Special Features
Posted at 12:14am on Jul. 9, 2008 I have to take a risk
By nivlem
Help me find the peple in California that are creating
a home for seniors to live independently in an apartment/senior
situation....they live ndependently by themselves, and this
individual has helped to create this environment.
I understand this is not where this post is going, but I need
help to create this on a national level.....
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Posted at 11:36am on Jul. 7, 2008 An Updated Summary of the Scandal, Corruption and Hypocrisy by Barack Obama in Mortgages and Real Estate
By mike volpe
From the beginning of the mortgage crisis, Barack Obama's political message was a populist one. In his speeches he stood up for the little guy. Stories like this are a common occurrence during any speech on the mortgage crisis.
Felicitas and Francisco have lived the American Dream. Their story is not one of great wealth or privilege. Instead, it embodies the steady pursuit of simple dreams that has built this country from the bottom up.
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Posted at 11:19am on Jul. 6, 2008 The Sunday Morning Talk Shows: The Review
By Mark Kilmer
Sunday, July 6, 2008

PREFACE:
On ABC's This Week, Senator Jack Reed (D-Rhode Island) asserted that the Iraqis were passing laws to make it seem like they were doing something but not enforcing them. (Actually, on oil revenue sharing, they've not passed a law but are enforcing the sharing anyway.) Senator Joe Lieberman (I-Connecticut) noted that there has been a significant change in Obama's position over the past week, with Obama now expressing concern for the "stability of Iraq" when discussing troop withdrawal. That, Lieberman argued, is the McCain position.
Next on TW, Libertarian Bob Barr spouted a few agreeable platitudes regarding the Nanny State then posited that George Bush was worse for our civil liberties than was Bill Clinton.
On FOX News Sunday, Brit Hume hosted an entertaining panel discussion.
On NBC, Meet the Press was preempted by a tennis match.
On CBS' Face the Nation John Kerry ("reporting for duty") posited that John McCain has flip-flopped more often than he has, and that we should try to partner with the People's Republic of China. Gitmo should never have been opened, Kerry offered, maintaining that we should have tried the enemy combatants right there on the battlefield.
For his part, Lindsey Graham said that the biggest loser now in Iraq is al Qaeda, and the biggest loser longer will be Iran. He said that the only way we could lose this war is to do an Obama retreat.
On CNN's Late Edition, Wolf Blitzer did a 10th anniversary best-of show.
Read on for the show-by-show review.
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Posted at 8:16am on Jul. 5, 2008 The Sunday Morning Talk Shows: a preview
By Mark Kilmer
For Sunday, July 6, 2008

FOX News Sunday (FNS): Host Chris Wallace has an "All Star Power Panel," including Superman, the Flash, Captain American, the Incredible Hulk… no, it is going to be Fred Barnes and Bill Kristol of The Weekly Standard with Mara Liasson and Juan Williams of NPR. They will discuss… stuff that's important.
This Week (ABC): Host George Stephanopoulos talks to Senators Joe Lieberman (I-Connecticut) and Jack Reed (D-Rhode Island) about the election. The hen talks to Bob Barr.
Meet the Press (NBC): There is no host and there is no program. Look for Federer and Nadal to go at in on British grass for our amusement.
Face the Nation (CBS): Host Bob Schieffer has two surrogates: Lindsey Graham vs. John Kerry.
Late Edition (CNN): Host Wolf Blitzer celebrates his ten year anniversary of LE with a sort of Best Of show of interviews with such as Yasser Arafat and Nelson Mandela, Rudy post 9-11 and Al Gore in 1999.
=====
Jack Reed (TW) and John Kerry (FTN) have never said anything interesting or stimulating in their lengthy spans on this Earth. Lindsey Graham has been very clever of late, I've noticed, mainly because Obama offers ideal opportunities, and Joe Lieberman is Joe Lieberman. The lefties must be galled by a man who favors abortion and the welfare state yet is so stubborn about defending our ally Israel from our shared enemies and seeking victory in Iraq.
