Daily Archives: November 5, 2012

Arizona GOP Senate Candidate Robocalls Democrats And Tells Them To Vote In The Wrong Place

What are they so scared of…?

Think Progress

According to a report by Phoenix, Arizona’s NBC affiliate, Rep. Jeff Flake’s (R-AZ) U.S. Senate campaign called Democratic voters telling them to vote in the wrong precinct — in some cases as much as 11 miles away from their actual polling place. After telling the Democratic voters to vote in the wrong place, the calls also encourage the voter to “vote Flake for U.S. Senate.” Watch the report:

It’s unclear whether these calls were made accidentally or as part of an intentional strategy to depress the Democratic vote.

 

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The 100th Day of the Romney Presidency…

Compelling…

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Rachel Maddow: Limiting Minority Vote

Where is the “mainstream media” on this?  Why is this only reported on MSNBC?

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I saw this on TRM Show last night.  I want to share this with all TFC readers because Rachel Maddow (who is a Rhodes Scholar and has a Doctorate of Philosophy in Political Science)  is very much on point in this segment.

 

She spoke about the crowd differences between the two campaigns in a different segment.  (Although Joe Scarborough was saying the complete opposite this morning.)

Here, she dissects the Florida GOP State leaderships’ malfeasance in preventing many folks from voting…by desgign.

You Tube:  Nov 4, 2012
Scott Arceneaux, executive director of the Florida Democratic Party, talks with Rachel Maddow about the legal efforts being made in Florida to extend early voting to offer some relief to Floridians waiting for hours to cast their ballot, enduring a hardship imposed by Governor Rick Scott and state Republican legislators trying to discourage voter turnout.

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Deconstructing the 5 most ridiculous myths about Barack Obama

The Week - Paul Brandus

The 44th president has long been the target of misinformation, smear campaigns, and outright, bald-faced lies

I’ve spent the last four years covering the Obama presidency and tweeting about it on a daily basis from the White House briefing room. And the Twitter messages I get — thousands of them — tell me that there are folks who will believe absolutely anything regardless of whether it is a distorted or a bald-faced lie, and regardless of whether factual information is staring them in the face.

I neither support nor oppose President Obama. I disagree with about half of what he has tried to do. But I do support trying to determine what is accurate and true and what is not. With that in mind, I deconstruct, based on four years worth of observation, the top five bogus myths about Obama:

1. Obama has played more golf than any president in history
This isn’t even close to being true. Now, there’s no question that he plays on a regular basis: 104 rounds from January 2009 through Aug. 4 of this year, the last time he played, according to Mark Knoller, the longtime White House correspondent for CBS Radio. That puts him about in the middle when compared with other duffers-in-chief. It’s less than Bill Clinton, and a lot less than Dwight Eisenhower, who played more than 800 rounds over eight years — four times as often as Obama plays.

And why is it an outrage if the president, who heads one of three branches of government, golfs 104 times in three-and-a-half-years, but the head of another branch of government, the Speaker of the House, plays four times as much? You heard correctly: John Boehner once told Golf Digest that he plays upwards of 100 rounds a year. Seems like a double standard, no?

2. Obama has taken more vacation time than any president inhistory
This isn’t even remotely accurate either, but first, some context from Nancy Reagan: “Presidents don’t get vacations — they just get a change of scenery. The job goes with you.” The responsibilities, the pressure, the officer with the “nuclear football” — it’s all with a commander-in-chief at all times. No exceptions.

But how much time away from the White House has President Obama spent, and how does this compare with predecessors?

POTUS Tracker, compiled by The Washington Post, shows that from January 2009 to October 31, 2012, Obama spent all or part of 72 vacation days in a variety of places, mostly Hawaii in the winter and Martha’s Vineyard in the summer. That’s about 10 weeks away in three-and-a-half years, hardly extravagant. Through May 18, according to data from CBS’s Knoller, he also visited Camp David 22 times, spending all of part of 54 days there.

What about his predecessors?

· In 1798, President John Adams left the capital for seven months to care for his ailing wife Abigail; his enemies said he practically relinquished his office.

· Thomas Jefferson and James Madison routinely went away for three- and four-month stretches.

· Abraham Lincoln, during the Civil War, was blasted for spending about 25 percent of his time away from the White House.

· Dwight Eisenhower took long summer breaks in Denver and spent almost every single weekend at Camp David.

· John F. Kennedy rarely spent a weekend in the White House, staying at family homes in Palm Beach, Hyannis Port, and the Virginia countryside.

· Lyndon Johnson spent 484 days in five and a half years at his Texas ranch.

· Ronald Reagan was away for 436 days, usually at Rancho del Cielo (his mountaintop retreat in California) or Camp David.

· Bill Clinton, who didn’t own a vacation home, loved to party with his elite friends in Martha’s Vineyard and the Hamptons.

· George W. Bush spent 32 months at his ranch (490 days) or Camp David (487 days) — an average of four months away every year.

