Showing posts with label michael steele. Show all posts
Showing posts with label michael steele. Show all posts

Friday, May 15, 2009

Keith Olbermann’s response to Mrs McCain

May 14, 2009

Mrs McCain’s video/comments
Rush Limbaugh’s response

Here’s Keith Olbermann’s response to Mrs McCain’s comments on Jay Leno. Jay asked her which commentators on the left bothered her. She didn’t hesitate and said “Olbermann”, prompting laughter. Jay asked why. She said she couldn’t understand someone who seemed to get pleasure from humiliating and denigrating others and that she thanked God that she didn’t have to be around people like him.

He had initially planned to use his closing rant to rebut Mrs McCain but he instead took exception to someone’s post about why he missed some days in April as if it is remotely relevant to anyone but him. He said it was because his mother died and then he got sick.

Why does he get so upset when someone does to him what he makes a living doing to others?

And how often does he google himself to find them?

Anyway this is what he had to say:

Tonight’s “WTF!?! moment” which was going to be about John McCain’s mother’s appearance on the Tonight Show. Ok. I’ll say what should have been my first thought: Good for you Roberta, defend your son.

Then he launched into a rant that is going to drive up the poster’s traffic and encourage others. When he finally took a breath, he admits hos absurdity.

I was going to do this segment on John McCain’s mother’s comments about Limbaugh and Michael Steel and me, but as this nonsense broke arouns me this afternoon, it struck me just how absurd that idea was. She was just a mother sticking up for her son. My mom would have appreciated that.

Tuesday, April 14, 2009

About: National Tax Day Tea Party

April 13, 2009

Happening in a city or state near you. I'm not sure it matters much to some folk what the true meaning behind them are - explained below. Some folks are angry that the proobamedia refuses to call him barry on anything and continue to not vet him.

There are three main sponsors of the Tea Parties: the DontGo Movement, Smart Girl Politics and Top Conservatives on Twitter. As an aside, I find it funny that John McCain, who barry said couldn't use a computer, is in the top 10 on Twitter.

From the National Tax Day Tea Party website. Below are links to other posts that provide more background, if needed.

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OWGCXY2dAdI]

TeaPartyRevolution

Speak now or forever hold your peace.

Tax Day Tea Party

The Tax Day Tea Party is a national collaborative grassroots effort organized by Smart Girl Politics, Top Conservatives on Twitter, the DontGo Movement and many other online groups/coalitions.

The Tea Party protests, in their current form, began in early 2009 when Rick Santelli, the On Air Editor for CNBC, set out on a rant to expose the bankrupt liberal agenda of the White House Administration and Congress. Specifically, the flawed "Stimulus Bill" and pork filled budget.

During Rick's rant (see video below), he called for a "Chicago tea Party" where advocates of the free-market system could join in a protest against out of control government spending.

A few days later, grassroots activists and average Joe Americans began organizing what would soon become the Nationwide Chicago Tea Party effort.

On February 27th, an estimated 30,000 Americans took to the street in 40+ cities accross the country in the first nationwide "Tea Party" protest.

Organizers of the February 27th events pledged to continue on with an even bigger and better protest to follow the first. With April 15th being "Tax Day", it was decided to schedule the second round of Tea Party protests to ride alongside the tax deadline.

And with that, the "Tax Day Tea Party", the second round of the Nationwide Tea Party protests, moved into reality.

***
Warning: Tea bags threat to Senate
Cort Wrotnowski’s papers sent for Anthrax quarantine
Newt Gingrich re: Tax Day Tea Party
Tax Day Tea Party Revolution Evolution
Rick Santelli's rant (video/transcript)
barama matthews goes after Rick Santelli
Robert Gibbs unprofessional remarks re: Santelli
DontGo: Steele welcome to listen
Steele denies request to speak at Chicago Tea Party
DontGo: Steele requested - we denied
About: National Tax Day Tea Party

DontGo: Steele requested, we denied

-April 13, 2009

DontGo Movement's press release response to RNC Chairman Michael Steele's denial of requesting to speak at Tea Party. See links below for background, if needed.

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
April 9, 2009

CONTACT:
Juliana Johnson
(312) 575-9500 (office)
(847) 691-9278 (cell)
julie@urqmedia.com

RNC Chairman Denied
Steele Not Wanted to Speak at Chicago Tea Party

NATIONAL- A few days ago Republican National Committee Chairman Michael Steele asked to speak at the Chicago Tax Day Tea Party. He was thanked for finally reaching out to the movement but denied to speak.

National Communications Director Juliana Johnson states, "Steele hasn't shown any interest in this movement until now, until the cameras are rolling. We denied his invitation. In addition, this is a nonpartisan event, not an RNC event."

Eric Odom, Director of the DontGo Movement, said in his letter to Steele's people, "...We're still excited to know that Chairman Steele will be in Chicago and we hope, after knowing that he'll be in the city, that he'll stop by and mingle with the Americans who will be rallying on April 15th. This will also present a fantastic time for Chairman Steele to LISTEN to what we have to say and perhaps gather some thoughts on what the RNC needs to be doing moving forward."

Please go to http://www.dontgomovement.com/blog/2009/04/08/rnc-chairman-steel-requests-speaker-spot-at-chicago-tea-party/ to read the full letter.

DontGo Movement will be protesting, along with many other organizations, the fact that government intrusion doesn't work. "A la the 1773 Boston Tea Party, we're fed up with the taxation and the government takeover brought on with the Stimulus Bill and the numerous other bailouts. There's only one proven way to create jobs and that is by cutting income taxes and wasteful spending" said Odom.

Tax Day Tea Parties will be taking place in hundreds of cities throughout America on April 15th and they are expecting a turnout of over 500,000 people. The original batch of Tea Parties, put together in only a few days, occurred in hundreds of cities with tens of thousands of people coming out in support. The main sponsors of the Tea Parties are the DontGo Movement, Smart Girl Politics, and Top Conservatives on Twitter.

For more information on the Tax Day Tea Parties, please go to www.taxdayteaparty.com.

***
Warning: Tea bags threat to Senate
Cort Wrotnowski’s papers sent for Anthrax quarantine
Newt Gingrich re: Tax Day Tea Party
Tax Day Tea Party Revolution Evolution
Rick Santelli's rant (video/transcript)
barama matthews goes after Rick Santelli
Robert Gibbs unprofessional remarks re: Santelli
DontGo: Steele welcome to listen
Steele denies request to speak at Chicago Tea Party
DontGo: Steele requested - we denied
About: National Tax Day Tea Party

Michael Steele denies request to speak at Chicago Tea Party

April 13, 2009

So now RNC Chairman Michael Steele is denying he ever asked to speak at the Chicago Tea Party. This after Eric Odom of the DontGo Movement (Tea Party organizers) said (4-8) that he could listen but not speak. For full background from Rick Santelli's rant - the inspiration - follow the links below.

April 10th, PAUL BEDARD, from Washington Whispers (US News) seems to have an inside source who said Steele never planned to speak and did ask to speak. DontGo responded with a press release saying Steele did but did include proof. (That I found.)

BEDARD:

...Yesterday, when I heard about this, I called the RNC, which said that Steele plans to be in Chicago for a party meeting and was just interested in getting info on the event and the attendees.

"He never asked to speak," says a party official. "There was never an expectation nor formal request for our participation."

"He's in a daylong meeting anyway, so we weren't ever going to be speaking," said an official. "It was just a 'Hey, we're going to be in town' call."

Well, after we E-mailed Don't Go, organizers there must have realized the news value of their claim. They put out a news release titled: "RNC Chairman Denied. Steele Not Wanted to Speak at Chicago Tea Party."

The RNC's reaction: "They're just having a little fun."

At Michael Steele's expense.

