Wednesday, October 8, 2008

McCain gives an impressive performance, but must confront Obama on alternative fuels

McCain, aside from the obvious physical impediments placed on his body from 5 1/2 years of captivity at the hands of sadistic communists, came off as the elder statesman, the more presidential of the two candidates yesterday evening. True to form, his opponent retreated to tired, polished responses peppered by his trademark "uhhhhhh" throughout each sentence. The only candidate who offered anything the public hadn't heard before was McCain. At the risk of quoting an overused term, the Republican candidate lived up to his "Straight Talk" persona, managing to speak directly to the questioner and the American people at the same time. On the other hand, his opponent's responses could've come out of any given pep rally or campaign commercial from the past 3 months or so.

Meanwhile, McCain has continually been silent when his detractors mention the dishonest claim that he voted against alternative fuels 25 times in his Senate career. In the third debate, McCain cannot let this pass unchallenged as he and Palin have in their respective debates. The votes his opponent cites do include wind, solar, and geothermal energy, and those are all fine, albeit inefficient forms of alternative energy. However, within those same bills are subsidies for biofuels. Do not make the mistake of confusing these biofuels with those of Brazil, whose sugar cane crop is both efficient and sustainable and the net carbon output actually does make it a true alternative fuel. Instead, these were subsidies for corn ethanol, which is perhaps the least efficient source of ethanol known to man while also being just as hazardous to the environment as the coal and petrol it's supposed to replace.



The reason Obama and members of Congress on both sides of the aisle continue to pretend this is a legitimate alternative has everything to do with the politics as usual and nothing to do with "change" of any sort to the tacit acceptance of corrupt and immoral agribusiness in the United States. For fear of challenging the image of the down-home, small town values, plaid shirt-wearing, pickup truck-driving farmers of America, McCain has failed to come right out and say that corn ethanol is bad for America and corn subsidies are bad for the entire planet. In fact, the mom and pop farmer is as much a victim of agricultural policies perpetuated by Obama as an obese child in the South Bronx who has been fed high-fructose corn syrup from the earliest stages of his life to rural peasants in the developing world who can't keep up with the ballooning price of grain. Quite often it's large expansive corporate farms that buy up increasingly large tracts of land for corn production. The vast majority of that corn (nearly 75%) goes towards ethanol, high fructose corn syrup, and feed for cattle. Ethanol is a viable solution and it could potentially be used to power the entire nations's vehicles-if that ethanol comes from a source other than corn. McCain needs to elaborate this point and drive home the fact that he has a record of bipartisan action on climate change, but that does NOT include further entrenching this nation in dangerous corn subsidies. These subsidies help factory farms drive up food prices, feed us unhealthy cattle, and use their profits for disinformation campaigns for high-fructose corn syrup and lobbying efforts for a brand of ethanol whose carbon output is on par with any traditional fossil fuel.

While the McCain campaign seems resigned to the beating they ritually take from Obama on ties to oil companies, the facts demonstrate that neither candidate is owned by the oil lobby (try here, too). On the other hand, Obama and prominent Democrats are literally in the pocket of the ethanol industry.

Mr. McCain advocates eliminating the multibillion-dollar annual government subsidies that domestic ethanol has long enjoyed. As a free trade advocate, he also opposes the 54-cent-a-gallon tariff that the United States slaps on imports of ethanol made from sugar cane, which packs more of an energy punch than corn-based ethanol and is cheaper to produce.

“We made a series of mistakes by not adopting a sustainable energy policy, one of which is the subsidies for corn ethanol, which I warned in Iowa were going to destroy the market” and contribute to inflation, Mr. McCain said this month in an interview with a Brazilian newspaper, O Estado de São Paulo. “Besides, it is wrong,” he added, to tax Brazilian-made sugar cane ethanol, “which is much more efficient than corn ethanol.”

Mr. Obama, in contrast, favors the subsidies, some of which end up in the hands of the same oil companies he says should be subjected to a windfall profits tax. In the name of helping the United States build “energy independence,” he also supports the tariff, which some economists say may well be illegal under the World Trade Organization’s rules but which his advisers say is not.

Many economists, consumer advocates, environmental experts and tax groups have been critical of corn ethanol programs as a boondoggle that benefits agribusiness conglomerates more than small farmers.

[bold is my emphasis]

For the first time in years, the Republicans have a candidate who is pro-stem cell research, pro-environment, pro-evolution; in a word, pro-science. This is the opening McCain needs to portray Obama as anti-science, anti-progress, and xenophobic. Moreover, it is cynical pandering in its rawest form. The Arizona Senator should propose that we dive head-first into algae-ethanol research (The most efficient ethanol source on Earth), while lifting trade barriers, including those on sugar, as a means to revitalize the economy and open re-open the marketplace of ideas.