Time off doesn’t mean goofing off. President Bush, for example, met with a variety of foreign leaders at his ranch. President Obama held a G-8 summit at Camp David. Just like you might check your email while sitting on the beach (you fool, you), presidents never really unplug. But if anyone deserves a vacation, it is the person who serves in the world’s most stressful and demanding job.

3. Obama shows his true colors by not going to Arlington National Cemetery
Sadly, the days we set aside to honor those who have worn the uniform of our country — and made the ultimate sacrifice — have become highly politicized. There is an expectation that presidents should go to Arlington National Cemetery on Memorial and Veterans Day. Certainly, any commander-in-chief should mark these sacred days in such fashion. But paying tribute to those whose final resting place is in any other of America’s other 130 national cemeteries is no less honorable.

That being said, the tradition of going to Arlington itself on Memorial Day is fairly new. Most presidents never, or rarely, went. Let’s look at the past six decades:

· Eisenhower: Twice in eight years

· Kennedy: Never in three years

· Johnson: Once in five years

· Nixon: Never in six years

· Ford: Twice in two years

· Carter: Never in four years

· Reagan: Three times in eight years

· Bush Sr.: Never in four years

· Clinton: Eight times in eight years

· Bush Jr.: Seven times in eight years

· Obama: Three times in four years

Bush Jr. and Obama really have perfect records as far as I’m concerned. The one year Bush wasn’t at Arlington he was at Normandy, honoring the heroes of D-Day. The one year Obama wasn’t at Arlington he was at a National Cemetery in Illinois, where the heroes who rest in peace are no less deserving of our respect than those who rest in Arlington.

4. Obama has never visited Israel as president, which shows he doesn’t give a damn about it
It’s true that Barack Obama, as president, hasn’t visited the Jewish state. Not once in four years. He’s in good company:

· Nixon waited five-and-a half years to visit

· Ford never went

· Carter went once in four years

· Reagan never went in eight years

· Bush Sr. never went

· Clinton went six times in eight years

· Bush Jr. waited seven years to visit

That Obama hasn’t gone, therefore, means two things: 1) Jack and 2) Squat. It’s true he and Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu don’t like each other personally, but the more important issue is whether he’s committed to Israeli security. Hardline Defense Minister Ehud Barak, a hawk who, with Netanyahu, has been the driving force behind a possible attack in Iran, says:

I can see long years, administrations of both sides of the political aisle deeply supporting the state of Israeli and I believe that reflects a profound feeling among the American people. But I should tell you honestly that this administration under President Obama is doing in regard to our security more than anything that I can remember in the past.

Then there’s Dennis Ross, who has spent a whole lot of time with five Republican and Democratic presidents, not to mention their Israeli counterparts.

I’ve worked with every Israeli prime minister in the past 30 years, and there have always been ups and downs. But you don’t really see the kind of language we’re hearing now. It must be the polarization. I can’t explain it otherwise.

If you think you know better, Mr. Armchair Expert, than Israel’s own hardline defense minister and the guy who has worked with Republican presidents, Democratic presidents, and every Israeli prime minister over the past three decades, I’m all ears.

5. Taxes under Obama are at an all-time high
If you buy this one, congratulations: You’ve failed not just history, but economics as well. Between the combined burden of federal, state, and local income taxes, Americans are parting with the smallest share of their income since 1958. The Bureau of Economic Analysis says we pay 23.6 percent of what we make, down from an average of about 27 percent during the 1970s, 1980s, and 1990s.

What makes you think that any president is responsible for what state and local governments take from you anyway? Never mind that Congress controls the federal purse strings, and never mind that cuts in income tax rates and payroll tax rates have been in effect for several years now. Of course, this could all change come January, unless hyper-divided Washington can somehow find a way to cooperate and avoid taking the economy over the fiscal cliff. But for now, the notion that taxes are gobbling up more of our hard earned income than ever is, to use a word we’ve heard often during this long and often dishonest campaign, malarkey.

 

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10 things you need to know today: November 5, 2012

Obama arrives for a campaign rally in State Capitol Square on Nov. 4 in Concord, N.H.

The Week

The presidential campaigns come to a close, Sandy leaves behind a housing crisis, and more in our roundup of the stories that are making news and driving opinion

1. OBAMA, ROMNEY MAKE FINAL DASH
President Obama and his GOP rival, Mitt Romney, and their running mates are wrapping up 17 months of campaigning on Monday, with a frenzied final tour of eight critical states on the day before Election Day. A pair of polls over the final weekend of the $3 billion battle for the presidency showed Obama finishing with an uptick of momentum, regaining a narrow lead nationally. A third poll, by CNN, showed the candidates tied, each with 49 percent support. Obama, however, also is clinging to a narrow but significant edge in a handful of swing states expected to decide Tuesday’s election. Political analysts said the final round of polling suggested that Romney’s path to victory was getting narrower, although Romney aide Ed Gillespie said the GOP nominee was suddenly competitive in Pennsylvania, long presumed to be in Obama’s camp, so his electoral map had “expanded.” [Washington Post]
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2. NEW YORK FACES KATRINA-SCALE HOUSING CRISIS
New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg, along with New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo, warned on Sunday that Hurricane Sandy had left the city facing a housing crisis that could be comparable to the one New Orleans suffered after Hurricane Katrina in 2005. As many as 40,000 people lost their homes in the storms, or were at least hit with damage that would keep them from returning for months. FEMA director Craig Fugate said 86,000 households in the New York area have registered for federal disaster assistance. Some of the city’s biggest housing developments will be “out of commission for a very long time,” Bloomberg said. The sobering news came as another storm — a powerful nor’easter — headed toward parts of the country devastated by last week’s superstorm, and as temperatures in New York and New Jersey plunged and 2 million people were still without power. [Wall Street Journal]