Kerry will wax indignant about hot he would have won if the election had not been stolen by lies about his service record. He always makes these things about him and offers as a KNOWN FACT™ that he served honorably and was the victim of smears by the SBVT.
I'll have the review up tomorrow after the shows.
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Posted at 1:19pm on Jun. 29, 2008 The Sunday Morning Talk Shows: The Review
By Mark Kilmer
Sunday, June 29, 2008

PREFACE:
On FNS, Pennsylvania Governor Ed Rendell said that though both he and President Clinton are disappointed that Obama won the Dem nomination, Bill Clinton will do whatever he is asked for Obama. Rob Portman said that though he's pleased to be home in Ohio with his family, he would like to get back into public service at some point. He seemed to think it would be as a cabinet secretary, perhaps, though everyone has the veepstakes on their minds.
Bob Barr was next for host Chris Wallace on FNS, and he insists that he is a Libertarian despite having voted for the war, for the Patriot Act, and against medical marijuana. He said that his votes were mistakes made because he trusted the Administration. BushLied™.
On ABC's TW, Rahm Emanuel and Tim Pawlenty made the case that they have been friends for a long time. The highlights were when Pawlenty asked when Obama had ever led on anything. Emanuel searched his mind and came up with once back when Barry was in the Illinois State senate. Pawlenty later asked when Obama has fought his party when he thought they were wrong. Emanuel had nothing.
Next for host George Stephanopoulos on TW was Ralph Nader, who attacked Obama. Steph begged him to attack McCain, so he did that. Then Nader declared the two-party system to be broken.
On NBC's MTP, host Tom Brokaw talked to Colorado Governor Bill Ritter and Wyoming Governor Dave Freudenthal, both Dems. Both men talked of the independence of the west. They support Obama but do not agree with all that flies from the candidate's trap. (Freudenthal is in favor of domestic energy exploration, for example, and Ritter is pro-life.)
Same show, Arnold supports McCain, loves the environment and fears global warming, but doesn't agree with McCain on everything. He said that Tim Russert had promised that he'd repeal the 22nd Amendment to the Constitution and insisted that now, Tom Brokaw had the power to do this.
On FTN, Joe Lieberman explained that the Dem Party was no longer the party of JFK which he had joined as a young man. He pointed out that Iran and al Qaeda would be the greatest influences in a chaotic Iraq if we had followed the Dem lead and gotten out when they wanted out.
Next on FTN, Wes Clark claimed that Obama is more prepared to be President than is John McCain: "I do not think riding in a fighter plane and getting shot down is a qualification for being President."
On LE, with Candy Crowley in for Wolf Blitzer, Senate Republic leader Mitch McConnell talked about the Republicans "drill more, use less" bill regarding oil. He said that he expected that Republicans, running with a strong candidate in John McCain at the top of the ticket, would hold steady in the Senate despite the numbers.
Next up, Obama surrogate Jon Corzine said that Congress must break us of our oil habit and that offshore drilling is a "short-term gimmick."
Also on LE, Louisiana Governor Bobby Jindal said that Obama must be held accountable, as he too often says one thing and does another. He also did not rule out a gubernatorial veto of a Dem pay grab by the State legislature.
(The show-by-show review is below the fold.)
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Posted at 12:32pm on Jun. 29, 2008 Child Abuse and Sham Peer Review...Corruption in Pennsylvania II
By mike volpe
Bob Casey Sr. ( Democrat, Governor of Pennsylvania 1987-1995)
Jim Singer attempted to reach the governor immediately after he took office. He wrote letters however it was his son that wound up in a chance face to face meeting with the Governor himself. Singer's son was an undergraduate at Yale at the time. Singer's son was chosen to debate on behalf of the students with Governor Casey Sr. After the debate the two spoke in private. At that meeting Singer's son told the Governor some of what happened in his dad's case. He even handed the governor documents regarding perjury at his trial among many other abuses. The Governor must have been moved because within months he received this letter. It was from James Haggerty, the Governor's personal attorney.