***
Warning: Tea bags threat to Senate
Cort Wrotnowski’s papers sent for Anthrax quarantine
Newt Gingrich re: Tax Day Tea Party
Tax Day Tea Party Revolution Evolution
Rick Santelli's rant (video/transcript)
barama matthews goes after Rick Santelli
Robert Gibbs unprofessional remarks re: Santelli
DontGo: Steele welcome to listen
Steele denies request to speak at Chicago Tea Party
DontGo: Steele requested - we denied
About: National Tax Day Tea Party

*Don't Go*: Steele welcome to listen

April 13, 2009

Gov Quinn, with his blago-predicted tax hikes, has given the Chicago Tea Party legitimacy. it's an issue that affects all of us here in Illinois - democrats included. Michael Steele in his infinite panderment - seeing the media picked up on it - wanted to speak at the Tea Party but he got dissed instead. He's welcome...to listen. Does anyone like this guy? Was he given the job so people could hate him and then they could make a change?


"Don't Go" Tea Party organizer, ERIC ODOM's response to RNC Chairman Michael Steele's request to speak (which he subsequently denied): Emphasis added

As I mentioned on the phone the other day, I very much appreciate the fact that Chairman Steele is now finally starting to reach out to the true grassroots side of the free-market movement in America. Unfortunately, it appears that he has only just decided to reach out after realizing how big the movement has gotten and how much media is now involved.

That said, we're still excited to know that Chairman Steele will be in Chicago and we hope, after knowing that he'll be in the city, that he'll stop by and mingle with the Americans who will be rallying on April 15th. This will also present a fantastic time for Chairman Steele to LISTEN to what we have to say and perhaps gather some thoughts on what the RNC needs to be doing moving forward.

With regards to stage time, we respectfully must inform Chairman Steel that RNC officials are welcome to participate in the rally itself, but we prefer to limit stage time to those who are not elected officials, both in Government as well as political parties. This is an opportunity for Americans to speak, and elected officials to listen, not the other way around.

I do hope that Chairman Steele will join us as a regular American in protest of Government spending and extreme taxation.

Monday, March 30, 2009

Capehart re: Steele vs barry = "black male jealousy"

March 30, 2009

Michael Steele is at it again. Does the RNC want him to keep hanging himself with his crazy words. RNC Chairman thinks abortion is a "personal choice" - how does this speak to the base? And then there's his kowtowing to a radio host. Now he's "done" with barry because of the myth of barry's bipartisanship. Don't blame him. It's a figment of barry's delusional egomania. Look what happened with barry's attempt at bringing on Judd Gregg.

Anyway Steele was interviewed by CNN's Don Lemon. The two other guys are RNC Chair of Florida Jim Greer and Sirius XM radio host Michelangelo Signorelli.

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lo7TNGhmKpQ]

NewsPoliticsNews

CNN Transcript:

DON LEMON: OK, well, you know, when I asked him, and I want you to comment on this after Michael, I asked him if he had -- he said he's been trying to reach out to the president for years, President Barack Obama, that there is no professional jealousy when it comes of all -- he said there was a Michael Steele before there was a Barack Obama. So he said he's tried to speak to the president, and I asked him about it.

STEELE: Look, I like the president personally, even though I think he has got a little thing about me, that I haven't quite figured out what that is.

DON LEMON: You haven't spoken to him?
STEELE: No.

LEMON: You've reach out?
STEELE: Several times, and I'm done.

LEMON: So there is no bipartisanship going on there?
STEELE: Not, not that I know of.

LEMON: Is there any professional jealousy?
STEELE: Not on my part. What would I be jealous of?

LEMON: He's the president of the United States.

STEELE: I'm chairman of the RNC, so, what's your point? We both have leadership responsibilities and roles. I'm not equating the two. My point is: you are on your track. I'm on my track. You do your thing. I do my thing.

Don Lemon also asked him if he had considered running for president.

STEELE: No. I'm telling you, I'm looking you in the eye honestly and telling you that, without blinking and without hesitation. Straight up.

LEMON also asked him whether he thought he would have secured his party's chairmanship had he been white.

STEELE: Yes. If my qualifications and my capabilities and my ideas were the same, and the only thing that was different was my skin color, yes. Why wouldn't I be?

LEMON: I asked him if Dr. King would be proud of him, or would think that he realized a dream? And he said yes, I think, absolutely he would. Look, we have two black men or African-American men at the pinnacle of political power in this country. He said one was Barack Obama, the other was Michael Steele.

When Steele was on DL Hughley he said:

STEELE: There was a Michael Steele before there was a Barack Obama.

LEMON asked Steele if he felt like he was on the wrong side of history.

STEELE: Is that how that works? So where was all the support for me when I was running for lieutenant governor of Maryland? Where was all of the support for me when I was running for the U.S. Senate as potentially the first black senator from Maryland? I didn't see a whole lot of, you know, being on the right side or the wrong side of history there. So if I looked at it in that context, I would be stunted in my abilities to do anything. I would become frustrated, angry, to the point where I just give up and go away. And that's just not how I do things. So this isn't about being on the right side or the wrong of anything.

What made this all the more interesting is Jonathan Capehart's pronouncement on Morning Joe. Mika and Joe are looking dumbfounded as to why the question was asked all the while knowing it was a black thing. Mika was waiting for Capehart to say something as the only black on the panel and he obliged.

CAPEHART: They're not even on the same level - Micheal Steele and Barack Obama - what the questioner was trying to imply was that there was some, you know, black male jealousy going on between the two.

Mika looks utterly shocked - bad actor and Joe goes off.

JOE: If I had a bell I would ring. Ding! Ding! Ding!

Sunday, March 8, 2009

DL Hughley to Ron Paul: “You are too human to be Republican”

March 7, 2009

DL Hughley interviews Rep Ron Paul (R-TX). The “Rush Limbaugh is the head of the Republican Party” debate continues.

HUGHLEY: Why is his name Steele? You should call him aluminum.

HUGHLEY to Paul: You talk sensibly, you’re very reasonable, you’re very pragmatic in your approach…Is Rush Limbaugh the Republican Party Leader?

PAUL: Philosophically, he has a lot to do with it but technically, no, he’s not that leader. He’s not an elected leader. But philosophically he’s filling a void. I think there’s a void in the Republican Party and somebody is filling it. There are philosphic influences and that’s what Rush Limbaugh does.

HUGLEY: If the word conspiracy is gonna be used let the black guy do it.

HUGHLEY to Paul: You don’t seem like a Republican to me - like that I’ve ever heard. You seem so reasonable…You seem to make sense, which I don’t attribute to too many politicians.

Paul says he’s a “strict Constitutionalist” but he didn’t have the nads to go to the wall with barry and his birth certificate.

HUGHLEY: You are too human to be Republican….You make too much sense - you can’t be a Republican.

Both interviews - Steele and Paul - Hughley remarked that they didn’t seem like Republicans, revealing his own generalized thinking.

What if someone were to say to Hughley: You don’t seem like a black person to me - you seem too reasonable - too human - you make too much sense.

Would it be considered worse than *articulate*?

Hx31963

HUGHLEY: Next we’ll find out if Jesus was a Republican…

RNC Dr Ada Fisher: “it would be a good idea for Mr. Steele to consider stepping aside”

March 6, 2009

RNC Member Dr Ada Fisher was on Rachel Maddow. She sent to 13 members of RNC Chairman Michael Steele’s transition team an email (which was leaked) suggesting Steele should consider stepping aside because the RNC hasn’t been doing their job - raising money for their candidates. Evidently there is a history between them - she not being a great fan of his, which Steele’s spokesman said publicly.

Bits of her email, which she did not realized was leaked. From The Hill:

FISHER: I don’t want to hear anymore [sic] language trying to be cool about the bling in the stimulus package or appealing to D.L. Hughley and blacks in a way that isn’t going to win us any votes and makes us frankly appear to many blacks as quite foolish.

