Sep 11 2008

Seven years ago

Posted by Len on Thursday at 10:36 am in Politics, Republicans

Bush marks Sept. 11 with moment of silence

WASHINGTON (AP) - President Bush said Thursday that history will look back at America’s response to the terror attacks of Sept. 11, 2001 and conclude that “we did not tire, we did not falter and we did not fail.”

We went shopping.

We spent a trillion dollars and thousands of lives invading a country that had nothing to with the terror attacks. We have allowed the people who attacked us to regroup and establish a base in the mountains of Pakistan and Afghanistan from which they are plotting new attacks against us.

We still haven’t caught the guy responsible.

We have an old man running for president who wants to continue the same policies.

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Yep, we’ve come a long way since that awful, awful day.

Please take a moment to remember in a manner which you deem fitting.

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7 Comments

Sep 02 2008

RNC resumes following big wind

Posted by Len on Tuesday at 12:01 pm in Democrats, Election 2008, Politics

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Though the Republicans dodged the bullet of having George W. Bush speak at their convention in prime time, he will still be speaking. Note that he is scheduled for 9:30 p.m. ET tonight. That’s 30 minutes before the major broadcast networks will begin their one hour coverage of the convention. Folks watching cable will still get to witness the fiasco, though.

Tonight will also feature “television actor” Fred Thompson and disgruntled former Democrat Joe Lieberman. The man who was supposed to deliver the keynote address tonight, America’s mayor Rudolph Giuliani, has had his appearance pushed off to some indeterminate night and time.

GOP decides to resume convention

ST. PAUL, Minnesota (CNN) — The Republican National Convention, cut back Monday because of Hurricane Gustav’s arrival on the U.S. Gulf Coast, will resume a full schedule Tuesday, convention officials said.

President Bush, who was scheduled to speak Monday, will deliver his address via satellite at 9:30 p.m. ET Tuesday, officials said.

Tuesday’s theme will be “Who is John McCain,” officials said.

Former Tennessee Sen. Fred Thompson, who ran in the early GOP 2008 presidential primaries, and Connecticut Sen. Joe Lieberman, the Democrat’s 2000 vice presidential nominee, will deliver primetime speeches after President Bush.

Former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani will have a speaking role at the Republican National Convention, a GOP official told CNN Tuesday.

Giuliani was scheduled to deliver the keynote address Tuesday, but Hurricane Gustav forced Republicans to alter the program. Giuliani will speak later in the week.

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Update: The broadcast networks may air Mr. Bush’s speech tonight after all. The New York Times is reporting that the Republicans, feeling that they lost out last night (their own doing, by the way), are asking the networks for additional time tonight. Will NBC, ABC, CBS and FOX break into their programming to bring you additional coverage of the RNC? We shall see.

It’s kind of fun to watch the Republicans squirming with their backs against the wall like this, isn’t it? They have earned and well deserve everything that’s coming to them.

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Aug 15 2008

Quote of the day

Posted by Len on Friday at 5:34 pm in Politics, Republicans

“Bullying and intimidation are not acceptable ways to conduct foreign policy in the 21st century.” — Republican George W. Bush, August 15, 2008.

How can you not smell the hypocrisy?

Bombing of Baghdad, March, 2003
Bombing of Baghdad, March, 2003

Bonus Quote of the Day:

“Gotta keep your sense of humor.” — Republican Johnny McCain responding to a question about Jerry Corsi’s smut book.

Second Bonus Quote of the Day:

“In the 21st century nations don’t invade other nations.” — Republican Johnny McCain speaking to reporters of the situation in Georgia.

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Gotta keep your sense of humor.

4 Comments

Aug 14 2008

Do as I say…

Posted by Len on Thursday at 2:43 pm in Politics, Republicans

… not as I did.

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4 Comments

Jul 16 2008

Trouble remembering

Posted by Len on Wednesday at 5:47 pm in Election 2008, Politics, Republicans

George W. Bush, during his press conference yesterday, said this:

“I’m 62, I’m having trouble remembering a lot of things.”

Not very helpful for Johnny McCain, who will turn 72 next month (on August 29, the day after the Democratic National Convention ends and three days before the Republican National Convention begins)…

John McCain: 'I cannot believe George said that!'
John McCain: 'I cannot believe George said that!'

Is it any wonder that McCain’s people would rather that Mr. Bush just stay home?

