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Posts Tagged ‘Sarah Palin’

Johnson Lies Again

by snork ( 144 Comments › )
Filed under Blogwars, LGF, Media, Open thread at February 1st, 2010 - 8:30 pm

I don’t know what’s going on over behind the scenes at LGF (1.0), but they’ve gone from banal to sloppy to downright lying. On Monday, Feb 1, the following thread was posted:

Moronic Convergence Accelerates – Palin Endorses Rand Paul

Politics | Mon, Feb 1, 2010 at 10:52:09 am PST

The crazy convergence of tea parties, Sarah Palin, and paleo-nutjob Ron Paul is picking up speed, as Palin endorses Ron Paul’s son Rand for the Kentucky Senate primary.

If someone had told me a few years ago that the Republican Party would be this far off the rails in 2010, I probably wouldn’t have believed them.

That’s it. That’s the whole post. So you click that link, and what do you get?

Rand Paul claims Palin endorsement

Here’s a delicious twist in the Kentucky Senate primary between Trey Grayson and Rand Paul: Paul’s campaign is claiming that Palin endorsed Paul, and donated money to his campaign.
[…]
We’re also hearing that Paul’s endorsement may have come prematurely: Palin hasn’t released any statement announcing the endorsement, and Grayson allies are privately telling POLITICO they’re not convinced she’s publicly endorsing in this race.

Jumping the gun a wee bit there Mr. Johnson, or whoever it is putting up those false posts? Fact check your ass my ass. Sorry, you’ve become the ass.

This is an open thread.

UPDATE: The post at 1.0 was timestamped 10:52 PST/1:52 EST. At 5:03 EST, this came out from Politico:

Former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin said Monday that she is “proud” to back Kentucky Senate candidate Rand Paul, clearing up any doubts raised about the endorsement by Paul’s opponents.

“I’m proud to support great grassroots candidates like Dr. Paul,” Palin said in a statement to POLITICO. “While there are issues we disagree on, he and I are both in agreement that it’s time to shake up the status quo in Washington and stand up for common sense ideas.”

It seems confirmation came three hours later, and the endorsement was somewhat backhanded.


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John McCain: Palin’s Political Bridge to Nowhere

by Mojambo ( 127 Comments › )
Filed under Elections 2010, Politics at January 24th, 2010 - 4:00 am

Sorry but in my opinion John McCain does not deserve Sarah Palin’s support which she would be giving him by going to Arizona. McCain’s people (his goofy daughter Meghan,  Steve Schmidt, Nicolle Wallace  et al) spent more time trying to sabotage her then they did in trying to win  the elections. If Palin had not been on the ticket then the cranky old fart would have been slaughtered even more. Let us never forget McCain-Feingold, McCain-Kennedy, closing down Guantanomo, doing away with waterboarding , picking fights with religious conservatives – John McCain is not now and never was one of us. The fact that the was infinitely better then Barack Obama just reminds us how bad Obama  is.  I hope that the next Republican Senator from Arizona is J.D Hayworth.

by Steve Flesher

Sarah Palin’s decision to campaign for John McCain’s reelection bid is dismaying some of her staunchest allies and defenders on the web.

This serves as a much-uninvited buzz-kill to conservatives, who finally had the beam of hope shone on them Tuesday night. Grassroots conservatism made a historic comeback with Scott Brown, who defeated Martha Coakley for Edward Kennedy’s Senate seat in the very liberal state of Massachusetts.

Aside from her personal allegiance to John McCain, it is incomprehensible what Palin thinks this will do for the country or her political career, which has made her one of the main inspirations of grassroots enthusiasm.

Of course, there is no doubt that John McCain is an honorable man who proudly served his country. There is also no doubt that the Arizona senator has delivered on selective issues, like the current health care debacle that the majority of Americans disapprove of.

I personally am so humbled by McCain’s strongest characteristics that I might even be willing to overlook his daughter Meghan’s passive-aggressive dissent from the conservative wing of the Republican Party.

Like many conservatives, I am certain that Sarah Palin is grateful to McCain for plucking her out of Alaska and placing her in the spotlight, where her endless well of conservative energy has been able to flourish.

Truthfully, every grassroots conservative responsible for the surge of vocal dissent to Obama’s policies knows that as the frontrunner in the 2008 election, John McCain gave real Americans and independent voters very little to believe in — that is, until he gave us Sarah Palin, who became the first V.P. candidate in history to carry the entirety of a ticket’s momentum.

Looking at McCain’s political history, it doesn’t take long to determine why he was unable to inspire the grassroots. While one person can make the case for McCain’s patriotism, the next can make an equally convincing argument to question his conservatism.

McCain reached across the political aisle in 2007 to develop a soft-amnesty piece of proposed legislation with the late Senator Edward Kennedy. Condemned by critics like Michelle Malkin as a “crap sandwich,” the bill proposed small fines to illegal immigrants. Not only did the fines lack the value of the infrastructure these immigrants had taken advantage of for years, but they also allowed them to stay. Americans were outraged, and the bill was never put to a vote.

Previously, McCain had again reached to the far left and crafted McCain-Feingold in 2002, which placed campaign-contribution limits and regulations on selective entities such as businesses and corporations. Coincidentally, that bill was overturned by the Supreme Court this week. This was such a success for freedom and democracy that it immediately won the scathing dissent of President Obama and Senator Chuck Schumer.