Hughley called the Republican National Convention “literally looked like Nazi Germany“. Steele wasn’t fazed - said nothing and then went on to insult Rush Limbaugh

FISHER: Limbaugh has already promised that ‘His Conservatives’ won’t be giving to the RNC. I would suggest to you that that is a real bet. If we can’t raise money and continue to allow the alienation of the few varifiable [sic] red states remaining, we are foolish.

FISHER: I have never seen such ineptness in our GOP leadership. And I though we handled the 2008 elections very poorly.

She also reportedly called the Limbaugh-Steele clash a “Republican Horror Show”.

From the MSNBC transcript:

MADDOW: “U.S. News & World Report,” yesterday, quoted an unanimous top GOP strategist saying, quote, “If his implosion continues, RNC members are likely to call a special session to dump him for an effective chairman.”

….You will recall that Michael Steele offering the, quote “friggin‘ awesome” Louisiana Governor Bobby Jindal some, quote, “slum love.”

Recall Mr. Steele calling civil unions crazy. You‘ll recall him insisting that in all human history, government has never created a job. Hmm. Mr. Steele has also failed to hire staff to run the Republican National Committee and, of course, he memorably has promised more outreach to urban-suburban hip-hop settings via an off-the-hook Republican public relations campaign.

Now, in a new radio interview, Mr. Steele has also said that Republicans over the years, quote, “in trying to be, you know, cool and hip in a Democrat way, we failed.” Mr. Steele then went on to explain how he thinks of the task ahead for the party he leads.

“I‘m putting the party on a 12-step program of recovery. And this is going to take some time, it‘s going to take some effort.”

[...] On top of all this, Michael Steele continues to have a cloud hanging over him from his last run for public office. He’s currently under FBI investigation for possible fraud after he paid thousands of dollars in campaign funds to a firm called Brown Sugar that was controlled by his sister. A former Steele campaign official says that no work was performed in exchange for those payments.

In addition, WBAL in Baltimore is reporting allegations about thousands of dollars Mr. Steele paid to a different firm during that same failed 2006 Senate bid. It was more than $60,000 in payments labeled as political consulting fees, but they were paid to a company that traded commodities. Their business was like trading coffee and minerals and stuff. And the company had forfeited its license to operate in Maryland a year before the payments.

[...] Mr. Steele told the “Washington Post” in an interview publish today, quote, “I’m in the business of ticking people off. That’s why I’m chairman.” Steele also told “The Post”, quote, “Everyone has a role to play, but at the end of the day, all roads are going to lead to this desk.”

Then Maddow talked about how Steele threatened to financially sanction the Rep Senators who backed barry’s bill (Collins and Snowe from ME, Specter PA, ). Snowe asked him if it was true - he said no and then later said yes he wasn’t going to back down from it and then donated $1M RNC dollars to the National Republican Senatorial Committee.

Why he needs a staff.

Also, you might recall Steele was in the center of the “Oreo cookie” controversy when he was running for Lt Governor of Maryland that may or may not have happened. The cleaning crew, reportedly, never found a single chocolaty bit.

The interview proper from the transcript:

MADDOW: Joining us now is Dr. Ada Fisher of North Carolina. Dr. Fisher, many, many thanks for coming on the show tonight.

DR. ADA FISHER, REPUBLICAN NAT‘L. COMMITTEE MEMBER: Well, thank you for inviting me. I‘d like to also thank (INAUDIBLE) Hendersonville, North Carolina, for agreeing to let me meet here with you in this public forum.

MADDOW: Sure. You are the first Republican National Committee member to publicly call for Michael Steele‘s resignation as chairman. What are you main concerns about his chairmanship?

FISHER: Well, first of all, let me say that I sent a memo to 13 members of, people who I thought were on Michael Steele‘s transition team and not to the media. So, I was surprised to find that people are quoting from the memo about various things that I said. What I said to the transition team and what I stand behind is I believe that, given all the things that are happening, it would be a good idea for Mr. Steele to consider stepping aside and letting the—and letting the RNC elect a new chairman. And you can call it whatever you want to, but that‘s what the memo said.

My concerns are, number one—that the job of the RNC is to raise money and get our candidates elected. We also have to sit down and talk about what our strategies are. We have been diverted by nipping and sniping from a lot of different sides, and we have not gotten to our primary mission. And if we don‘t get to our primary mission, we won‘t be effective in helping our candidates get elected both in 2010 and 2012.

We also have a challenge, because we have people in local races, from school boards to county commissioners who need our help. And we need to be out in the counties, where I am now, trying to drum up support and get the Republicans energized to take on this task as well. And that is what our mission is and that‘s what we should be doing. And I don‘t think that we have put the time into that.

MADDOW: I know that your memo was not intended for the media. It did leak, which means that somebody who received it decided to let it—to let it get out to the media. What we got from the memo was reported in “The Hill” newspaper. I wonder—given that—what kind of response you have had directly from the people to whom you sent this memo, from the transition team, from other RNC members?

FISHER: I haven‘t received any response from anybody that I know of. And I checked my email at a different computer today about 4:30. So, I haven‘t received anything.

And when you called me, it was the first time that I knew that the memo was leaked. And that‘s just not standard operating procedure nor is it correct. And we need to tighten up our ship and do better.

MADDOW: Well, Mr. Steele‘s transition chairman did say publicly today that—essentially, that you just got a grudge against Mr. Steele, that you have been gunning for him essentially since he decided to run for chairman. That‘s the way publicly he‘s responding. What‘s your response to that?

FISHER: Well, I think that his response is absolutely wrong. I don‘t have a public grudge against anyone. My role at the RNC National Committee woman from North Carolina is to help get our candidates elected.

And if we are not about that business, then we are not doing what we are supposed to. I‘ve also said that we must have transparency in all of our operations because I am accountable to my state and the people in this state. And people want to know what‘s going on. Now—that‘s it.

MADDOW: OK.

FISHER: And I don‘t have a grudge against anybody.

MADDOW: In an e-mail that you wrote—in this email that you wrote, you said and I‘m quoting here from, again, something you did not intend to be public but it is. “I don‘t want to hear anymore language trying to be cool about the bling in the stimulus package or appealing to D.L. Hughley and blacks in a way that isn‘t going to win us any votes and makes us, frankly, appear to many blacks as quite foolish.”

I mean, Mr. Steele made history as the first ever black party chairman. You are one of only three members of the RNC who are African-American. Why do you think he specifically makes the Republican Party look foolish to black people?

FISHER: I think that he makes people—he makes us look—first off, we have an 11th commandment. And that commandment says we should not speak ill of other Republicans. Mr. Steele has a right to say what he wants as does Rush Limbaugh.

My concern is, we need to focus on our mission and our principles. We need to talk about the fact that this economy is failing and we need to promote what is the Republican response. We need to talk about the fact that we have healthcare coming from the White House, and Republicans need to say this is what our response is. Those are the challenges that we face.

And the Democrats are doing a good job of getting us off-task and off-mission.

MADDOW: Do you think that Mr. Steele should stop talking to the media as long as he is chairman? Would that be—would that be a positive step in your mind?

FISHER: What I think should happen is Mr. Steele and the RNC needs to come together and talk about several issues. If you read the memo further, you would say that—you would hear that we are having a phone conference on Friday. And I asked to talk and discuss these things on Friday in the phone conference. So, I haven‘t received a response to that.

We need to talk to each other not about each other. We need to get it straight what is going to be our mission so that we can go with a unified front and say, this is what we believe. The principles of this party are correct.

I am writing a book now which is called “Commonsense Conservative Prescriptions.” And the subtitle says, “It‘s not what you say, it‘s what they hear based on what they‘ve seen.” And I think that that is one of the dilemmas for the party. We have the right principles. People have not seen us use them and promote them in a way that they can relate to, and we need to do a better job of that.