1 Comment

Jul 02 2008

Prezidenting is hard work

Posted by Len on Wednesday at 4:36 pm in Humor, Politics, Republicans

Have you ever seen anybody concentrate quite so hard on something quite so simple?

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Story here.

P.S. I really hope that was not the infamous “terrorist fist jab.”

(h/t: For Your Entertainment)

8 Comments

Jul 02 2008

Bushies take over McCain campaign

Posted by Len on Wednesday at 3:36 pm in Election 2008, Politics, Republicans

If there was ever any doubt in anybody’s mind that Johnny McCain is running for George W. Bush’s third term, it should be gone now…

McCain Orders Shake-Up of His Campaign

Steve Schmidt
Steve Schmidt

WASHINGTON — Senator John McCain’s presidential campaign has gone through its second shake-up in a year as Mr. McCain, responding to Republican concerns that his candidacy was faltering, put Steve Schmidt in charge of day-to-day operations and abandoned an effort to have the campaign run by 11 regional managers, the senator’s aides said Wednesday.

Mr. Schmidt is a veteran of President Bush’s 2004 re-election campaign and he worked closely with Karl Rove, who was Mr. Bush’s political adviser. His installation at Mr. McCain’s headquarters sharply diminished the responsibilities of Rick Davis, who has been Mr. McCain’s campaign manager since the last shake-up nearly a year ago.

Mr. McCain’s advisers said that Mr. Davis would continue to hold the position of campaign manager, but that Mr. Schmidt had taken over every major operation where Mr. McCain has shown signs of struggling: communications, scheduling and basic political strategy.

The shift was approved by Mr. McCain after several aides, including Mr. Schmidt, warned him about 10 days ago that he was in danger of losing the presidential election unless he revamped his campaign operation, according to two officials close to the campaign.[..]

Mr. Schmidt’s elevation is the latest sign of increasing influence of veterans of Mr. Rove’s campaign efforts in the McCain operation. Nicolle Wallace, who was communications director for Mr. Bush in the 2004 campaign and in his White House, has joined the campaign as a senior adviser, and will travel with Mr. McCain every other week. Greg Jenkins, another veteran of Mr. Rove’s operation, has joined the McCain communications operation.

Mr. Jenkins is a former Fox News producer and a director of Mr. Bush’s presidential advance team that set up political events.

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Jun 13 2008

Bush remarks on Russert death

Posted by Len on Friday at 9:33 pm in Politics

Here are George W. Bush’s remarks today concerning the death of Tim Russert:

Laura and I are deeply saddened by the sudden passing of Tim Russert. Those of us who knew and worked with Tim, his many friends, and the millions of Americans who loyally followed his career on the air will all miss him.

As the longest-serving host of the longest-running program in the history of television, he was an institution in both news and politics for more than two decades. Tim was a tough and hardworking newsman. He was always well-informed and thorough in his interviews. And he was as gregarious off the set as he was prepared on it.

Most important, Tim was a proud son and father, and Laura and I offer our deepest sympathies to his wife Maureen, his son Luke, and the entire Russert family. We will keep them in our prayers.

I have to ask this: Is there anyone who actually believes that these were extemporaneous remarks? Does anybody believe that Mr. Bush wrote them himself? Who thinks Mr. Bush actually knows what the word ‘gregarious’ means?

Don’t get me wrong… they were lovely remarks and I am sure they were appreciated by Mr. Russert’s friends and family. My congratulations to the Bush staff member who wrote them. To expect us to believe that George W. Bush actually came up with them on his own, however, is an insult to our collective intelligence.

It would have seemed more sincere had Mr. Bush come up with his own statement as Barack Obama did. (How nice will it be to have a president who is actually on speaking terms with the English language?)

We all, I think, have heard the news about Tim Russert. I’ve known Tim Russert since I first spoke at the convention in 2004. He’s somebody who, over time, I came to consider not only a journalist but a friend. There wasn’t a better interviewer in television, not a more thoughtful analyst of our politics, and he was also one of the finest men I knew. Somebody who cared about America, cared about the issues, cared about family. I am grief-stricken with the loss and my thoughts and prayers go out to his family. And I hope that, even though Tim is irreplaceable, that the standard that he set in his professional life and his family life are standards that we all carry with us in our own lives.