Next, John McCain used his power as a United States senator to hysterically denounce enhanced interrogation methods at Guantánamo, and he also became a strong proponent of the campaign to close altogether the prison where detainees are given three full meals a day, hours of free time for activities and religious reading, and the right not to be awakened for interrogations. The average detainee has gained forty pounds during his stay at Gitmo. How’s that for “torture?”

Aside from health care, conservative victor Scott Brown campaigned explicitly on the Obama administration’s soft treatment of terrorism (providing them with lawyers, having their trials on American soil, and proposing to relocate them to American prisons).

The independent spirits of Americans have responded. Obama’s approval ratings have tanked, the life of the current Senate health care disaster has been doubted by Nancy Pelosi, and Americans have overwhelmingly denounced treating terrorists who seek to destroy our democracy and its accompanying constitutional fabric as common criminals with constitutional rights. They did it on Tuesday by giving a half-century-old liberal seat to a conservative.

Sarah Palin had a major effect on this by awakening the once-silent majority. We are now witnessing the loudest dissent against big government ever via average American independents.

Similarly, the Tea Party movement’s effectiveness immediately earned it an unflattering nickname from the viewer-lacking hosts on MS-NBC and Air America radio. The movement has adopted all of the same commonsense approaches that Sarah Palin advocated from the moment she sat on the city council of Wasilla to the moment she was elected governor.

Read the rest

‘Game Change’: New Book Reveals 2008 Campaigns’ Messy Moments

by Mojambo ( 126 Comments › )
Filed under Barack Obama, Democratic Party, Election 2008, Media at January 11th, 2010 - 5:30 pm

As bad as Barack Obama has been – the country would have been in even worse shape (not that they ever really had much of a chance) had the Edwards’ become residents of 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue. A sleazier bunch (yes I know Elizabeth is a cancer sufferer but there has to be some concession to the truth –she was manipulative, overly ambitious, and not very nice) it would be hard to imagine.  Also frankly, Hillary does not exactly come off very well, and as for the “staffers” on the McCain campaign who tried to strangle Sarah Palin – I wish those dirt bags had put as much effort into defeating Barack Obama as they did in trying to kill off Governor Palin. After reading the many reviews of this book I have to open up my window and scream “Were these the best we had to offer in 2008?” By the way check out Bill Clinton’s slap at Barack Obama.

By David Kerley and Kristina Wong

While “Game Change” has yet to hit the stores, the book about the 2008 presidential campaign has already offered revelations of messy moments between political opponents, even creating a stir among friends.

Start with, for instance, Sen. Harry Reid’s remarks on Barack Obama’s race.

“[Reid] was wowed by Obama’s oratorical gifts and believed that the country was ready to embrace a black presidential candidate, especially one such as Obama, a ‘light-skinned’ African American ‘with no Negro dialect, unless he wanted to have one,’ as he said privately,” according to the book, which is authored by Mark Halperin and John Heilemann, and due out this week.

————————————————–

Then-Sen. Obama, for instance, was furious at comments his running mate, Joe Biden, made at a campaign fundraiser.

“‘How many times is Biden going to say something stupid?” Obama reportedly said after Biden said that it would not be “six months before the world tests Barack Obama like they did John Kennedy.”

————————————————–

Former president Bill Clinton received flak from his comment that Obama’s campaign was “the biggest fairy tale I’ve ever seen.”

But he made an even more dismissive comment about Obama in private with the late Sen. Ted Kennedy, according to the book.

“A few years ago, this guy would have been getting us coffee,” Clinton reportedly said.

Read the rest.

Sarah Palin: It’s War, not a Crime Spree

by bar ( 175 Comments › )
Filed under Islamic Terrorism, Islamists, Politics, Religion, Republican Party at January 5th, 2010 - 6:00 pm

President Obama’s meeting with his top national security advisers does nothing to change the fact that his fundamental approach to terrorism is fatally flawed. We are at war with radical Islamic extremists and treating this threat as a law enforcement issue is dangerous for our nation’s security. That’s what happened in the 1990s and we saw the result on September 11, 2001. This is a war on terror not an “overseas contingency operation.” Acts of terrorism are just that, not “man caused disasters.” The system did not work. Abdulmutallab was a child of privilege radicalized and trained by organized jihadists, not an “isolated extremist” who traveled to a land of “crushing poverty.” He is an enemy of the United States, not just another criminal defendant.

It simply makes no sense to treat an al Qaeda-trained operative willing to die in the course of massacring hundreds of people as a common criminal. Reports indicate that Abdulmutallab stated there were many more like him in Yemen but that he stopped talking once he was read his Miranda rights. President Obama’s advisers lamely claim Abdulmutallab might be willing to agree to a plea bargain – pretty doubtful you can cut a deal with a suicide bomber. John Brennan, the President’s top counterterrorism adviser, bizarrely claimed “there are no downsides or upsides” to treating terrorists as enemy combatants. That is absurd. There is a very serious downside to treating them as criminals: terrorists invoke their “right” to remain silent and stop talking. Terrorists don’t tell us where they were trained, what they were trained in, who they were trained by, and who they were trained with. Giving foreign-born, foreign-trained terrorists the right to remain silent does nothing to keep Americans safe from terrorist threats. It only gives our enemies access to courtrooms where they can publicly grandstand, and to defense attorneys who can manipulate the legal process to gain access to classified information.

President Obama was right to change his policy and decide to send no more detainees to Yemen where they can be free to rejoin their war on America. Now he must back off his reckless plan to close Guantanamo, begin treating terrorists as wartime enemies not suspects alleged to have committed crimes, and recognize that the real nature of the terrorist threat requires a commander-in-chief, not a constitutional law professor.

– Sarah Palin