MADDOW: We‘re just about time, just one last quick question. Are you, at all, concerned about those financial scandals surrounding Mr. Steele? Having spent money on a—given money to a company run by his sister, apparently, for work that was not done, this other allegation about spending $60,000 for consulting with a company that appears to be a minerals commodity trading firm—are you concerned about those things as well?

FISHER: I‘m concerned about how we use and operate money throughout the Republican Party, not just in his case. I ran a campaign and the FEC came down on me for some late reports which were not my fault but related to a third party. So, we got some cleaning up in campaign finance reform to do all along. But I would say to you, if the FBI can investigate Mr. Steele for his finances, somebody needs to look at the Obama campaign and its finances, which are not subject to public scrutiny and should be to the same extent that we are holding Mr. Steele and others.

MADDOW: Republican National Committee member, Dr. Ada Fisher, thank you for coming on the show tonight. I really appreciate your time, ma‘am.

FISHER: Thank you very much.

Wednesday, March 4, 2009

DNCC website: “I’m sorry, Rush”

March 4, 2009

The democrats are so crazy they put up a generic website “I’m sorry, Rush” for Republicans to send Rush Limbaugh and “I apologize” form letter. It’s a real group: Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee.

Why are they bothering? Aren’t they in power? It’s just turning off more people. Any middle-grader can tell you: if you ignore the bully, the bully will ignore you.

barry can’t help himself, though. He can’t stand when folks aren’t obamerized. He rants about FOX, O’Reilly, Hannity, Limbaugh and Lou Dobbs because they dare to speak in non-adoring terms. He said he doesn’t read much press. Right.

His ego and need for feeding of it is bigger than the deficit.

RAHM EMANUEL: “Whenever a Republican criticizes them, they have to run back and apologize to him.”

RUSH LIMBAUGH transcript:

It is on the record — thanks to Politico.com — since last fall, the White House, led by Rahm Emanuel, the chief of staff to Barack Obama, has been targeting me, your host, your harmless, lovable little fuzzball. Their standard operating procedure: they need a demon to distract and divert from what their agenda is. They need a demon about whom they can lie so as to persuade average Americans that they’re the good guys, the benevolent good guys, and the mean SOBs are their enemies trying to stop this great young little president from doing miraculous and wonderful things.

Here is a new ad that this union bunch is running in Washington, DC, ladies and gentlemen. And, of course, it’s been picked up all over the Web. You guys, if you haven’t done so, you gotta go to RushLimbaugh.com. The DNCC, whatever it is, they have a questionnaire up there. It’s hilarious. I have to give ‘em credit. You can see it right now at RushLimbaugh.com. It is a form letter where any Republican can send a note of apology to me. The note is an apology note to me, and you can fill in your name and the reason you’re apologizing. It is funny. I had to laugh when I saw it last night. I instructed Koko, just put it up there, ’cause it’s hilarious. It’s as good as the old Saturday Night Live stuff back when Saturday Night Live was actually funny. But there’s a new ad targeted at your lovable, harmless little fuzzball host from that union bunch. It starts today in Washington, DC, which means it’s going to be all over the cable networks pretty soon.

That’s the union bunch. Can you just see…? (laughing) “Call the Republican leadership and say no to Limbaugh.” (laughing) Now, ladies and gentlemen, the Politico story today. I got an e-mail last night from the writer of the story, Jonathan Martin, who did not tell me the full details of what the story they were working on was. He did not tell me that they have discovered that there is a team inside the White House targeting me and that they’ve been doing this since last fall, when they went out and did some polling data and found out I’ve got very high negatives among certain groups. So they thought, “Well, this is the guy to demonize! Since Bush is leaving, we need somebody,” and so this is being led from the White House. There is an orchestrated attack, daily drumbeat on me from the White House. The participants here are James Carville, Paul Begala and Rahm Emanuel.

But make no mistake about it. Emanuel is the leader of all of this. Carville and Begala are just trying to ride my fame into their fortune and become relevant again. Begala and Carville, don’t confuse them with the power brokers that are managing this. It all Emanuel. Begala and Carville are second-rate talking heads on CNN. CNN has no audience. Rahm Emanuel is the power behind the throne — and don’t let his effeminate nature and his ballerina past mislead you on this. He may look effeminate (he was a ballerina at one time) but he has the feral instincts of a female rat defending its young. Well, take a look. When Emanuel and Carville and Begala are together (and I’ve seen pictures) it looks like a reunion of the Village People. (singing) Y! M! C! A! They are really the official greeters in Roswell, New Mexico, in Area 51 where Carville was born.

My point here is that these are really odious, empty, nasty people who are feasting on their own arrogance. They are power hungry. But, you know what? They’ve never had a serious debate over ideas. Their goal is to destroy opponents, which is what they’re trying to do now. They don’t want to engage opponents. Their idea of victory is the destruction of the opponent. They’re not for a level playing field. They want to clear the playing field so that their ideas do not have to undergo any scrutiny. So what do they do? They leak stories to The Politico intended to create impressions about their own importance and their brilliance, when in fact they aren’t even bit players on the nation’s stage. This is Emanuel, and this is Obama.
***

He’s absolutely right - barry cleared the playing field for his first election. Wiped out all his competitors. The only time he had run against the GOP was the general election and that was obvious by their simple use of the race card. How many black folks weren’t already voting for him? What white guilt hadn’t been milked dry?

barry’s goal is to destroy. He wanted to win by destroying and it was born out in during the primaries. They won by destroying because he had nothing to promote. Same thing the barrybots did. In ours hundreds of interactions with bots here and the other site - not one - NOT ONE - could tell us why he should be president without attacking his opponents or us. 99% couldn’t name a single policy. Nonbarry folks know more about barry then the bots.

What does that tell you?

He’s up there taking about Change! and ethics and hope! and whatever else, while his minions - the DNC, the proobamedia and the bots - attack like filthy demons. Hillary Clitnon was one thing - what they did and said about Sarah Palin and her family was beyond evil.

Jonjon Alter: “DISABLED INFANT”.

And Al Franken came up with the incest “sketch” for SNL.

If he said the same thing about Malia and Sasha would he be on his way to the senate?

Give me Burris any day.

I don’t know what this man believes in and I really do not care. What he says here - right here - about barry is the absolute truth. Absolute 100% truth. And the more barry pouts and postures, the more glaringly obvious it will become.

What was done to Hillary Clinton? Mr Bill? Suddenly they’re both racists and “Hillary” is talking about barry’s assassination. That is still something they haven’t apologized for. Anyone ever hear barry apologize for anything? Ever? It took three denials before he admitted he was playing the race card with those dollar bills he indeed looks like. Hillary Clinton is other one who doesn’t look like the dollar bills. It took him four tries to say he screwed up with Daschle.

Stellar judgment, eh?

And Clinton’s teas sipping didn’t qualify her to be president - just qualified her as the top diplomat in the world. That should have clued y’all into who barry really is. She has to be happy she is actually out doing something. And he assembles these expert panels to come up with something so a) he knows what to do and b) so he has someone to blame it on. He puts together team after team and then says his top people won’t be getting raises. He neglects to mention that one team’s salary far exceeds any raise his people could get.

Hello.

And what about what he allowed to happen to Sen McCain? He was called a racist and likened to George Wallace and had ads made about how his rage was a “national security concern“. All things barry has never apologized for, including the allegation that McCain supporters were yelling “kill him” which was a complete myth as per barry’s own Secret Service. And I certainly don’t have to mention what was done to Gov Palin and her family. And after his hacks did it he said families are off limit- just like he said when his US Senate Rep opponent’s sealed divorce records became public and barry said they shouldn’t be used.

You folks are seeing who the real barry is now - who he has been all along. He cares about himself - not the people - else he wouldn’t even be responding to this crap. This is all barry’s people know how to do - campaign. All barry knows how to do is give teleprompter speeches and Mr Bill had to tell him to stop saying how bad things. He was trying to lower expectations at a time when all that hope! teleprompterspeak was needed. That’s why there was a complete change in tone in that latest speech.