7 Comments

May 28 2008

McClellan finally comes clean

Posted by Len on Wednesday at 3:22 pm in Politics, Republicans

Too late…

Former press secretary’s book bashes Bush

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WASHINGTON (AP) - Former White House Press Secretary Scott McClellan writes in a new memoir that President Bush relied on an aggressive “political propaganda campaign” instead of the truth to sell the Iraq war, and that the decision to invade pushed Bush’s presidency “terribly off course.’

The Bush White House made “a decision to turn away from candor and honesty when those qualities were most needed” - a time when the nation was on the brink of war, McClellan writes in the book entitled “What Happened: Inside the Bush White House and Washington’s Culture of Deception.”

The way Bush managed the Iraq issue “almost guaranteed that the use of force would become the only feasible option.”

“In the permanent campaign era, it was all about manipulating sources of public opinion to the president’s advantage,” McClellan writes.[..]

McClellan called the Iraq war a “serious strategic blunder,” a surprisingly harsh assessment from the man who was at that time the loyal public voice of the White House who had followed Bush to Washington from Texas.

“The Iraq war was not necessary,” he concludes. “Waging an unnecessary war is a grave mistake.”

McClellan admits that some of his own words from the podium in the White House briefing room turned out to be “badly misguided.” But he says he was sincere at the time.

“When words I uttered, believing them to be true, were exposed as false, I was constrained by my duties and loyalty to the president and unable to comment,” he said. “But I promised reporters and the public that I would someday tell the whole story of what I knew.”

The former press secretary - the second of four so far in Bush’s presidency - explained his dramatic shift from loyal defender to fierce critic as a difficult act of personal contrition, a way, he wrote, to learn from his mistakes, be true to his Christian faith and become a better person.

“I fell far short of living up to the kind of public servant I wanted to be,” McClellan writes. He also blames the media whose questions he fielded, calling them “complicit enablers” in the White House campaign to manipulate public opinion toward the need for war.

McClellan said Bush loyalists will no doubt continue to think the administration’s decisions have been correct and its unpopularity undeserved. “I’ve become genuinely convinced otherwise,” he said.

The book is scheduled to go on sale June 1.

I’d have been impressed if he had come out with this in 2003 or even early 2004 when it might have done some good. As it is, it only appears that he is trying to save his own skin. He seems to think that, in some way, by writing this book his name will not be associated with the most corrupt and deceitful presidency and administration in American history.

Too late, Scotty. You should have spoken up sooner. What you write may come as a revelation to a few people, but most of us have been aware of the truth for quite a while now. We won’t be wasting our money on your sniveling attempt to save your own soul. Good luck with that, by the way.

P.S. Circle this date on your calendars, kids. Today I actually agreed with something Karl Rove said. That does not happen often.

“If he had these moral qualms, he should have spoken up about them.”

2 Comments

May 23 2008

Bush/McCain event canceled

Posted by Len on Friday at 9:19 pm in Election 2008, Politics, Republicans

This is choice…

Poor ticket sales, expected protests scuttle Bush-McCain fundraiser at Phoenix Convention Center

Bush / McCain
Bush / McCain

A Tuesday fundraiser headlined by President Bush for U.S. Sen. John McCain’s presidential campaign is being moved out of the Phoenix Convention Center.

Sources familiar with the situation said the Bush-McCain event was not selling enough tickets to fill the Convention Center space, and that there were concerns about more anti-war protesters showing up outside the venue than attending the fundraiser inside.

Another source said there were concerns about the media covering the event.

Bush’s Arizona fundraising effort for McCain is being moved to private residences in the Phoenix area. A White House official said the event was being moved because the McCain campaign prefers private fundraisers and it is Bush administration policy to have events in public venues open to the media. The White House official said to reconcile that the Tuesday event will be held at a private venue and not the Convention Center.

Convention Center personnel confirmed the event has been canceled at their venue.

Tickets to the event were to range from $1,000 to $25,000 for VIP treatment. Money was to go toward McCain’s presidential bid and a number of Republican Party organs.

Arizona is Johnny McCain’s home state! Let’s review… A fundraiser for the presumptive Republican nominee for the presidency of the United States with the sitting President of the United States had to be canceled in the presumptive nominee’s home state because of poor ticket sales. They could not sell enough tickets to fill the venue. Their were fears that there would be more protesters outside the venue than supporters inside.

From this week’s Friday Night Cartoons (click to enlarge):

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November 4 cannot get here quickly enough.

UPDATE: Isn’t it strange that this Associated Press story makes no mention of the above? Uh, tell me again, please, about the “liberal media.”

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