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Posted at 12:20pm on Jun. 29, 2008 Child Abuse and Sham Peer Review...Corruption in Pennsylvania I
By mike volpe
In 1986 Jim Singer was a practicing psychologist in Dubois, Pennsylvania. He maintained his own private practice and at the same time at the Maple Avenue Dubois Regional Medical Center. He treated a patient that he suspected of being abused, and as a mandated reporter he was sworn by an oath to report it. As a result, he travelled through a road of treachery and corruption in the political apparatus.
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Posted at 12:59pm on Jun. 22, 2008 The Sunday Morning Talk Shows: The Review
Sunday, June 22, 2007.
By Mark Kilmer
PREFACE:

On TW, host George Stephanopoulos held an energy roundtable at which Ed Markey spewed slogans, Columbia U' Jeff Sachs sailed in la-la land, Senator Hutchison made the Republican case, and American Petroleum Institute CEO Red Cavaney made perfect sense.
On FNS, Tom Daschle explained that Barack Obama never really promised to accept public financing thus did not flip-flop on the issue. Tom Ridge contested Daschle's use of "Bush-McCain."
On MTP, Joe Biden maintained that Obama did not flip-flop on campaign finance reform but has made public financing a less achievable goal.
On FTN, Bob Schieffer observed that Obama had flip-flopped on public financing of his presidential campaign. Carly Fiorina, speaking for John McCain, said that it was disingenuous for Obama to claim that he was doing this in the name of reform. Bill Richardson, speaking for Obama, said, nuh-huh, Barry didn't flip-flop, McCain flip-flopped.
Speaking for Obama on LE, Richardson said that the Surge had "absolutely not" been successful, as there has been little political reconciliation in Iraq and they are not sharing oil profits. Speaking for McCain in the next segment, Dr. Douglas Holtz-Eakin dismissed the falderal that the Iraqis should sell us oil at a discount, asserting that it should be sold at market prices so we will not be kept artificially dependent on it.
The show-by-show review is beneath the fold.
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Posted at 9:02am on Jun. 21, 2008 The Sunday Morning Talk Shows - a preview
By Mark Kilmer
For Sunday, June 22, 2008

FOX News Sunday (FNS): Host Chris Wallace does the surrogate thing, with Tom Ridge for McCain and Tom Daschle for Obama.
This Week (ABC): Host George Stephanopoulos talks energy and the price of oil with such as Senator Kay Bailey Hutchison (R-Texas), Representative Ed Markey (D-Massachusetts),American Petroleum Institute CEO Red Cavaney, and economist Jeffrey Sachs, who runs something called the Earth Institute at Columbia University.
Meet the Press (NBC): Brian Williams will host the show Tim Russert wanted to host last Sunday, featuring Joe Biden and Lindsey Graham. The surrogate thing.
Face the Nation (CBS): Host Bob Schieffer does the surrogate thing, with Carly Fiorina for McCain and New Mexico Governor Bill Richardson for Obama.
Late Edition (CNN): Host Wolf Blitzer does surrogates with Richardson for Obama and Tim Pawlenty, becoming known nationally, for John McCain. He talks also to Congressman Eric Cantor of Virginia and that gawdawfully dim bulb Bob Wexler of Florida. And the usual cast of thousands.
~~~~~
We've plenty of surrogates this week and Steph's oil thing.
I'll have the review tomorrow.
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Posted at 11:14am on Jun. 16, 2008 The Sharpton Shakedown
Not The Al Sharpton Barack Obama Knew?
By Dan McLaughlin
There are few more reprehensible people in American politics than former Democratic presidential and Senate candidate Rev. Al Sharpton, a man whose litany of public sins and scandals stretches from slander to anti-Semitism to theft to tax evasion to incitement of lethal riots and deadly arson. By Sharpton's own admission in response to a federal investigation that resulted in a raid of his offices in December, "I have probably been under every investigation known to man and I can't remember a time that I've not been under investigation." No decent person would embrace this man.