They have no idea how to govern and it is becoming clearer every hour.

I’ll have to put that stock market graphic in a post. Another thing the fuzzball is right about.

Face the Nation: Rahm Emanuel (video + transcript)

Face the Nation: Rahm Emanuel (video + transcript)

By mattie14

March 1, 2009

barry’s Chief of Staff, Rahm Emanuel on “Face the Nation” goes off on Rush Limbaugh.

Why is the White House wasting time on a radio host when they are in power? Would someone please tell barry he won and that he is no longer campaigning?

barry and his buds are playing let’s lay the groundwork for 2012 when the ground is burning.

CQ Politics Transcript: Face the Nation

Bob Schieffer & Rahm Emanuel

[emphasis added - CAPS mine]

SCHIEFFER: And good morning again. Rahm Emanuel is with us in the studio this morning.

Good morning, Mr. Emmanuel.

It was a big week last week. It’s going to be another big one this week. When the president told the joint session of Congress on Tuesday there was nothing more important than bringing the deficit down, House Democrats, led by Speaker Pelosi, jumped to their feet with applause.

Yet on Wednesday, those same Democrats passed a spending bill to keep the government running for the rest of this fiscal year that contained 9,000 — count ‘em — 9,000 earmarks, costing nearly $8 billion.

The Senate is going to act on that bill this week, will send it to the president for his signature. It looks like most of those earmarks are going to stay in.

Is the president going to sign this bill?

EMANUEL: As you noted, that’s last year’s business. Second is when President Obama came to office, two major bills were passed without earmarks. The major economic recovery act — earmark-free; the children’s health care bill — earmark-free.

He has said clearly his policies about earmarks, which is you’ve got to be — more accountability, more transparency, and a reduction.

This bill has some of those, but he has enunciated his view and given an indication, when he was a senator, he, like I, when I was a member of Congress, put his own individual request on his own Web page.

That policy has now been adopted because the most important thing is to be transparent and accountable for what you ask.

Because what the American people want to know is, do these individual congressional earmarks meet a worthy public objective, or are they just an individual desire of a member of Congress?

And that’s why transparency and accountability are so important.

[SAY IT ENOUGH TIMES AND PEOPLE BELIEVE IT - IT WORKED TO GET HIM THERE.]

SCHIEFFER: Well, I understand that. But why didn’t he just tell the Senate, look, take these things out of here; I’ve told people we were not going to have these earmarks; then send it back to me?

EMANUEL: What he has always said is — and what he’s clear is, again, the economic recovery act, earmark-free, a major bill.

Second, this is last year’s business.

And third most importantly, we’re going to have to make some other changes, going forward, to reduce and bring more — reduce the ultimate number and bring the transparency. And that’s the policy that he enunciated in his campaign.

SCHIEFFER: But it sounds to me like what you’re — what he’s about to do, here, is say, well I don’t like this but I’m going to go ahead and sign it, but I’m going to warn you, don’t ever do it again. Is that what’s about to happen here?

EMANUEL: In not so many words, yes.

SCHIEFFER: All right. Well, let’s talk about this budget, because it was a whopper, that was outlined this week.

Republicans say it’s going to increase the size of government by one-third, just next year alone. It produces a deficit of $1.75 trillion. That’s the largest since World War II, probably larger than the last five combined.

On our Web cast, “Washington Unplugged,” I asked former Republican Speaker Newt Gingrich on Friday about it. Here’s what he said about it.

(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)

NEWT GINGRICH, FORMER SPEAKER OF THE HOUSE: I think that what President Obama has done is outlined the boldest effort to remake America since Lyndon Johnson’s great society in 1965.

I think he has courageously laid down the challenge to the whole country. He said, I want to become a more left-wing country with a bigger government, with higher taxes. Now, do you want to go that way or not?

And I think the challenge will be, for those of us who don’t want to go that way, to articulate an alternative vision. But I think this budget sets the stage for the biggest fight over the future of America since 1965.

(END VIDEO CLIP)

SCHIEFFER: The biggest fight since 1965?

EMANUEL: Three quick points, Bob. First, this is a $1.7 trillion deficit he inherited. Let’s be clear about that. We inherited this deficit and we inherited $4 trillion of new debt.

EMANUEL: That is the facts.

Second, this budget is very honest with the American people. It’s honest about the cost of the war, which we have never been honest for seven years. It’s honest about the alternative minimum tax, which we’ve never been honest with the American people about. And that, in this deficit, reflects what we inherited at this point.

Second, I happen to think that Newt is right about one thing. There’s a challenge now to the Republicans. Because the president is very clear. We can subsidize the HMO industry on 114 cents on the dollar rather than pay 100 cents on the dollar for health care. Will the Republican budget continue down the path of subsidizing the health care industry and the insurance industry in particular, while in fact coverage and premiums — lack of coverage for the uninsured continues to go up? The fact is that premiums go up for the rest of America, and also America’s life expectancy goes down. Will they continue to subsidize the big oil industry, while we send — but while we send over, Bob, $700 billion of our wealth overseas. They have a challenge. Will they subsidize the banking industry rather than helping kids go to college?

We’ve laid out a vision — start to invest in America, invest in your middle class, make the tough choices, be honest with the American people. The challenge will be, as he said there, which is will the Republicans meet the challenge of the future or keep us on the path that they have set for the last seven years that got us to this point of reckoning.

SCHIEFFER: You cannot say, though, can you, that this is all something he inherited, this deficit. I mean, there are things in this budget that were not in George Bush’s budget, talking about health care and all of these other things.

EMANUEL: No, no, but what we are doing — as we did in the Economic Recovery Act — and it’s fundamental to our goal — first of all, we bring the deficit down. That’s different.

Second is, we and the president– the president was very clear in the Economic Recovery Act as he is in this economic program — it is time to invest in our energy independence, which is why in the Economic Recovery Act we doubled the size of alternative energy. It’s time to invest in our kids’ ability to go to college, which is why we don’t subsidize banks but we subsidize kids’ ability to go to college. It is time we start insuring and bring the costs down, the premiums, as well as expand coverage. Those are the type of investments that are key for America’s economic growth and competitiveness going forward. The health care system is a particular example where America’s economic competitiveness, its strength around the world is sapped because we have a health care system that doesn’t allow American workers and business to compete. And it is the key to our long-term putting our fiscal house in order.

And the Republicans will have an opportunity not just to criticize, but to propose. And the question is, will they continue the path of the seven years that have got us to the point of basically a culture of rising deficits and more and more consumer spending? This budget deficit, this budget, an economic program fundamentally changes the culture in this way. It rejects the past and says we are going to be a culture and a society that invests and saves.

SCHIEFFER: What the Republicans also say, it raises taxes on everybody. I think everybody expected that taxes on upper-income people were going to go up. Barack Obama said during the campaign that that’s what he planned to do. But Newt Gingrich and some of the other Republicans say when people find out that when you’re talking about these things you’re talking about on the energy front, it’s going to be a new tax on everybody that uses electricity, who drives a car, and there’s going to be tax increases in myriad other ways.

EMANUEL: Well, first of all, let’s be very clear. Because I’ve seen these scare tactic before. You’ve seen it too, Bob. 95 percent of Americans, working Americans, will have a tax cut. As the president said Tuesday night, 95 percent of Americans will have a tax cut. And starting April 1st, they’ll see it, which the Republicans voted against in large measure in the House and in the Senate.

Second, nobody will see a tax increase for two years, when we get out of this recession. And he ran on, as you noted, the fact that the wealthy 2 percent will have their marginal rates go back to where they were under Bill Clinton, when we produced 22 million jobs, and their deductions will go back to where they were under Ronald Reagan. We’re going really just back to that point, that starting point.