Meanwhile, McCain can propose constructing algae-ethanol facilities (which are impervious to the surrounding climate and produce a constant yield) in rust belt cities like Wilkes-Barre/Scranton, Detroit, Duluth, and Youngstown. It is imperative that McCain makes these facts known if he wants to seriously perpetuate his status as an independent reformer. That's putting country first and that's the kind of straight talk Obama lacks the courage to confront.

Sunday, October 5, 2008

Rod Dreher smacks it out of the park

Rod Dreher of the Dallas Morning News is consistently insightful, independent, and frank in spite of my personal disagreement with him on our current military engagements. His blueprints for Republican renaissance are detailed in his book Crunchy Cons. This should be required reading for anyone who has found themselves at odds with the theocratic and unshakably laissez-faire wing of the party that has sat firmly at the helm for almost a decade. The predicament that John McCain finds himself in follows a typical narrative of his career. McCain is no stranger to being underfunded, underpolled, and the underdog. Nevertheless, the next two weeks are do or die time, and if he is going to turn around his campaign, it must be done immediately. In his latest editorial, Dreher outlines what could be John McCain's last chance to save his campaign. The speech below is what John McCain must communicate to this country in order to turn the ship around.

My friends, I am neither young nor eloquent, handsome nor smooth. But I have lived a long life, much of it in service to America in war and in peace. And I have always stood for straight talk. There has been no time in our nation's recent history when the American people more needed to hear the plain truth from their leaders. A fundamental reason our country faces economic catastrophe is that we have built our lives around running from truths about the American way of life.

Washington has run from the truth. Wall Street has run from the truth. And if we're honest with ourselves, all of us have, in one way or another, run from the truth.

We have accepted the lie that we can live exactly as we want to live, with no concern for the consequences. We have taken the blessings of liberty and prosperity and turned them into a curse of debt slavery – bondage that will be visited on our children, and our children's children, if we don't change.

Everybody has a theory about how we got into this mess, and it's usually one that absolves them and their party from blame. My friends, I'm here to tell you that this crisis is the Republicans' fault. It's the Democrats' fault. It's the fault of every one of us who believed in the fairy tale of a free lunch.

It's time for all Americans to take responsibility for what we've done. It's time for all Americans to pull together to help our families, our neighbors and our country through hard times.

I will not lie to you and tell you that the road ahead will be easy. I will not insult you by giving you simple villains, simple heroes or simplistic solutions. As the song says, everybody wants to get to heaven, but nobody wants to die. My fellow Americans, all of us must sacrifice to endure the trials that history sends our way and to rebuild our nation on a solid foundation of honor, truth and plainspoken virtue.

I know something about sacrifice. And I know something about the way life can break your pride. I was a cocky Navy aviator who thought he was invulnerable. Then I was shot out of the sky and spent five years in prison. That experience did not kill me. It made me stronger. It taught me how much I loved my God, my family and my country – and what trials I could endure for the sake of that love.

I am a patriot. I believe we are a nation of patriots, of men and women who are ready and willing to put country first. But over the years, our leaders, Republican and Democratic, have asked us to do little more than to go shopping, to vote for them and to blame other people for what's wrong with America. Anything to keep us from facing the truth and changing our ways.

As your president, I will ask you to do hard things. I, too, will do hard things for the good of this great nation. Serious times call for serious leadership. In his first speech as prime minister, with his free nation facing the might of Nazi Germany, Winston Churchill refused to mislead the British people about the gravity of their situation. We remember today his words to them: "I have nothing to offer but blood, toil, tears and sweat."

Churchill did not give cheap optimism. He, too, had fought and suffered for his nation, both on the battlefield and in Parliament. He had known the joy of victory and the humiliation of defeat. What Churchill, from his incomparable experience, could offer his people was the gold standard of hope. Hope is the conviction that whatever suffering we must go through, goodness and right shall prevail.

Today, when I survey the gathering storm, I am certain that if we, the people, stand together without fear or favor, victory will be ours. I ask you to give me the privilege of leading this great nation in a time when heroes will be made, and all good men and women must come to the aid of their country.

Thank you, and God bless America.


If McCain can heed the inspiring words of Dreher and use them to fight back, he can chip away at the heavy favorite and beat the odds like he has so many times before.

Saturday, October 4, 2008

Feingold seeks limits on laptop searches

No agency of the federal government has better demonstrated the apathy and ineptitude of the present administration than the Transportation Security Administration. Theft, constitutional indifference, wasteful and unnecessary spending, unprofessionalism, and most importantly, less secure airports have defined the federal government's foray into airport security. In a time when nearly all corners of the military are being dangerously privatized, the only ground the federal government actually took from private companies has been a complete and abject failure.