Of course, Sharpton played his own role in this year's Democratic primaries, playing the 'bad cop' who darkly threatened disorder and litigation if the DNC ruled in favor of Hillary Clinton on the disputed Florida and Michigan delegations. These were not idle threats, as many establishment Democrats recall how Sharpton's falling-out with a pair of white Democrats who had defeated minority candidates in racially-divisive primaries (Bob Abrams, who beat Sharpton in the 1992 Senate primary, and Mark Green, who beat Fernando Ferrer in the 2001 Mayoral primary) contributed to their defeats in the general election. Of course, the DNC caved, awarding Hillary her Florida delegates but effectively handing the nomination to Obama with its ruling on Michigan; mission accomplished. And Gothamist notes that Sharpton's National Action Network does not lack for friends, or at least supplicants, in high places in the Democratic establishment:
Sharpton's organization, a non-profit founded to promote black civil rights, holds a yearly, influential conference in April (last year a who's who in the Democratic party attended, from former President Bill Clinton to Senator Barack Obama, from Senator Hillary Clinton to DNC chair Howard Dean) and attracts corporate sponsorship.
Given his background, the latest news on Sharpton, via an investigation by the New York Post, should surprise absolutely nobody, but it's an instructive look nonetheless in Sharpton's business as usual.
Read On...
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Posted at 12:16pm on Jun. 15, 2008 The Sunday Morning Talk Shows: The Review
By Mark Kilmer
Sunday, June 15, 2008 (Happy Fathers Day)

PREFACE:
Everyone had a tribute to the late Tim Russert. (The sentence looks strange.)
On FNS, a roundtable argued about how to decrease gas prices. Hutchison Dorgan wants to tax the oil companies and find new types of energy and to regulate speculators, as well as to drill in his home State of South Dakota, while Kay Bailey Hutchison wants to drill in ANWR and elsewhere. American Petroleum Institute CEO Red Cavaney offered that a promised increase in production by the Saudis, along with domestic production, will help to decrease prices. He also forecast that absent external factors, the price of gasoline should start to decrease as the summer proceeds.
Next on FNS, Karl Rove picked veeps for McCain and for Obama: Joe Biden and Mitt Romney.
On TW, John Edwards went in one ear and out the other. Fred Thompson was as charming as ever, but he said that he was "not interested" in being McCain's veep pick. However, he would not rule out what has not been offered, he said. (Russert would have taken that as a "definite maybe.")
On MTP, Tom Brokaw hosted a nice discussion of Tim Russert and his career, including plenty of clips.
First up on FTN was Louisiana Governor Bobby Jindal. Guest host Chip Reid wanted to talk about Jindal as GOP-Superstar and Jindal in the veepstakes, but the governor got the word out about what's happening in Louisiana.
Next on FTN, Newt Gingrich said plainly that Jindal would be McCain's best running mate selection.
FEMA director David Paulison was on LE to discuss the flooding in Iowa, but host Wolf Blitzer wanted to talk about Katrina. It turns out that CNN's Abby Boudreau had done an exposé on supplies which FEMA had hoarded for years, keeping them out of the hands of the needy Katrina victims. Paulison explained that the supplies were not all for Katrina victims and that Louisiana had turned down FEMA when they were offered. An indignant Blitzer demanded to know why Paulison hadn't explained that to Abby Boudreau before she made a fool out of herself.
Next up for Blitzer was House Republican Leader John Boehner who stressed that the Republican Party has to inform the American people of their solutions; do that, and they will do better than expected this November.
After this, Blitzer talked to his own congressman, DCCC boss Chris Van Hollen. The Congressman went through the Axelrod talking points and smiled as he said that the GOP "is very tight with BIG OIL."
Read on for the Show-by-Show review….
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Posted at 8:58am on Jun. 14, 2008 The Sunday Morning Talk Shows - a preview
The post-Russert era.
By Mark Kilmer
For Sunday, June 15, 2008

FOX News Sunday (FNS): Host Chris Wallace will chat with Senators Kay Bailey Hutchison and Byron Dorgan, then he'll talk to American Petroleum Institute CEO Red Cavaney.
This Week (ABC): Host George Stephanopoulos talks to John Edwards and Fred Thompson, former Senators both.
Meet the Press (NBC): It was to be host Tim Russert interviewing Lindsey Graham and Joe Biden, but… we'll see.