[ON THE CAMPAIGN TRAIL EVERYTHING BILL CLINTON DID SUCKED - NOW THEY'RE TAKING CREDIT FOR THE GOOD THINGS - EXACTLY WHAT HE SAID ABOUT HILLARY CLINTON AS FIRST LADY.]

So there will be these scare tactics of trying to talk about the fact that everybody is going to see increases. And the president couldn’t have been clearer Tuesday night that working, middle-class families will get a tax cut.

In addition to that, more and more will get assistance so they can go to college in a society and a time economically where you earn what you learn, we’re going to help more people go to college and have the most educated workforce.

We’re also fundamentally — the most important thing economically is getting an energy policy and a health care policy that ensures that the economy and members of our society and our country can get a health care system that works for them, rather than them working for that health care system, and an energy policy that weans us off dependence on foreign oil and towards an independent policy on energy.

SCHIEFFER: Aren’t there more tax increases in this plan than Barack Obama talked about during the campaign? For example, on upper- income people, talking about reducing the deductions they can take on charitable giving. Aren’t you going to get a lot of opposition from places like where Barack Obama used to work, charitable enterprises, when he was a community organizer?

EMANUEL: There will be, you know, voices of criticism. But I want everybody to be reassured by the fact, these are the rates that were — the deductions that Ronald Reagan had, and the marginal rate is where Bill Clinton and the time in the ’90s, we had. That’s what they are. There’s not like just something totally radically new. We’re going back to those points.

And making sure — but what do we do? We reduce the deficit and we make critical investments that are essential to the economic strength of this country. And what has not happened over the years when we were subsidizing these powerful interests is, in fact, we went farther and slid farther and farther behind while we were piling up record amount of debt and deficits.

And the question is and the challenge is, that day of reckoning can no longer be put off. And the president is very clear. He ran on this. And one of the big news here in Washington is not only did he run on it, he then proposed it, which is always a surprise, and I think one of the gaffes that you hear here in Washington. People expect you to run on one — say one thing in the campaign and then govern different. I think what’s woken up Washington is he’s been consistent from the campaign all the way through to his economic programs, and he’s said these are the challenges we have, and the day of running away from those challenges and not meeting them while America slid behind economically is no longer feasible or is no longer smart.

SCHIEFFER: All right. Do you think you’re going to get more Republican support than you had, for example, on passing those stimulus packages? I noticed you said in an article in the New Yorker when somebody asked, “is bipartisanship dead?”

You were quoted as saying, “the public wants bipartisanship. We just have to try. We don’t have to succeed in getting it.”

What does that mean?

EMANUEL: Well, there’s slightly — a little more about that.

First of all, we did succeed, number one, in bipartisanship.

[SUCCEED? WHEN? AND NOW?]

SCHIEFFER: You got three Republicans.

EMANUEL: No, well, let’s do the entire scorecard. On the Ledbetter legislation, a number of Republicans in both the House and the Senate voted for it. On the children’s health care bill, a number of Republicans voted for that.

[HOW MANY EXACTLY? AND HOW WERE THEY GOING TO VOTE AGAINST LEDBETTER AND GET REELECTED WHEN THE MAJORITY IF THE ELECTORATE ARE WOMEN?]

You are right on the Economic Recovery Act, because of its boldness, we had three. But we had governors throughout the country who support it. Republican mayors throughout the country support it, and Republican voters who supported it.

[THAT IS NOT BIPARTISANSHIP.]

Going forward, the president has been very clear. He called on the national service bill that Senator Kennedy and Senator Hatch, Republican for Utah, had proposed. He has been clear about wanting a stem cell legislation that a number — like Senator Specter, a Republican from Pennsylvania, as well as Senator Harkin, a Democrat from Iowa. So we will continue to reach out, as we did in the fiscal summit earlier this week, as we will in the health care summit on Thursday.

SCHIEFFER: Let me ask you this question…

EMANUEL: But our goal, our goal, Bob, is to continue to reach out.

[HOW DID THEY REACH OUT? THEY JAMMED IT DOWN THEIR THROATS AND NO ONE READ IT. HURRY AND GET IT THROUGH AND THEN GO HOME TO THE HYDE PARK RANCH FOR VACATION AND THEN GO TO A SWING STATE TO SIGN IT.]

And it’s our desire that the Republicans would work with us and try to be constructive, rather than adopt the philosophy of somebody like Rush Limbaugh, who is praying for failure.

SCHIEFFER: Rush Limbaugh. We’ve talked about Newt Gingrich a lot this morning and now you bring up Rush Limbaugh. Who do you think now speaks for the Republican Party?

EMANUEL: You just named them. It was Rush Limbaugh. I mean, he has laid out his vision, in my view, and he said it clearly, and I compliment him for that. He’s been very upfront and I compliment him for that. He’s not hiding.

He’s asked for President Obama and called for President Obama to fail. That’s his view. And that’s what he has enunciated. And whenever a Republican criticize him, they have to run back and apologize to him, and say they were misunderstood.

He is the voice and the intellectual force and energy behind the Republican Party. And he has been upfront about what he views, and hasn’t stepped back from that, which is he hopes for failure. He said it. And I compliment him for his honesty, but that’s their philosophy that is enunciated by Rush Limbaugh. And I think that’s the wrong philosophy for America, because what Americans want us to do and what President Obama has been very clear about is work together, setting our goals. We may take different roads to get to that goal, but be clear on what we have to do to build this country, by investing in our people, changing the health care system, having an energy independence policy that clearly weans America off its dependence on foreign oil…

SCHIEFFER: Do you really think he is that important, that other Republicans are paying that much attention to him?

EMANUEL: Well, he was given the keynote, basically, at the Conservative Caucus to speak. When a Republican did attack him, he was — clearly had to turn around and come back and basically said that he’s apologizing and was wrong. And I do think he’s an intellectual force, which is why the Republicans pay such attention to him.

[WHY IS THE WHITE HOUSE PAYING ATTENTION TO HIM?]

SCHIEFFER: All right. We’re going to take a break here and we’ll come back to talk about this, about drawing down the troops in Iraq and a whole lot more when we come back.

(COMMERCIAL BREAK)

SCHIEFFER: Back now with the White House chief of staff Rahm Emanuel .

Mr. Emanuel, General Motors is now losing $100 millions a day. They have already spent, we are told, two-thirds of what they have already received from the government. And we’re hearing they want some more. They’re now asking for another $16 billion.

Is the president going to do that?

Because the question I have is, how long does this go on?

EMANUEL: As you know, the panel of experts we’ve assembled on the auto industry is working with GM and the others on their plan. The president has been very clear, though, what his priorities are. They have to have a viable business plan, on a going-forward basis, and it’s going to require a sacrifice from all the parties involved to do that.

But here’s the other thing I think that people should see, in both GM as well as the others. They never invested in both alternative energy cars. They got dependent on big gas guzzlers. They didn’t do — they have a health care cost structure that’s outdated.

And as, sort of, an example, we talked earlier, Bob, about the fact that their health care system is affecting their business and their employers — and their employees, rather.

And it’s an example, in my view, of what the president’s saying for this country. The day of reckoning, of making sure that we had a policy on energy independence, a policy that ensures that our health care costs were under control and our ability to make sure that coverage was expanded to those who are uninsured, as one way to also bring costs under control — that is the challenge we face as a country.

Is it GM specific? The president wants to see a business model that, on a going-forward basis, is cognizant of the market and that all the parties made the sacrifices necessary for that independence. The panel of experts are now meeting to go over those plans and help them develop something — or review what they’re doing before any other decision is made.

SCHIEFFER: So you’re saying, unless they change their ways drastically, unless they come up with a new model, no more money.

EMANUEL: Basically, over the last 20 to 30 years, they had a strategy that has gotten them to, I think, a very unfortunate position both on health care costs, new types of cars, weaning themselves off of basically gas guzzlers to energy-efficient cars.