Russ Feingold has put forth the first major challenge to the unbridled authority of the TSA.

Under a 29-page bill Mr. Feingold introduced on Friday, customs agents at airports and borders would need to document a "reasonable suspicion" before inspecting a computer or similar device carried by an American resident and could only hold on to the device for 24 hours before starting the process of seeking a warrant from a judge.


We shouldn't trust them with valuables in our baggage, why should we trust them with our private information, especially when they don't have probable cause. Kudos to Feingold. Let's hope this is the first of many moves to restrict the TSA's intrusive and ineffective methods.

Friday, October 3, 2008

CNN's Overreaction to isolated racism



Obama's supporters have been laying the ground work for several weeks now. If their guy doesn't win, get ready for the race card to be played like Ms. Pac Man at a NARAL convention. The above is a clip of a solitary individual who planted a misspelled sign the size of your average sheet of paper on his lawn. The contents? "OBAMA HALF-BREED MUSLIN". We've seen similar synthetic hysteria over the very racist, but inconsequential "Obama is my slave" t-shirts and the Obama waffles.

But what kind of reporter finds this newsworthy? Almost all network news has devolved to the point where the rap sheet of a celebrity gets equal billing with genocide on another continent. However, this is a special kind of story. It's often said that by reacting to Ann Coulter's latest unapologetically venomous soundbite, the media is giving her even more undeserved attention. Judging by the latest in a long line of false outrage to a remote village idiot's prejudice, the media has learned from its mistakes and is now using its own infrastructure to instill the notion that if McCain wins, it will not be the result of his decades of service to this country or peerless record of reform on a Rooseveltian scale, but because, through no fault of his own, a minority of a minority within his voting bloc falsely believes his opponent is a Muslim.

Wednesday, September 24, 2008

The truth about clean coal

September 24th was a bad day for Joe Biden. In less than 24 hours, he negated his own campaign's ads, claimed FDR was both president in 1929 and went on (chronologically impossible) television to lead America through it, and presented a schizophrenic position on coal energy. On coal, Biden said,

No coal plants here in America... Build them, if [The Chinese] are going to build them, over there. Make them clean.

[snip]
We’re not supporting clean coal.


Quick to jump on this new weakness, the McCain campaign formed the Coalition to Protect Coal Jobs. According to the campaign, the coalition
will spread the message about the importance of clean coal technology and the advantages of tapping the country's vast coal reserves. The group will also speak out to protect critical coal jobs when they come under attack from the most anti-American energy ticket in history.


Regardless of the impact of coal, this was a completely ridiculous move on Biden's part. Not only is he contradicting both he and Obama's position on clean coal, but this might bury the Dems in Pennsylvania, Ohio, and West Virginia; states Biden was brought on to deliver for his ticket.

The BBC offers a crash course in the technology.

However, clean coal has detractors who don't have a perpetually surprised look on their faces. Greenpeace is probably the most prominent in the movement against clean coal. They offer a 5-point manifesto against the technology.
1. Clean coal cannot deliver in time to avoid dangerous climate change

If time was a factor, then Greenpeace could not, in good conscience, support any of the renewable sources of energy traditionally supported by environmental groups. The inrastructure currently in place for coal extraction coupled with the vast domestic resources make clean coal far more conducive to the urgency of possible climate change.
2. Clean coal wastes energy

This is a legitimate grievance. However, like all new forms of technology, this is constantly being improved. Greenpeace is not concerned with wasted energy and its carbon impact for fuel cells or recycling plants
3. Storing carbon underground is risky

Carbon capture and storage (CCS) can reduce carbon emissions by up to 90%. Meanwhile, the technology of storing CO2 has gotten to a point where the threat of its leakage is virtually nonexistent. When the carbon emissions are almost eliminated and the risk is nearly irrelevant, it should be considered a viable technology and its storage is demonstrably safe.
4. Clean coal is expensive

This is a valid point. Clean coal, like all new sources of energy, is expensive. The same can be said for virtually all the sources of energy that Greenpeace and other more idealistic environmental groups extol. The advantage of clean coal is that significant infrastructure already exists for the extraction and production of coal.
5. Clean coal carries significant liability risks

There's no doubt that coal mining is at times a dangerous activity and there must be protections for the employees who put themselves at risk each time they enter a mine. However, it's biazarre to argue that by eliminating coal as an option is somehow helpful to them.

At the heart of it, Greenpeace's points are not environmentally-driven, they are economically-driven. They know that all of the immediate environmental risks associated with coal have been all but eliminated. Strip mining, for instance, is an ugly practice in which dynamite is used to literally detonate chunks of mountaintops in order to extract coal in the aftermath. But both candidates have voiced their opposition to this and other intrusive coal extraction methods.