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3. CHINA SHAKES UP MILITARY LEADERSHIP
China completed a shake-up of its top military leaders on Sunday. President Hu Jintao oversaw the promotion of generals Fan Changlong and Xu Qiliang as vice chairmen of the influential 12-member Central Military Commission. Hu is slated to step down Thursday in a once-in-a-decade power shuffle, but China experts said his selection of a second-tier of military leaders suggests he plans to keep his post as chairman of the country’s 2.3-million strong military, the world’s largest. “As long as he is the CMC chief,” says Willy Lam, a China politics expert at the Chinese University of Hong Kong, “he will still be the power behind the throne.” [Agence France-Presse]
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4. EGYPT’S COPTS PICK A NEW POPE
Egypt’s Coptic Orthodox Church selected a bishop from the Nile Delta as its 118th pope. The name of the new leader, Bishop Tawadsros, was drawn by a blindfolded altar boy from a chalice containing the names of finalists. The new pope succeeds Pope Shenouda III, who died in March after leading the Middle East’s largest Christian community for four decades. He takes over at a tense time, as Egypt’s Copts, who account for 10 percent of the country’s 82 million people, confront rising tensions with Muslims after the country’s revolution and the election of President Mohamed Morsi, a former leader of the once-outlawed Muslim Brotherhood. [Los Angeles Times]
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5. GREECE PUSHES NEW AUSTERITY MEASURES
The Greek government is presenting a new package of spending cuts and tax hikes on Monday in a bid to get more bailout money from Europe to avoid bankruptcy. The country’s parliament is expected to vote on the $17 billion package on Wednesday. Angry citizens have already been staging protests for a week, blaming the austerity measures imposed for the last four years for wiping out a fifth of the country’s economy and leaving a quarter of the population without jobs. [Reuters]

6. TODDLER KILLED BY ZOO ANIMALS
A 2-year-old boy was killed by a pack of African painted dogs on Sunday after he fell 11 feet into the animals’ enclosure at the Pittsburgh Zoo. The boy’s mother had placed him on a railing so he could see, and he slipped. The animals immediately attacked the child. “It was very horrific,” said Lt. Kevin Kraus of the Pittsburgh police. Zookeepers and police were able to call away all but one dog, which police had to shoot. [Associated Press]
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7. APPLE HANGS ONTO TABLET DOMINANCE
As Apple begins shipping its new iPad mini, the company is holding onto its dominance of the tablet market, according to a new IDC report. Sales of the now-iconic iPad climbed by 26 percent in the last year. Still, Apple’s share of the market slipped from 59.7 percent to 50.4 percent, as Samsung, Amazon, Azus (which makes the Google Nexus 7), and other rivals gained some ground. Samsung vaulted into second place with 18.4 percent of the market, thanks to year-to-year growth of 325 percent. [ZDNet]
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8. HSBC FACES TROUBLE OVER MONEY-LAUNDERING 
HSBC, Europe’s largest bank, warned on Monday that it could face criminal charges and has already suffered “considerable reputational damage” over charges by U.S. regulators that it let customers shift possibly illegal money from countries such as Mexico, Iran, the Cayman Islands, Saudi Arabia, and Syria. The company set aside $700 million to cover potential fines for breaching money-laundering rules in Mexico; now it says it has allocated another $800 million, but warns that the penalties might rise significantly higher than $1.5 billion. [Reuters]
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9. WRECK-IT RALPH CONQUERS THE BOX OFFICE
Disney’s latest animated film, Wreck-It Ralph, pulled in $49 million in its first weekend in movie theaters, trouncing the box-office competition in the unofficial launch of the holiday movie season. The 3D film about video-game characters was expected to generate $40 million or so in ticket sales in its debut, but industry analysts say it got a boost from nearly universal glowing reviews and “the nostalgia factor,” as parents who grew up playing video games in the ’80s and ’90s take their kids to theaters to reminisce. [USA Today]
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10. MAN WITH BIONIC LEG CLIMBS TOWER
A Seattle man who lost a leg three years ago climbed 103 floors to the top of Chicago’s Willis Tower, formerly known as the Sears Tower, on Sunday. Zac Vawter, 31, made the climb as the first public test of his prosthetic right leg, which is the world’s first bionic leg controlled by impulses sent by the wearer’s brain. He made it to the top in 53 minutes 9 seconds. Vawter called the leg “a dramatic improvement over my normal prosthetic,” and said he hoped his accomplishment would “push the boundaries of what the research and the leg is capable of.” [CNN]

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