Tag Archives: presidency

Harry Reid, Obama: ‘Light-Skinned’ with ‘No Negro Dialect’ Comment….Can You Imagine the 24/7 Continuous Uproar By the Left if a Republican Had MadeThese Remarks? Just Askin.

“I know this is old news but with the nov. elections coming up i thought it still pertinent, especially the hypocrisy part”. Harry Reid has embarrassed himself, the democratic party the people of Nevada and the people of the United States once again. This time it was more than just his run-of-the-mill insulting and demeaning comments, like the time he said that the people who visit the Capital ’smell’. Or the time he likened opposition to his health care plan to slavery. This time he made what can only be called racist remarks about the President of the United States, Barack Obama. A book about the 2008 Obama campaign, ‘Game Change’ written by Time Magazine’s Mark Halperin and New York magazine’s John Heilemann is creating a proverbial political storm in Washington, D.C. The book airs the dirty-laundry of many in Obama’s inner political circles during his campaign for the Presidency. Among the revelations in the book (and there are many) is that Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid was anxious for Obama to run for president because he’s ‘light-skinned’ and ‘doesn’t have a Negro dialect unless he wants to’. WHAT!?!?!?! http://www.rightpundits.com/?p=5307 added by: congoboy

John Edwards Film To Be Directed By Aaron Sorkin

Saga of disgraced politician is an ‘extraordinary story,’ ‘West Wing’ creator says. By Mawuse Ziegbe John Edwards Photo: Jonathan Torgovnik/ Getty Images The saga of disgraced North Carolina politician John Edwards is on its way to the big screen. According to The Hollywood Reporter, screenwriter and “The West Wing” creator Aaron Sorkin has acquired the rights to the tell-all “The Politician: An Insider’s Account of John Edwards’s Pursuit of the Presidency and the Scandal That Brought Him Down.” The tome was penned by Edwards aide Andrew Young, who divulged damaging details about the pol’s extramarital affair. Edwards was vilified in the press for carrying on an affair with campaign videographer Rielle Hunter. The politician was apparently cheating with Hunter while his wife, Elizabeth, battled cancer. The former senator, who sought the Democratic presidential nomination in 2008, also fathered a daughter with Hunter. Edwards initially denied he was the child’s father until a paternity test revealed otherwise. “This is a first-hand account of an extraordinary story filled with motivations, decisions and consequences that would have lit Shakespeare up,” said Sorkin, who will make his directorial debut with the movie. “There’s much more to Andrew’s book than what has been reported, and I’m grateful that he’s trusting me with it.” Sorkin has worked extensively in film and television. In addition to helming the hit political show “The West Wing,” he also created the shows “Studio 60 on the Sunset Strip” and “Sports Night.” He has written screenplays for “Charlie Wilson’s War,” “A Few Good Men” and, most recently, “The Social Network,” based on the rise of the social-media juggernaut Facebook. For breaking news, celebrity columns, humor and more — updated around the clock — visit MTVMoviesBlog.com .

Originally posted here:
John Edwards Film To Be Directed By Aaron Sorkin

Man Builds Homemade Nuclear Fusion Reactor in Brooklyn

Need a weekend project around the house? Mark Suppes, web developer by day, has built his own nuclear fusion reactor in a Brooklyn workspace. It kind of makes that project car you’ve got rusting in the garage seem lame by comparison. Suppes' reactor – it’s about the size of an air conditioning unit with some extra bells and whistles attached – isn’t the answer to the world’s energy problems, at least not yet. He joins a list of 37 others recognized by the online community Fusor.net as having achieved homemade fusion (among them is a 15-year-old in Michigan). But his reactor is unique in the sense that it sits smack in America’s most densely populated city, and one in which the very word “nuclear” causes discomfort. But rest easy, Brooklynites. Reactors of this kind are both legal and safe. It uses no fissile materials like uranium or plutonium that are associated with nuclear weapons, and it produces no pollution or other byproduct, other than heat. Suppes' reactor uses deuterium gas to fuel his reactor, which essentially creates an ideal atmosphere for fusion before mashing neutrons together at high energy. While all the components of Suppes' machine – including the deuterium gas – were acquired through legal channels, some of it is somewhat dangerous. His power supply provides 30,000 volts, and his reactor does put off a negligible amount of radiation as it smashes neutrons together. Suppes' reactor does not generate any more power than he puts into it, and as such is not the golden fusion generator scientists hope will fuel the future with clean, cheap energy. But at some point Suppes hopes to go much bigger, attracting the funding to build what’s known as a Bussard reactor that will break-even when it comes to energy input and output. http://www.popsci.com/science/article/2010-06/deuterium-diy-man-builds-homemade-… added by: pjacobs51