Sunday, September 21, 2008

WHO reignited the culture war?

I would link a story, but I don't need to. Nearly all major news outlets have made the claim in one segment/article or another: Sarah Palin's nomination revived the culture war. First the major media outlets overplayed select aspects of Palin's record, then staged a tantrum that a "war" was taking shape when her supporters came to her defense. McCain is a moderate who never put much stock in the phony "conflict" that draft-dodging journalists and College Republicans have been propagating ever since Pat Buchanan choked out his last breath of relevance in at the Republican National Convention in 1992. For him, an war with actual elements of danger and death was quite enough. What makes this "culture war" so much fun for those who fight is that the only casualties are the reputations of public figures and no exercise of any kind is required. Unless you count the tired process of your average news cycle, but that's not the type of exercise I mean. Observe:



So, we can all agree that the guys who use the term culture war want to censor those they disagree with and shut them and their families off from dissenting opinions. For them, this is a war that is won by never seeing or hearing from your enemy.

With that unfortunate example of neoconservatives and paleoconservatives embracing out of the way, the question remains: Did Sarah Palin bring it back? I first began supporting Palin for VP in May of this year, and started this blog a week or so before the nomination. What brought me to this conclusion was not her stance on abortion or evolution, but her record as governor of Alaska. Indeed, one would be hard-pressed to find her religious views expressed anywhere if one searched articles pertaining to her in the Summer of 2008, as I did.

Instead, there were bountiful examples of a brash independent streak that had won her enemies on both sides of the aisle. According to Bloomberg News
Ms. Palin threatened to evict Exxon Mobil Corp., the world's biggest oil company, and partners BP PLC, Chevron Corp. and ConocoPhillips Co. from a state-owned gas field, winning their promise to increase Alaska's natural gas output 17 per cent.

This and other moves led conservatives to compare her to Hugo Chavez, and her policies to socialism. That was the Sarah Palin I supported and continue to support today. You wouldn't recognize it today, because of all the sensationalism the media has engaged in by pointing out her belief in God or that neither she nor her daughter chose infanticide, a fact she only chose to reveal when the media began suggesting she had faked her pregnancy while Bristol delivered Trig Palin. This is not to suggest that the media is liberally biased. I am wary of such a blanket statement, but it is obvious with every passing day that the media is simplistic and ruthless and is motivated by factoids, not facts, sound bites, not speeches, and profit, not informing. It is no wonder that they would seize upon isolated speech excerpts, trivial meetings and family issues to turn one of the few credible reformers left in this country into an extremist Christian who will lord over McCain the way Cheney was assumed to pull President Bush's strings. Anyone keeping score knows it was the sensationalists, not Palin, who reanimated the rotting corpse of the dishonest culture war.

Sunday, September 14, 2008

Obama's taking a beating on all sides

Ever since the Palin nomination, Obama has found himself playing defense in just about every area in which he thought he was on solid ground. His message of Change is finally being put under scrutiny, and the results haven't been pretty. He's losing 8 out of 11 key swing states since the Republican National Convention. Obama's now trying to maintain that the Change message belongs to him alone, while the Palin selection has shored up the base and allowed McCain to be more persistent in his own message of reform. Just when it seemed things couldn't go any worse, he compared the McCain-Palin record to "lipstick on a pig," and all hell broke loose. Now, "lipstick on a pig" is an ancient expression and is familiar to almost all Americans. That's why it's stunning that Obama's defenders point to an 11-month old quote to make Obama appear acceptable. Obama made his comment a little over a week after Sarah Palin said the difference between a hockey mom and a pitbull is lipstick. The laughs in Obama's standard exalting audience were laughs of recognition. His supporters made the connection instantly, but Obama would have us believe that his brain trust failed to notice the possible gaffe.
con·text [kon-tekst]
–noun
1. the parts of a written or spoken statement that precede or follow a specific word or passage, usually influencing its meaning or effect: You have misinterpreted my remark because you took it out of context.
2. the set of circumstances or facts that surround a particular event, situation, etc.

And Barry won't recover until he understands that.

Wednesday, September 10, 2008

Hitchens Brothers find common ground on Palin

You'd be hard-pressed to find 2 people more diametrically opposed than Christopher and Peter Hitchens, yet they will be forever linked by genetics. Christopher, the elder, is a former Trotskyist whose main passion in the 1990s was seeing Henry Kissinger and Augusto Pinochet brought to justice for crimes against humanity while claiming Mother Theresa was a fraud who engaged in forced conversions at her mission. A militant atheist, he has rallied against the forces of jihad by arguing in favor of wars in Afghanistan as well as Iraq. Peter, on the other hand, is a paleoconservative who opposes each previously mentioned war as well as evolution and abortion. Peter favors sovereignty for the United Kingdom while preferring British control over Scotland and Wales. So when these 2 can agree on the merits of McCain's choice of running mate, it's worth our attention.