And they’re making those changes now, when everybody said, for the last 20 years — but it’s a wake-up call which is clear — what the president said on Tuesday night. It’s a wake-up call to America. Do we want to have an energy policy…

SCHIEFFER: So they have to do something different?

EMANUEL: They have to…

(CROSSTALK)

EMANUEL: Wait a second. The plan is in front of the panel of experts, which is where it should be (inaudible) basically making sure that the restructuring is a viable restructuring plan.

SCHIEFFER: Let’s talk about the president’s announcement that he is going to draw down the troops in Iraq, that he’s going to leave 50,000 there in support roles.

Before he made that talk, Nancy Pelosi , the Democratic leader in the House, said that 50,000 sounded like too much. Let’s listen to just what she said. This was just before he spoke.

(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)

REP. NANCY PELOSI, D-CALIF., SPEAKER OF THE HOUSE: I don’t know what the justification is for 50,000, the presence of 50,000 troops in Iraq. I do think that there’s a need for some. And I don’t know that all of them have to be in-country.

(END VIDEO CLIP)

SCHIEFFER: So there you have it. And that seems to be most of the criticism now coming from Democrats, not from Republicans. John McCain likes the way the president’s doing this. The Republicans — I mean, the Democrats seem to be saying no, we need to get more troops out of there quicker.

EMANUEL: Well, first of all, as you noted earlier in the question, the president ran on this policy. He told the American people what he wanted to see.

[HE TOLD THEM WHAT THEY WANTED TO HEAR...AND THEY BELIEVED HIM.]

He said, on day one, I’m going to have a meeting with my national security staff to begin the process to evaluate how we can come out in 16 months. That’s what he did on day one.

[HE DID NOT SAY THAT UNTIL THE END.]

EMANUEL: And about a month later, he, as you saw on Friday, he enunciated that policy, because they came back, the entire apparatus of the national security apparatus for the president, on how to responsibly draw down our troops.

By August of 2010, the combat mission will be over.

We will have a residual force of somewhere between 35,000 and 50,000 troops, mainly dealing with training, protecting our diplomatic and civilians in Iraq, and some counterinsurgency. The president has been very clear that on a going-forward basis, as we draw down, that the Iraqis must politically and on a security basis take ownership of their country. So there will be an intensified effort on the diplomatic and political side, which is why we sent Ambassador Hill there, to work with our general and our entire…

[TROOPS PROTECTING ARE COMBAT TROOPS. EVERY SINGLE ONE OF THEM WILL BE CALLED INTO COMBAT IF NEEDED. THUS THEY ARE ALL COMBAT TROOPS. NO ONE IS BUYING IT.]

SCHIEFFER: Do you think the Democrats are going to go — in the end are going to go along with it?

EMANUEL: I think — well, first of all, the speaker spoke to her concern about 50,000. There have been other Democrats also including who have been supportive and understand where we are. The speaker has a right to question that size. The president said this is what I think is a responsible plan for withdrawal and a responsible residual force, and has worked it through both with the commanders, the diplomatic corps and the political apparatus to make sure we had a comprehensive view.

[ALWAYS LAYING IT OFF ON SOMEONE ELSE - EXPERTS, PANELS, COMMANDERS.]

SCHIEFFER: Let me go back to the budget for just one kind of cleanup question. You set a kind of a deadline for sometime in April to get most of this done. Am I correct?

EMANUEL: The Congress is working on that…

SCHIEFFER: Is that realistic?

EMANUEL: Well, yes. In this sense, Bob — I mean, there’s a lot to complement what this Congress has just pulled off. They passed the Ledbetter legislation on pay equity for women. They passed a children’s health care bill that 11 million children of working parents are going to now finally get health care, who because of no fault of their own did not have health care. Passed in a bipartisan way. And then two weeks later, they passed an impressive Economic Recovery Act that begins to invest in our country once again. And they did that in a month.

The president laid out his budget, and this Congress is already beginning to work. And you’ll see the president’s OMB director, Peter Orszag, up this week testifying. And the activity will go forward in both the House and the Senate, and we are confident, because this Congress is here understanding the extraordinary time we find ourselves in, to meet that challenge and meet the president’s objective of sending through an economic program.

SCHIEFFER: Let me also ask you quickly. We hear these horror stories coming out of Mexico. Nearly 7,000 people killed in these wars between these drug cartels. They forced the police chief of Juarez, just across the street from El Paso — across the river — out by threatening to kill a police officer a day until he left. And he left, after they killed four or five people. It just seems worse and worse. Does the administration consider Mexico a national security problem for the United States?

EMANUEL: As you know, the first foreign leader that the president met with was the president of Mexico. Attended that meeting. And both committed to working to stabilize the border, which is exactly what Janet Napolitano , the head of Homeland Security, said this week in congressional testimony. They want to clearly stop the guns from the United States going south. We want to stop the drugs coming north. And we have a mutual interest in working to secure that border, and that’s why the president of the United States had a meeting with President Calderon, his first meeting with a foreign leader, because that border is important to us and Mexico is a key ally of ours.

SCHIEFFER: All right. We have to stop there. Thank you very much, Rahm Emanuel …

EMANUEL: Thank you.

SCHIEFFER: … White House chief of staff.

EMANUEL: I actually enjoyed it.

SCHIEFFER: We’ll be back with the final thought in just a minute.

(COMMERCIAL BREAK)

SCHIEFFER: Finally today, we have just come through one of those who would have thought it weeks. As in, who would have thought that way back, when Barack Obama began his campaign for president, that his first State of the Union speech would hardly mention Iraq.

[BECAUSE HE WOULD HAVE HAD TO ADMIT THAT WHAT GOT HIM THE WHITE HOUSE HE ALREADY LIED ABOUT. THE PROMISES HE MADE ON IRAQ WAS WHY HE WAS "NOMINATED".]

Who would have thought back then that the state of the nation’s economy would be so bad, the president wouldn’t even call it a State of the Union speech, just so he wouldn’t have to finish the sentence that begins “the state of the union is…”

Who would have thought the Republican Party would be laying some of the blame for the bad economy off on their recently departed leader? I guess that’s what GOP stalwart Newt Gingrich was doing when he talked to me and others this week about what he labeled the failed Bush-Obama big-spending strategy. Who would have thought that when President Obama, who campaigned to bring the troops home from Iraq announced his withdrawal plan, that it would be the Republicans who liked it and the Democrats who didn’t?

[BECAUSE THE SURGE WORKED AND BARRY'S END PLANS TO GET OUT ARE THE SAME BUSH AGREED TO.]

And who, for that matter, would have thought that when the withdrawal was announced, that it would not be the lead story on the evening news?

[BECAUSE HE BROKE HIS NUMBER ONE PROMISE AND THE PRESS COULDN'T BEAR TO LOOK FOOLISH JUST 35 DAYS IN. THEY ARE ANGRY BECAUSE THEY DON'T WANT BARRY TO FAIL. HE FAILS THEIR BIAS IS EXPOSED FOR WHAT IT WAS. A HUGE ASSIST TO AN UNKNOWN MAN WHO HAD NEVER MADE A SINGLE DECISION OF CONSEQUENCE. HIS FIRST WAS BURRIS AND IT'S CLEAR HOW THAT ENDED UP NOT TO MENTION GIRD YOUR LOINS BIDEN.]

Not only was it not the lead, two or three stories about the bad economy came ahead of it, nor did it get above the fold in many newspapers.

[AGAIN, THE SAME.]

Yes, Barack Obama campaigned on change, but I doubt he expected a lot of that. Who would have thought?

SCHIEFFER: That’s our broadcast. And we’ll be back right here next Sunday on “Face the Nation.”