Newsweek’s Adler: Obama ‘Chickens Out,’ Fails to Push for Taxes to Make ‘SUVs… Prohibitively Expensive’

“Obama Chickens Out on Energy,” a disgusted Ben Adler argued to Newsweek’s The Gaggle blog readers this morning. Adler’s chief complaint with last night’s Oval Office address: Obama didn’t call for massive tax hikes to push Americans to make more politically correct spending choices. The Newsweek writer avoided the T-word until his last paragraph, but he made abundantly clear that he felt that a) American stupidity and short-sightedness was threatening to literally drown Manhattan in rising sea levels and b) Obama was not doing enough to make government force people to make better choices with their own money (emphases mine): In his address from the Oval Office on Tuesday night, President Obama eloquently laid out the case that we have failed to confront our dependence on fossil fuels, and that now is the time for us to do so. Obama acknowledged that our failure to do this so far has been caused not just by obeisance to entrenched interests, but also by “a lack of political courage and candor.” But he failed to use this opportunity to marshal public support for a logical, tangible goal that would reduce our destructive consumption of oil and coal. The idea that we can solve this problem of our massive, inefficient energy use through investing more in R&D is ridiculous. We need to start bringing down our emissions immediately, before Manhattan finds itself under water. Spending more money on research into technologies that may or may not be more efficient, and may or may not be economically viable 10 years from now, is insufficient. There are plenty of technologies, such as driving smaller cars, or hybrids, or taking buses, or living in smaller houses, that do not need to be researched and developed; they just need to be chosen. And they will be chosen if we make indulging in SUVs and McMansions prohibitively expensive, to reflect the social cost of global warming , and the cost of disasters such as the Deepwater Horizon oil-rig explosion that forced Obama to make this address in the first place. Obama should know all this, and his decision to pretend otherwise reeks of the same lack of courage and candor he had just lambasted unnamed predecessors for. Tossing out the pain-free idea that we can invest our way out of this problem is politically convenient, but it is not realistic. Obama swiftly pivoted to sounding like he was filled with steely resolve, saying, “But the one approach I will not accept is inaction.” But merely investing in energy research is little better than inaction. What Obama needed to say , if he was willing to stake his presidency on combating catastrophic climate change, as he had previously staked his presidency—and won—on the proposition that Americans are all entitled to affordable health insurance, was that he would not tolerate anything short of a bill that caps or taxes carbon emissions. He did not, and we will all suffer the consequences.

Continued here:
Newsweek’s Adler: Obama ‘Chickens Out,’ Fails to Push for Taxes to Make ‘SUVs… Prohibitively Expensive’