From big brother Hitchens:

I partly sympathize with all those who have been trying for a week to paint the former Miss Wasilla as a candidate from (fairly nearby, in Anchorage terms) Manchuria. However, as often as I have forwarded some alarming e-mail about her from a beavering comrade, I have afterward found myself having the sensation of putting my foot where the last stair ought to have been and wasn't. Was she in the Alaska Independence Party? Not really. Did she campaign for Pat Buchanan in 2000? The AP report from 1999 appears to be contradicted by her endorsement of Steve Forbes. (Not great, I agree, but not Buchanan, either.) The most appalling thing I have unearthed so far is the answer that she gave to a questionnaire when she ran for governor in 2006. All candidates were asked "Are you offended by the phrase 'Under God' in the Pledge of Allegiance? Why or why not?" Her response was:

Not on your life. If it was good enough for the founding fathers [it's] good enough for me, and I'll fight in defense of our Pledge of Allegiance.
The very slight problem with this—because it would truly be awful if Gov. Palin didn't know that the pledge itself dates from only the late 19th century and that the unwonted insertion of the words "under God" was made in the mid-1950s—is that it is somehow funny. And it's also the sort of mistake that many people can imagine themselves making and thus forgive someone else for making.

I could well be wrong, but I think something similar is involved in the attempt to paint the Palin family as if it were Arkansas on ice or Tobacco Road with igloos and Inuit. Very well, she possibly has had her Troopergate and even trailer-park moments. But whom exactly did the Democrats drown in moist applause, for two nights running, in Denver? The most dysfunctional family ever to occupy not the vice-presidential mansion but the executive one. It's hard to imagine that there will be any more unwanted pregnancies or shotgun weddings when or if the Palins move to the Naval Observatory on Massachusetts Avenue, whereas with the Clintons, the very thing that made all Bill's friends turn white and pee green was that they made him the president, and he still wouldn't stop. For me, it is astonishing that the Democrats have been babbling all week as if this point isn't just waiting—indeed begging—to be made in riposte to their "opposition research."

Here, the author of a book called "God is not Great: How religion poisons everything," whose preoccupation in all of his works is hardline anti-theism followed closely by anti-authoritarianism. Take notice that one of the most brazen men on the planet barely finds her religious views not worthy of any significant attention. More appropriate in his view is to expose the hypocrisy of Obama's DNC mouthpieces to belittle Gov Palin's experience, defend Obama's nearly equal experience, and then feign outrage when she compares mayoral experience to Obama's part-time job.

But Peter's endorsement is more clear:
Which just goes to show that ultra-feminists are not actually interested in promoting women because they're women. They pretend they are, but really their agenda is a campaign against marriage, in favour of abortion and for every other disastrous liberal and socialist cause that ever existed. In which case, they really can't go on pretending that their opponents are women-hating bigots.

Hitchens notes that the supposed feminist agenda is the celebration of womanhood for the sake of womanhood, yet that ideology collapses when exposed to the rigid beliefs that all must follow in order to be called "sister." This is what Peter's older brother would compare to Orwell's Ministry of Love (or Miniluv in Newspeak). Could anyone have predicted a month ago that the all-around conservative governor of Alaska would not only be McCain's running mate, but energizing the entire campaign and bringing the Hitchens brothers together? Somewhere, the moon is turning a shade of azure.

Monday, September 8, 2008

Does Sarah Palin believe the Iraq War is "God's War"?

Alright, I'll spoil it: She doesn't.

It's being murmured throughout the blogosphere and even lurks its way into some legitimate news sources: Sarah Palin believes American soldiers are "on a task that is from God." Any quote that brief should throw up red flags for any objective reader. Here's the unadultered quote in its proper context:
Pray for our military men and women who are striving to do what is right. Also, for this country, that our leaders, our national leaders, are sending [U.S. soldiers] out on a task that is from God. That's what we have to make sure that we're praying for, that there is a plan and that that plan is God's plan.

Not exactly fire and brimstone, is it? She's asking the congregants to pray for wisdom and sound moral judgment from political leadership, not declaring a Holy War.

There remains an effort to cast Palin as outside the mainstream on a host of issues such as abortion and gay rights. What her critics don't realize (or don't want to realize) is that whether or not Palin's views align with theirs, most voters respect the integrity and credibility that her personal experiences bring to the abortion debate. When it comes to gay rights, seldom is it reported that Palin vetoed a bill outlawing same-sex benefits for state employees, effectively guaranteeing benefits to gay state employees. Curiously, however, most of the focus is aimed at Palin's opposition to gay marriage. While this is portrayed as "outside the mainstream," when's the last time anyone characterized Obama's opposition as extremist?