END

Monday, March 2, 2009

Emanuel: “[Limbaugh] is the voice and intellectual force and energy behind the Republican party”

March 1, 2009

Why are the Democrats giving Rush Limbaugh so much acknowledgment? Aren’t they in power? Isn’t the next election in four years? I’ve never listened to him before the other day. I only heard a little but he is entertaining. He’s a natural speaker and the crowd loved him. I didn’t hear anything objectionable. And he explained his comment about wanting barry to fail.

LIMBAUGH: What is so strange about being honest and saying I want Barack Obama to fail if his mission is to restructure and reform this country so that capitalism and individual liberty are not its foundation?

Like barry didn’t say on a daily basis how much of a failure Bush was? What’s wrong with the crowd going wild? The robamabots chanted like mindless fools and went wild when barry talked about how wrong Iraq was.

And why are people so quick to come to barry’s aid? Sure makes you wonder if they don’t think he can handle the job and the criticism that comes with it.

Why was Gov Palin not in attendance?

Rahm Emanuel was on CBS’ Face the Nation. Don’t see much of him on the fly just these sit down prepared interviews with his pals in the press. barry must have him on a tighter leash than Biden. Though it could have something to do with the subpoena he got from Patrick Fitzgerald.

EMANUEL: He is the voice and the intellectual force and energy behind the Republican party, and he has been up front about what he views, and hasn’t stepped back from that, which is he hopes for failure.

He said it, and I compliment him on his honesty. But that’s their philosophy that’s enunciated by Rush Limbaugh and I think that’s the wrong philosophy for America.

DL Hughley told RNC Chairman Michael Steele, who is the actual head of the GOP, that “Rush Limbaugh is the de facto leader of the Republican Party.”

And barry wasn’t hoping the Surge would fail?

Source: CNN

Sunday, March 1, 2009

DL Hughley: “The Republican Convention literally looked like Nazi Germany”

DL Hughley: “The Republican Convention literally looked like Nazi Germany”

By mattie14

February 28, 2009

Republican National Committee Chairman Micheal Steele was on DL Hughley discussing the two parties and the black community. Selected quotes - see transcript for the whole show.

HUGHLEY: I really do. I think you’re a really bright guy. And they hired both of us because we have a black president.

STEELE: That’s right.

HUGHLEY: You don’t have to go any further than the Republican National Convention. It literally looked like Nazi Germany. It literally did.

[...]

HUGHLEY: You, me, Bobby Jindal, we’re all working because of the brother in the job.

STEELE: That’s right. All the brothers in the same room, right?

barry is responsible for the accomplishments of two high-ranking Republicans? It’s goes beyond ludicrous to demeaning.

HUGHLEY: A lot of the things I see Republicans do specifically are reactionary. They’ll go, you know what, they don’t like Hillary? Let’s give them Sarah Palin. They voted for Obama. Let’s give them Michael Steele. And the other guy who we don’t know who he is yet. It is always so plastic, that you go, wow, is this what they think? They think that — they’re missing the entire point of what happened during the Obama transformation. They missed the entire point.

The “Obama transformation”??

STEELE: There was a Michael Steele before there was a Barack Obama. The reality of it is, I had established — I was the only black lieutenant governor in the country at the time. I was the only statewide black elected official when I was governor of Maryland from 2003 to 2007. And then Obama got elected from 2005. So that wasn’t about, oh, geez, let’s do this because of Obama.

Note: Burris was Illinois’ first statewide black elected official (Comptroller) in 1979 making the way for barry, who is now totally snubbing Burris.

Steele was also was the first to be named Chairman of the Republican Party in any state (2000) and he did the GOP rebuttal to barry’s DNC speech (2004). So his being named as RNC Chairman was not based on barry.

Gov Jindal has been around the national seen as long as barry and he’s 10 years younger. They were both sworn in in 2005 - Jindal as a US Representative and barry as a US Senator. Jindal was elected governor all by himself and to somehow say it was because of barry diminishes Jindal’s own hard work and talents. He was a Rhodes Scholar and was accepted to both Harvard Medical school and Yale Law school and chose politics instead, getting his PhD from Oxford. And instead of just talking about ethics reform he is actually doing something.

It’s like Spike Lee saying time will be marked: “before Obama and after Obama”.

Hip-hop legend Chuck D then joined the discussion and brought up the “articulate” reference that is supposed to be a racial code word. In reference to Hughley and Steele’s conversation:

CHUCK D: It was so exciting, just eloquence across TV.

HUGHLEY: He’s an eloquent man. I don’t know that I necessarily agree with him but I can honestly say that I never heard — never heard the Republican agenda articulated so accessibly.

Then Hughley disses Steele to his face.

HUGHLEY: Like Rush Limbaugh, who is the de facto leader of the Republican Party.

STEELE: No, he’s not.

HUGHLEY: I will tell you what …

STEELE: I’m the de facto leader of the Republican Party.

[...]

HUGHLEY: You know what, there’s no doubt that you’re worthy of respect. But this does seem like a common situation when you get in trouble, always bet on black men. You know what I’m saying! You know what I’m saying. I’m just saying. Hey, Michael, hey, listen, they didn’t just do it to you. The whole country went, we’re in trouble. Let’s get a black guy. Always bet on black. We’re in style now, baby!

STEELE: Wait a minute, D.L., when you bet on black, don’t you win?

HUGHLEY: Absolutely! You better come to our side. Michael Steele, Chuck D.

Then Hughley showed a snippet of Alan Keyes’ made for videotape tirade about barry being a “radical Communist” and he remarked:

If you’ll excuse me, I hear the Massa calling me. This cotton won’t pick itself.

Then he proceeded to posit that the white man sitting next to Obama during the Stevie Wonder’s Lifetime Achievement Award performance at the White House - somebody he doesn’t even know or even name - somebody who is doing nothing but sitting there - is thinking:

HUGHLEY: Eight more years of this. Jesus, when did the White House turn into “Soul Train”. ‘When did the White House become Soul Train.’

And then he goes back to Gov Jindal.

GOV. BOBBY JINDAL (on videotape): Some are problem the government will rescue us from the economic storms raging all around us. Those of us who lived through Hurricane Katrina. We have our doubts.

HUGHLEY: For the last time, no, I’m not the kid from “Slumdog Millionaire”!

Why are these ok?

Comparing the people in the Republican Convention to Nazi Germany? Automatically assuming that the white man can’t enjoy Stevie Wonder and that because he is white he is thinking derogatory comments? What does that say about Stevie Wonder’s music?

Hughley was making snap judgments solely based on the color of the man’s skin.

How is that not racist?

Will anyone be calling for his firing tomorrow?

Imagine if it were the other way around.

And the most curious part is how the black community continues to take credit for barry being in the White House when 8 Million eligible black voters couldn’t be bothered to register to vote for barry. That means 1/3 of the eligible black voting population did not find it important to get out and vote for progress in America. Only 2% more black voters came out after 8 years of Bush to vote for the first biracial president in history.

Where was that discussion?

The black vote made the difference in the primary because barry used the race card at every turn. In South Carolina - where barry had already prepared a memo painting ‘The Clintons’ as racists - barry’s policies suddenly became enticing? The same policies that were not attracting black voters at a >95% rate up until that very moment?

No. barry made it about race - the man who claimed to Unite! and Transcend Race! used race to win.

How was that not identity politics?

So why would 95% of white people voting for Senator McCain be considered racist?

Because it’s the Double Standard.

And until it is addressed and abolished, race relations in America will remain the same.

You can’t have it both ways.

It can’t be ok to be racist in one direction and not in the other. There cannot be an exception for one skin color over the other.

Prejudice is prejudice.

Bigotry is bigotry.

Small mindedness is small mindedness.

Making snap judgments based on the color of a white man’s skin is just as unacceptable as making comments about black basketball players’ hair.

Either both are ok or neither.

***

Rev Lowery: “When white will embrace what’s right”

Eric Holder: “[The USA] continues to be essentially a nation of cowards”

John Ridley: “Are you black enough to be part of all this”