NYT Rips Obama: It Shouldn’t Have Taken So Long To Get Involved In Oil Spill

The New York Times editorial board on Sunday absolutely tore Barack Obama apart for his handling of the oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico.  “The president cannot plug the leak or magically clean up the fouled Gulf of Mexico. But he and his administration need to do a lot more to show they are on top of this mess, and not perpetually behind the curve,” wrote the Times.  “It certainly should not have taken days for Mr. Obama to get publicly involved in the oil spill, or even longer for his administration to start putting the heat on BP for its inadequate response and failure to inform the public about the size of the spill.”  Quite surprisingly, the Times was just getting warmed up:  If ever there was a test of President Obama’s vision of government – one that cannot solve all problems, but does what people cannot do for themselves – it is this nerve-racking early summer of 2010, with oil spewing into the Gulf of Mexico and far too many Americans out of work for far too long. The country is frustrated and apprehensive and still waiting for Mr. Obama to put his vision into action. Americans need to know that Mr. Obama, whose coolness can seem like detachment, is engaged. This is not a mere question of presentation or stagecraft, although the White House could do better at both. (We cringed when he told the “Today” show that he had spent important time figuring out “whose ass to kick” about the spill. Everyone knew that answer on Day 2.) But a year and a half into this presidency, the contemplative nature that was so appealing in a candidate can seem indecisive in a president. His promise of bipartisanship seems naïve. His inclination to hold back, then ride to the rescue, has sometimes made problems worse. It took too long for Mr. Obama to say that the Coast Guard and not BP was in charge of operations in the gulf and it’s still not clear that is true. Readers should keep in mind this editorial was likely being produced at around the same time the paper’s Washington correspondent Helene Cooper was telling Chris Matthews Obama’s presidency “will go the way of Jimmy Carter’s” if he doesn’t get control of this spill. Adding insult to injury, Times columnist Maureen Dowd also went after Obama in her piece  published Sunday: The press traveling with Obama on the campaign never had a lovey-dovey relationship with him. He treated us with aloof correctness, and occasional spurts of irritation. Like many Democrats, he thinks the press is supposed to be on his side. The former constitutional lawyer now in the White House understands that the press has a role in the democracy. But he is an elitist, too, as well as thin-skinned and controlling. So he ends up regarding scribes as intrusive, conveying a distaste for what he sees as the fundamental unseriousness of a press driven by blog-around-the-clock deadlines. Sometimes on the campaign plane, I would watch Obama venture back to make small talk with the press, discussing food at an event or something light. Then I would see him literally back away a few moments later as a blast of questions and flipcams hit him. But that’s the world we live in. It hurts Obama to be a crybaby about it, and to blame the press and the “old Washington game” for his own communication failures. Now that Obama has been hit with negative press, he’s even more contemptuous. “He’s never needed to woo the press,” says the NBC White House reporter Chuck Todd. “He’s never really needed us.” So, as The Washington Post’s Howard Kurtz writes, the more press-friendly, emotionally accessible, if gaffe-prone Biden has become “the administration’s top on-air spokesman.” How ironic. Instead of The One, they’re sending out The Two. This means that in one weekend, the Times editorial board, its White House correspondent, and one of its top liberal columnists made harshly negative comments about the president they all helped get elected. This led Commentary magazine’s Jennifer Rubin to write Sunday: It’s one more sign that the bottom is dropping out on Obama’s support, and the unraveling of his presidency is picking up steam. Unless he gets a grip and finds some grown-ups from whom he is willing to take advice, this is not going to improve.  Indeed. 

Original post:
NYT Rips Obama: It Shouldn’t Have Taken So Long To Get Involved In Oil Spill

Teabagger convention speaker, and out of the closet racist, Tom Tancredo does not love Sarah Palin anymore.

In an interview with NRC Handelsblad, he (Tancredo) talked about the Tea Party movement, senator John McCain and Sarah Palin, the former vice-presidential candidate and a heroine of the movement. After her speech at the Nashville convention, Palin said she is considering a run for the presidency in 2012. Tancredo however, does not believe she is fit for the presidency. “I really don’t have this feeling about her as being presidential,” he Tancredo said. “I don’t know what it is exactly. I don’t know if the issues really are that difficult for her or not.” He questions if she has what it takes, and whether she really wants it. “As governor of the state of Alaska, she doesn’t have all that kind of experience. She can get better. But I don’t know if she is really looking to do it.’’ It could all be a commercial thing, just a way to sell books? “Sure. Make a lot of money and stay in the mix. I think that’s a great idea.’’ John McCain has brought over his former running mate to campaign for him in Arizona, where the Tea Party movement is challenging his seat in the Senate. She will campaign against J.D. Hayworth, a friend of yours who is on your side in the immigration debate. What does that tell you about Palin? “That tells me she is a Republican. I am not. I mean, I am a member of that party and that will always stay that way. But to me it’s only a mechanism, a way to get on the ballot and all that. But she is a real Republican.’’ She has to do this to rise in the party ranks? “I think so.’’ So she is just as much an unprincipled politician as all the rest of them? “To a large extent.’’ And you still love her? “I didn’t say that!’’ Well, in your Tea Party speech you pointed out that she could finally say all those wonderful things now she’s free from McCain. “I said: ‘Now she can tell it like it is.’ And she chooses not to.’’ So at the end of the day you are not that fond of her? “You are right. I was much fonder of her before she chose to get involved in the McCain thing. She didn’t have to do it.’’ The Republicans are abandoning her, the teabaggers are abandoning her, her own inner circle is abandoning her, how much longer can it be before Sarah Palin finds that the only people left who will listen to her speak are Piper, and the “retarded baby”. (Sarah calls him that , not me.)

See the article here:
Teabagger convention speaker, and out of the closet racist, Tom Tancredo does not love Sarah Palin anymore.