In fact, the issues for which Palin is made out to be an unapologetic ideologue are when Barry is at his most slippery. Here are his views on each respective issue in his own words:

Gun rights
I think there is an individual right to bear arms, but it's subject to commonsense regulation

I would respect his position if he were to interpret the second amendment to say that guns are meant solely for the militia, but he isn't. He acknowledges that gun ownership is a right, then concludes that a right is up for negotiation.

Death Penalty
The community is justified in expressing the full measure of its outrage

In fairness to Obama, he's also said he wants to limit the number of executions in order to appear to care about the anti-death penalty crowd (see: abortion).

So the accusation the Palin believes she governs Alaska with a mandate from Heaven is provably false. She has done more for gay unions in Alaska (a red state in which gay rights are more difficult to sell to the electorate) than Obama did in Illinois (Non-existent gay union record in the legislature of a solid blue state). Unlike Obama, her message in uncorruptably clear. In fact, the absence of pandering in her rhetoric signals a genuine departure from politics as usual. That's change you can believe in.

Saturday, September 6, 2008

Palin Attackers Dispersing

After an unsuccessful media onslaught against Sarah Palin, the partisan attackers are declaring the battle is lost. I don't believe in the culture wars, but they are literally calling for a retreat. It won't be the first or last time this crowd waves the white flag. It started with the slanted Us Weekly coverage:
Then Us was confronted

I could've done without the shameless "Fair and Balanced reporting" line by Megyn Kelly, but this is the professionalism of Us Weekly's editorial board on display. Bradley Jacobs, the marble-mouthed individual being interviewed, is caught with his pants down as he's taken to task for probably the first time in his "journalistic" career. Normally, Hilary Duff and Tila Tequila don't fight back.

Take a good look at Michael Moore's demand that Gov Palin "Show Us the DNA!", because you'll never see that on his site again... Until another astute group of anonymous bloggers bravely take some other 17 year old to task and he runs with the story for a few days then quietly deletes it. He doesn't even get the pseudo-story right. The claim was that Palin was the "grandmother" of her "son". What a faildozer. At any rate, this statement should have been retracted not deleted.


While, he won't truly acknowledge his own mistakes, Moore is advocating that the anti-Paliners cool it. And in the process, glossing over his own role in the initial claims that Trig Palin was Bistol Palin's son:
One hour after Gustav hit land, the McCain campaign announced that Vice Presidential candidate Sarah Palin's teenage daughter is pregnant. I don't want to say much more beyond this, as I agree with Barack Obama that "people's families are off limits, and people's children are especially off limits."

I do feel very sorry that this minor, this child, now has to have her privacy sacrificed because her mother accepted an offer to run for VP. Obama's right -- the children are off limits.

That's really low and embarrassing, even for Moore. Don't ever let this quarter ton land monster ever claim he has a moral high ground on anything.

But Moore isn't alone. Arianna Huffington, who initially summarized Palin as a Hail Mary pass is now calling Palin a "distraction." Look, even if you don't like Sarah Palin, it should be common knowledge at this point that Palin has a legion of loyal followers who consider her the yang to John McCain's yin. It should come as no surprise that they come to her defense, but when your political opposite calls your attackers sexist, they are probably telling the truth. After a week of prodding into everything from her family to a vague connection to the Alaska Independence Party (which isn't necessarily seccesionist), her detractors have finally realized just how badly they've injured themselves in the process.

Friday, September 5, 2008

Washington Post distortions on Federal dollars for Wasilla

The Washington Post is reporting that while Sarah Palin served as mayor of Wasilla, she helped secure [cue sinister music] earmarks for her fair city. According to the report, this undermines McCain's message of cleaning up pork barrel spending.
In fiscal year 2002, Wasilla took in $6.1 million in earmarks -- about $1,000 in federal money for every resident. By contrast, Boise, Idaho -- which has more than 190,000 residents -- received $6.9 million in earmarks in fiscal 2008

So let's examine the Post's comparison. Wasilla's population from 2000 to 2007 grew from 5469 to 7100 indicated almost 30% growth rate, while Boise's population growth from 2000 to 2007 went from 185,787 to 203,600 or 9.5% growth. What nefarious deeds did your hard-earned tax dollars go for?

• $1.9 million for the Wasilla Intermodal Transit Project, to realign rail and bus routes to increase use of public transit in the region.
• $500,000 for Kids Are People Inc., an emergency shelter for youths transitioning out of juvenile detention facilities.
• $15 million for a rail project to connect Wasilla with Girdwood.
• $1.75 million to upgrade emergency communications between authorities at the Wasilla dispatch center.
• $600,000 to upgrade bus stations.
• $900,000 to upgrade water and sewer facilities.