UPDATE: From NBC News comes word of the revised listings for "MEET THE PRESS WITH TIM RUSSERT." This one is for remembering Tim: Tom Brokaw of NBC News, Mike Barnicle of MSNBC News, James Carville, MTP Executive Producer Betsy Fischer, Presidential historian Doris Kearns Goodwin, Gwenn Ifill of PBS, Mary Matalin, and former NBC News correspondent Maria Shriver.
Kudos to Fischer for selecting Barnicle as the obligatory MSNBC representative Mike Barnicle. This memorial could have become a farce.
Face the Nation (CBS): Host Bob Schieffer will talk to Louisiana Governor Bobby Jindal and Newt Gingrich.
Late Edition (CNN): Host Wolf Blitzer will chat with Republicans John Boehner and Arlen Specter and Democrats Janet Napolitano and Chris Van Hollen, plus his usual cast of thousands.
= = = = =
This is a unique week, and singular sad at that. David Brinkley of ABC's This Week had retired, turning his show over to Sam & Cokie, when he passed, while Tim Russert was at the top of his game and went suddenly. His passing alters the face of Sunday morning.
It's pretty much surrogate-ville again across the board, except for Bob Schieffer at FTN. From time-to-time, he'll go all-conservative, and with Bobby J. and Newt G., he will be taking that step again.
I don't know what to expect from MTP this week. We'll see.
The reveiw of the shows will come in the space early tomorrow afternoon, and I'll have more on the passing for Tim Russert later.
"If it's Sunday..."
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Posted at 12:11pm on Jun. 8, 2008 The Sunday Morning Talk Shows: The Review
Your map of next week's political news.
By Mark Kilmer
Sunday, June 8, 2008

PREFACE:
On FNS this morning, Time Pawlenty and Tim Kaine were in studio for what host Chris Wallace called an "American Idol audition" for their preferred candidate's veep slot. (Kaine's an Obama governor, while Pawlenty favors McCain.)
On TW, Dianne Feinstein, host of last week's historic, unprecedented, breakthrough, significant, dramatic, and earth-shaking tête-à-tête 'twixt Obama and Hillary, said that she favors Hillary for veep despite Jimmy Carter's protest that such a ticket would bring "the worst of both worlds." (An African American and a woman?)
Next on TW, Lindsey Graham pushed John McCain while John Kerry made mindless pronouncements.
On MTP, journalist Andrea Mitchell offered that prior to yesterday's Hillary speech, Bill Clinton had been crying. Host Tim Russert argued that John McCain can compete with the Obama juggernaut by convincing the American people that he's "a comfortable shoe." He compared Obama and RFK, pointing to RFK's vision in 1968 that a "negro" could be elected President in forty years, in 2008.
On FTN, Hillary's former campaign mouthpiece, Howard Wolfson said that Hillary will do "whatever she has to" and "whatever she can" to see that Obama is elected President. Chuck Rangel, on next, said "I would hope so!" when asked if Bill Clinton would be involved in everything during an Obama Administration if Hillary were Barry's Veep. Jim Webb, on next, compared himself intellectually to Daniel Patrick Moynihan.
On LE, for some reason, host Wolf Blitzer put Senator Bob Casey of Pennsylvania up against Jon Kyl of Arizona, and it was embarrassing. (To Pennsylvanians, if not to the Democrats.) Kyl hammered Obama for his ever-changing position on meeting with the leaders of rogue and/or terroristic nations, and Casey could only argue that Ronald Reagan and the first President Bush did that.
Some good stuff this week. Read the summary below the fold.
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Posted at 8:24am on Jun. 7, 2008 The Sunday Morning Talk Shows: a preview
By Mark Kilmer
For Sunday, June 8, 2008

FOX News Sunday (FNS): Host Chris Wallace chats with potential veeps: Governors Tim Pawlenty (R-Minnesota) and Tim Kaine (D-Virginia).
This Week (ABC): Host George Stephanopoulos has Senators Lindsey Graham (R-South Carolina) and John Kerry (D-Massachusetts) on the air as surrogates to argue about the Presidential election, then Senator Dianne Feinstein will talk about the historic secret summit between Clinton (Hillary) and Obama.