Rielle Hunter-John Edwards Coverage May Win National Enquirer a Pulitzer

After its relentless reporting blew the lid off the John Edwards-Rielle Hunter cheating scandal, the National Enquirer is in the running for a Pulitzer Prize. Does it deserve to be nominated – or even win it? Laugh if you want, but the Enquirer ’s coverage of Edwards’ double life is being considered for investigative reporting and national news reporting awards . The story of his affair and love child with Rielle Hunter were ignored, dismissed, and ignored again until finally being vindicated by mainstream media. The significance of the story, the New York Times notes, is the fact that Democratic Party came dangerously close to nominating this man for the presidency. This would have been a disgrace of unparalleled proportions. Yet only in the National Enquirer was the truth about John Edwards’ recklessness, and the grim reality behind his doting-husband facade, exposed. The National Enquirer did us a favor exposing this loser. The mainstream media’s hesitation to run the story might be defended as the high ground, a means to a less sex-obsessed culture, which is somewhat noble. But the celebrity gossip machine will grind on regardless. If Americans aren’t reading about Edwards and Rielle Hunter, they’ll just read about Tiger Woods and Rachel Uchitel (also broken by the Enquirer , natch). Better the former than the latter, right? Woods’ apology made clear that we may be interested, but it’s his business and he will talk only when he wants. Tiger may have opened himself up to incredible scrutiny and criticism with his inappropriate actions, but to a certain point it’s his problem to deal with. Not so with John Edwards . Athletes and talk show hosts don’t work for us, but politicians’ dalliances tend to interfere with, and often corrupt, their jobs. Not all affairs produce corruption, and we don’t have to know every sin committed. But with Edwards, imagine if we found out only after it was too late? We’re just saying.

Read the original here:
Rielle Hunter-John Edwards Coverage May Win National Enquirer a Pulitzer

Former President Bill Clinton Hospitalized

Clinton was rushed to the hospital after unidentified chest pains. By Jayson Rodriguez Former President Bill Clinton Photo: Larry Marano/ Getty Images Former President Bill Clinton was rushed to a New York hospital on Thursday afternoon (February 11) after suffering from unidentified chest pains, according to multiple reports. Clinton received a procedure where two stents were placed in his coronary arteries, CNN reported. The surgery was described as routine, and having two items placed in his arteries was characterized as “not unusual,” a doctor told CNN. CNN correspondent Dr. Sanjay Gupta said the speed in which the procedure took place, however, was enough to classify the incident as an emergency. Six years ago, Clinton suffered from serious heart trouble. In 2004, he underwent surgery for a quadruple coronary artery bypass; several months later, complications arose, which led Clinton to go back to the hospital for a minor follow-up procedure. According to The New York Times, Clinton’s pains stemmed from a bypass graft previously operated on becoming obstructed. He was then rushed to Columbia Presbyterian Hospital and is now recovering; his wife, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, is on her way to meet her husband, CNN reported. “President Clinton is in good spirits and will continue to focus on the work of his foundation and Haiti’s relief and long-term recovery efforts,” Douglas J. Band, his counselor, said in a statement released by the former president’s office, according to the Times. Before Clinton rose the political ranks to become president, it was well documented that he has a weakness for fried foods, stemming from his Southern upbringing in Arkansas. Clinton was a frequent jogger and lost a noticeable amount of weight during and after his presidency. He also changed his diet after his surgery six years ago. Clinton leads just as active a lifestyle following his presidency as he did when he occupied the White House. His Clinton Global Initiative has been instrumental in the fight against the global AIDS crisis. The former president is also a U.N. special envoy to Haiti and recently visited the ravaged country following the earthquake that struck the tiny island. Clinton appeared at MTV’s “Hope for Haiti Now” and BET’s “SOS Save Ourselves: Help for Haiti” telethons, urging viewers to continue aiding the survivors of the 7.1-magnitude quake.

See the original post here:
Former President Bill Clinton Hospitalized

NYC Prep’s Terrible Toll: Camille Out at Nightingale School

Reality TV claimed yet another victim today as it was revealed that Camille Hughes NYC Prep ‘s Harvard-bound Lucrezia Borgia, will not be returning this fall to the prestigious Nightingale-Bamford School. Nightingale-Bamford had previously aired its distaste with Hughes’ participation in the historic documentary.

Read the rest here:
NYC Prep’s Terrible Toll: Camille Out at Nightingale School

Obama faces critical moment for his Presidency

WASHINGTON — President Obama returned to the White House from his summer break on Sunday determined to jump-start his struggling presidency by reasserting command of the health care debate and recalibrating expectations that some advisers believe got away from him. With his honeymoon seemingly over and his White House on the defensive, Mr. Obama faces what friends and foes alike call a make-or-break moment in his young administration.

Continue reading here:
Obama faces critical moment for his Presidency