Imagine! We put trust in our elected officials and they use it to improve transportation, bring efficiency to first responders, and rehabilitate juvenile delinquents? FOR SHAME!!! So the money that went to Wasilla was meant for one of the fastest growing metropolitan areas in the country and provide public transportation between Anchorage's suburbs. And the monetary figure used by the Post is an Olympian reach, because sizable chunks of their $6.9 million are shared with neighboring communities. Not pork by any measure. Oink oink, indeed.

Tuesday, September 2, 2008

Noun + Verb + 4 more years of failed Bush policies

Much has passed since the last time I posted on this blog. Sarah Palin has become McCain's VP, much to the delight of social conservatives, women outisde of NY, Frisco, Seattle, and Boston, and most importantly, reform-minded Republicans.


The tolerant left has shown its progressive and forward-thinking agenda by attacking the second female on a national ticket in history and her daughter, first by claiming that Governor Palin used a page out of the Desperate Housewives playbook and faked her pregnancy with Trig to cover for what was actually daughter Bristol's child. Daily Kos was the first to jump on it, but has since removed the story. Then it was revealed that Bristol is currently pregnant with her fiance's child. Somehow, this was evidence of some type of vague hypocrisy that detractors never explain.


Normally, I am skeptical of the term "liberal media," but many agenda-driven journalists made their views clear as this election cycle moved from the primaries to the general election. This became even more pronounced when the Palin pick was chosen. Immediately questions rose as to whether or not Palin had the experience to be POTUS. Naturally, MSNBC, CNN, and CBS immediately direct them to Obama's own justification


So Palin delivered a speech that was tremendous to all non-Democrats who were watching. in fact, there was a 9% jump for McCain/Palin among independents. So Howard Dean did exactly what all good public servants do... fell back to his talking points.

From Howard Dean:

I think the first half was terrific. I thought she really laid out who she
was. I was fascinated. The second half, she sounded like Dick Cheney, she
really did. The same old attack stuff, the same old canards about Democrats that
mostly weren't true.


Sarah Palin and Dick Cheney are both 1) Carbon-based beings 2) Need oxygen to survive. The similarities end there. Mind you, this accusation comes from a guy whose party nominated Joe Biden for the sole purpose of having an attack dog who could spew venom while the name above him on the ticket could maintain the guise of a cherub. Dean never elaborated on the alleged falsehoods, by the way. As the interview progressed, he did remember to equate McCain/Palin to Bush/Cheney, also without elaboration.


Like the above instances and many, many more examples that you can find by simply turning on your television set, the DNC continues to disappoint the electorate with their overly simplistic formula to piece together a sentence: A noun + a verb + 4 more years of failed Bush policies.


Friday, August 29, 2008

Don't buy ABC report on Palin not being in Dayton

ABC News claimed the following an hour or so ago:
But one person who will not be there: Palin. The Governor's spokesperson, Sharon
Leighow, tells ABC News she's going to the State Fair in Anchorage, Alaska.

Ms. Leighbow never said Palin won't be in Dayton. It is highly probable that Palin could leave Ohio at 1:00 PM Central time and be back in Alaska in time for the State Fair fireworks at 10:15 PM UTC-9. As a matter of fact, with the time zone change, I'd venture to say the Governor could make the Honky Tonk Allstars at 5 if she's really hauling.

Call Sign N387HA

What's the meaning of this post over at Change & Experience?

Sarah Palin could have left Anchorage on charter flight N387HA on August 27, 2008 at 2:15 YST, and arrived at Boeing International (in Seattle) at 6:13 PST, and departed Boeing International (in Seattle) at 6:51 pm PST and arrived in Flagstaff ( which is 20 miles from Sedona, AZ, the home of John McCain) at 8:59 MST. August 27 was when John McCain was meeting with advisers about his VP choice.

The very next day, on August 28, 2008, flight N387HA, departed at 12:16 pm MST from Flagstaff, Arizona, landed in Amarillo, Texas at 3:31pm CST, departed Amarillo, Texas at 4:02 pm CST, and arrived at the Hook Field Municipal (the same airport that Scenario 1's Anchorage flight landed at) at 7:09 EST. Mccain's Official Campaign airplane tail number is N802TJ.
Why would a chartered plane leave Anchorage, fly to Flagstaff, then to Middletown the next day? If this isn't good news for Sarah Palin, it's a devastating letdown to everyone who wants her on the ticket. This could be it.

Wednesday, August 27, 2008

Democrats offer a bushel of lies on corn ethanol

The theme of Day 2 of the Democratic National Convention was supposed to be "Renewing America's Promise," but it unsurprisingly degraded into a competition over who could mention Bush and McCain in the same sentence the most.

