed Services Committee, was an avid proponent. . . .
Sen. Patrick Leahy (D-Vt.), the ranking Democrat on the Senate Judiciary Committee, warned on Sept. 19 that "we certainly do not need to make it easier for Presidents to declare martial law," but his alarm got no response. Ten days later, he commented in the Congressional Record: "Using the military for law enforcement goes against one of the founding tenets of our democracy." Leahy further condemned the process, declaring that it "was just slipped in the defense bill as a rider with little study. Other congressional committees with jurisdiction over these matters had no chance to comment, let alone hold hearings on, these proposals."

Military dictatorship, anyone?

Part of my issue with this is how similar the police have become to the military, which is why law enforcement is surely capable for "crowd control" or whatever. What law enforcement is not capable of is assisting with disasters like Katrina. That job should go to the national guard.


Bush has stepped on Democratic protections in place over 100 years in his quest to make America as far to the right as Nazi Germany. From the treatment of immigrants in ICE custody to this, I am honestly ashamed of what America has become. While 9/11 was a true tragedy by any metric, the answer is not to throw away our Democratic protections and become as extreme as those in the middle east wanting to kill us. I am very disappointed in Ted Kennedy for going along with this without asking questions. He must have misunderstood what Bush had in mind.

Monday, October 6, 2008

Make Believe Maverick

This posting is in response to Tim Dickenson's piece, Make Believe Maverick on Rolling Stone.com. (Link below)
There are some parts of it that I thought were appropriate to discuss: other members of his own party failing to endorse his bid. McCain deals with that by spinning himself as a "neocon" or whatever, but according to the article McCain is as far to the right as Bush and his cronies. My gut feeling is that if McCain wanted to pander to the center, he would have asked Lieberman to run with him.
In some ways McCain is classically to the right: wealthy guy, looks out for the rich and corporate America, so long as they contribute to his campaigns. Flip flops on the stuff that matters most: offshore drilling, immigration, and Iraq.
Given the complicated host of problems the new President will face in January, credit crisis, housing mess, Iraq war, immigration, energy, and what will likely be by then a recession, what we need is a politician elected President with the courage to do what is right, regardless of the initial popularity of the policies.
When I ask myself how people become Republicans, I come back to one idea. True right wingers only know wealth, and so they feel it is the job of government to assist them in protecting that wealth. The right is not without support for this position. The Federalists stated that the job of government is to protect land owners from non landowners, so there is some merit to the right's position. The right, being the present day landowners, want to be free from taxes and other irrelevant regulations on their ability to grow said wealth. They reject the role of government that the left sees, to utilize the power of government to the economic advancement of all. The left is proud of social security and medicare, welfare and food stamps. The left is glad that the rich pay taxes to help the minimum wage workers that the corporations fail to pay a living wage afford a roof over their heads and health care. While the right's traditional stance has been that true economic expansion raises living standards for all, what we have seen over the past 8 years has been that along with deregulation, industries expanding economically will keep profits close and raise their own wages rather than share the increases in wealth with the middle class. (What I am citing here is the average increases in wages and productivity over the past 8 years, not one specific industry.) Again, this is due in part to the anti-union position of the right and corporate America, however the result has been the same: those at the top earning more and more while those in the middle and bottom work harder for the same money. Hey, its great if you are the guy at the top, yet not so great if you are the guy in the middle or bottom.
I believe in my heart that most members of the right have no concept of the fear that the poor has regarding their inability to provide, either for themselves, their families, or both. This is why I couldn't fathom back in 2004 when I heard on 97.1 an ad for "Blacks for Bush." I remember thinking, they must be very rich and with absolutely no ties to their communities in which they grew up. Also, this idea of Latinos for the Republicans. Supposedly in Florida there are right wing Latinos who fled communist Cuba that are against anything leftist, yet still, could they all be so rich that they require no public assistance whatsoever?
I have heard a Republican say they are against the "free lunch" many people think that they deserve. I think there is a difference between a "free lunch," being a true handout from the government to people whether they need it or not, and a "free lunch" being food stamps to someone who is starving and needs food to eat. Given the lack of wage growth for the poor, lower class, and middle class over the past 8 years, many people that were middle class 9 years ago may today be poor, and given the rising costs of food, fuel, real estate, education, insurance, and health care over the past 8 years may need said government assistance. The crisis on Wall Street is resulting in the evaporation of wealth, so whatever gains were made under Bush must surely be gone now. I fear that under Obama the needs of the social welfare state will be so large that the war will be stopped and taxes will be raised just to help take care of the "Bush refugees." These people will be former CEOs, high level bond traders, former home building executives, and many others that used to have wealth and now need public assistance. Lets hope McCain doesn't get elected and still think the job of the President is to make the rich richer and deregulate industry. I don't think the American consumer can take too many more hits.

SNL spoof

Thursday, October 2, 2008

Diddy Video

Selections From Palin's Interviews

Some selections from the interviews posted below:

1. Believes evolution should be taught in schools. When asked by Couric if it should be one of many choices, Palin didn't answer specifically. Palin said she thinks evolution should be taught in science classes, and that science is science, yet God did have a hand in the creation of earth.
2. When asked if she considers herself a feminist, (again by Couric) she said yes, that as a little girl the same things were expected out of her as the boys. There was a little cheerleading for equality, but in what way, wasn't mentioned.
3. Abortion: She said she would "counsel to choose life" even in the case of rape and incest, but that wouldn't ever put anyone in jail for having an abortion. Was vague about the morning after pill, when asked twice about it, said, "Wouldn't choose to participate in that kind of contraception, life begins at conception," and that no one seems to disagree with," life beginning at conception."
4. When asked by Couric what newspapers she reads, and Couric asked twice, Palin didn't name one publication, and said, "All of them" many times. She couldn't name one thing that she reads? Is that because they are far to the right and she doesn't want to be associated with that, or because she DOESN'T READ? Could that be? She doesn't read?

A Good Laugh

Pelosi lets down the left





Pelosi let us down!

Note: Long Interview" Contains 2 clips Posted Below

The "Long Interview" clip has both the abortion clip, directly below, and the newspaper clip, 2 below included in the long interview. So, to avoid seeing anything twice, watch the "Long Interview" and then 3 below it, "Palin doesn't know what is going on" and that will avoid seeing anything twice.

Long Interview

Can You Believe it?

Another good one