Meet the Press (NBC): Host Tim Russert has a roundtable with a bunch of NBC News reporters: Ron Allen, Lee Cowan, David Gregory, Andrea Mitchell, Kelly O'Donnell, and Chuck Todd.
Face the Nation (CBS): Host Bob Schieffer has Hillary's mouthpiece Howard Wolfson, then turns to Representative Chuck Rangel (D-New York) and Senator Jim Webb (D-Virginia).
Late Edition (CNN): Host Wolf Blitzer will interview Senators Jon Kyl (R-Arizona) and Bobby Casey (D-Pennsylvania), Kay Bailey Hutchison (R-Texas) and Feinstein, and his usual cast of thousands.
= = = = =
The Senate's two "dumb guys" are on display this week in Jim Webb (FTN) and Junior Casey (LE), a sure contributor to the morning's mirth. The surrogate thing is going on again.
DiFi's not going to spill the beans on that irrelevant get-together between Barry and Hillary at her DC home, one which I mockingly call "historic" merely because it has caught the scorned media's imagination.
And Russert continues his painful habit of interviewing official pundits and unofficial pundits (reporters). At least we'll know what the Washington Press Corp thinks, but I do not understand how he talk to NBC News folks with including their two brightest stars: Chris Matthews and the sportscaster Keith Olbermann.
I'll be by early tomorrow afternoon (ET) with a review of these shows, and I should be in a better mood by then.
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Posted at 12:46pm on Jun. 1, 2008 The Sunday Morning Talk Shows: The Review
What did Saturday's Dem RBC freak show solve? Anything? Well, "on to Denver."
By Mark Kilmer
Sunday, June 1, 2008

Preface:
On FNS, Hillary's main mouthpiece, Howard Wolfson, expressed discontent with the face that the Dem RBC's Saturday freak show decided to give Obama four of Hillary's delegates, amounting to two votes, and were willing to fight this simply on principle. He also didn't care for the "uncommitted" delegates from Michigan being given automatically to Obama.
Next on FNS, Obama surrogate Dave Bonior declared that the popular vote doesn't count but that he would not entertain a question which stipulates that Obama might not win the popular vote.
On ABC's TW, Obama mouthpiece Bob Gibbs assured us that Barry is "still a strong Christian," despite leaving the church where he found Christianity.
Up next on TW, Clinton campaign honcho Terence McAuliffe declared: "This is not the Democrat Party I know." He quickly added that he had just had dinner with Hillary, leaving open the possibility that these are also her sentiments. He added that one Wednesday, after the results of the final contests have been resolved, Team Hillary begins chasing the superdelegates.
Finally on TW, FDR's grandson called for a "unity choice" for veep. Howard Dean said that the most important person in the race is the second place finisher, which he was in 2004.
On NBC's MTP, host Tim Russert interviewed Scott McClellan, both accusing McClellan of hypocrisy and reveling in his charges against the Bush Administration. Is Tim Russert a true believer in this tenor lefty insanity or is he, like McClellan and Olbermann, doing this for ratings, for the fame and the money?
On CBS' FTN, Cuddly Carl Levin, who says he's backing neither Dem candidate right now, said that both Hillary and Barry have promised him that the Michigan delegation would receive their full votes. Barry, he conceded, had promised that this would happen only after he'd received the number of delegates he needs to secure the nomination.
On FTN, Hillary supporter Mandy Grunwald said that Hillary had received the most votes of anyone ever. Schieffer asked her if this includes voters in the caucuses, and she said that they were in the newspapers, so it did.
On CNN's LE, Howard Dean had an interesting comparison. He told host Wolf Blitzer that he had learned not to answer hypotheticals when raising two teenagers. Barry and Hillary behaving like teenagers? FDR's grandkid was there, as well.
Next on LE, Hillary's buddy Harold Ickes evoked the image of September 11 when he declared that the Michigan delegates had been "hijacked" from Hillary.
Read the review beneath the fold.