However, the prize for misrepresenting McCain's energy policy the most goes to Gov. Chet Culver of Iowa.
McCain has voted against tax credits for renewable energy 11 times, and his only idea to solve our energy crisis is to keep doing what we're doing, as we watch prices go up and up and up.

Culver's idea of "renewable energy" is corn ethanol, which is universally known to experts as a political tool to lure Iowans and other midwestern voters. John McCain called the corn industry out for the charlatans they are and as a result, he lost in Iowa in both the 2000 and 2008 primaries, and should probably brace himself to lose the Hawkeye State this time around as well. Between the soil degradation, inefficiency, and environmental impact of producing corn ethanol, corn-based fuel is neither renewable nor environmentally friendly.

Take the wording of a vote on tax credits for "renewable energy,"
To make energy more affordable and sustainable, to increase our national security through foreign oil replacement with biofuels and alternative fuels and advanced/hybrid vehicle use, to accelerate production and market penetration of clean and renewable energy technologies and generation, and to more fully utilize energy efficiency and conservation technologies and practices.

Needless to say, there are pretty open-ended standards as to what those represent. So when McCain's opponents repeatedly lie about his stance on renewable energy, remember that they are endorsing a dishonest corn lobby that not only misrepresents and inflates the benefits of corn ethanol, but has decimated American crop diversity and floods the market with cheap, unhealthy food additives. I don't need to remind you that Mr. Culver's state is ground zero for American corn production.

Tuesday, August 26, 2008

Republican VP Poll on Townhall.com

There's a poll running on Townhall.com in regards to the Republican VP selection. It's just under the cartoons. Let them know you support Gov. Sarah Palin for VP.

McCain's best shot, Palin and simple

One of the reasons I started this blog was to recognize the rising stars of the Republican party; the reformers and moderates who energize voters by promoting equality and tolerance while simultaneously fighting for fiscal responsibility. Sarah Palin embodies all of the aforementioned principles. Her leadership has provided Alaska, one of the most corrupt states in the Union, a hope for the future. She has provided this hope not through vague promises of a better future, but through practice.

Among her other achievements, Mrs. Palin pushed a comprehensive ethics bill that tightened loopholes around her fellow state officials. Some of its provisions include:
  • Requiring legislators and legislative employees to disclose all boards on which they serve
  • Increasing restrictions on employment after leaving service in the executive branch
  • Barring political use of state aircraft except when that use is incidental
  • Provides for forfeiture of certain pension contributions when an official is convicted of a felony such as bribery in connection with official duties

Take, for instance, Thundervision or the Boeing Tanker deal. In each case, the guilty parties continue to collect full retirement benefits. If Palin had the opportunity to battle corruption in Washington by stripping retirement benefits for crooked federal employees, it could have a dramatic chilling effect on procurement. Imagine Palin's war on corruption as an extension of McCain's crusade against pork barrel spending. It could lead to tangible change on the way our money is spent.

Additionally, Palin brings instant economic and energy credentials to the table. Slashing almost a third of the capital budget in her first year in office while supporting revenue sharing for local governments, Palin embodies a return to small government and restoring local responsibility.

On social issues, Palin satisfies the conservative wing with both her views and credentials on abortion. She knew early in her pregnancy that her son would be born with Down's syndrome, yet she demonstrated her commitment to life and pressed forward. Trig Paxson Palin was born on April 18th, 2008. While opposing gay marriage in her state, she eventually signed benefits for same-sex couples into law in Alaska.

These alone are more executive credentials than the Democratic party managed to submit for the 2008 election cycle. Mrs. Palin; a mother, wife, journalist, hunter, governor, and most importantly an agent of change. Senator McCain has a historic opportunity to have both members of his ticket be reform-minded Republicans in the tradition of Theodore Roosevelt.

Monday, August 25, 2008

Is New York in play for McCain?

According to both the NY Post and the NY Sun, McCain is polling strongly enough in New York to justify putting the state in play.

... polling comes in the wake of a Siena College poll earlier this month that found Obama leading McCain among traditionally Democratic New York voters by a relatively meager 47 percent to 39 percent - down from 50 percent to 37 percent in July and 51 percent to 33 percent in June.

It should come as no surprise that McCain would be strong in Westchester, upstate, and Long Island; all traditional conservative strongholds that stand in contrast to 4 out of 5 boroughs of New York City. However, the fact that McCain is within 8 points in a state that hasn't gone Republican in over 20 years is a feat in itself. If McCain can continue to make overtures to security-minded Jews, he may have a shot at New York and its 31 electoral votes. However, it is a mistake to interpret this as a sign that he should put Joe Lieberman on the ticket.