
Thanks to Erin for posting this over at her blog along with some wise words from Rep. Dennis Kucinich.
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« August 2008 | Main | October 2008 »

Thanks to Erin for posting this over at her blog along with some wise words from Rep. Dennis Kucinich.
Posted at 09:39 PM in Politcally Speaking | Permalink | Comments (1) | TrackBack (0)
(Here's another great essay from "Greco" over at DemoOkie. This guy is so eloquent, I can't help but re-post his stuff.)
In preparation for the Friday evening presidential debates, John McCain memorized a line written for him by his handlers. He followed their instructions and inserted it over and over and over. They thought it would be a knockout punch, but it only served to set himself up for a haymaker.
"What the Senator doesn't understand…."
Big mistake with that one. Every time John McCain used that scripted comment, Barack Obama responded with a reply that was clear, precise, exacting, and illustrated the depth of his knowledge. The actual topic didn't matter, Obama established the depth of his comprehension on all topics, and expressed himself in a calm, collected manner. Each time McCain threw that punch, he wound up on the deck. However, the debate did prove one thing, and McCain's scripted line is the best way to illustrate the point.
What the Senator doesn't understand is the fact that Americans have correctly determined that he represents a third term for Bush's failed policies. What the Senator doesn't understand is the fact that Americans don't think it's a good idea to have lobbyists calling all your plays. What the Senator doesn't understand is the fact that Americans clearly understand that the current financial crisis was created by de-regulations passed by Republicans, with McCain's help and votes. What the Senator doesn't understand is the fact that Americans want the needless Iraq war that he continues to strongly support, to come to an end.
What the Senator doesn't understand is the fact that the novelty of his novelty act as a running mate has worn off. What the Senator doesn't understand is the fact that picking a totally unqualified running mate speaks directly to his flawed judgment. What the Senator doesn't understand is that Americans don't think it's a good idea to elect a president that claims he doesn't know much about economics, then picks as his economic advisor, the one individual that was most responsible for creating the housing and financial crisis.
What the Senator doesn't understand is is the fact that throughout the debate, on issue after issue, he proved the point that he really is just like Bush. America understands those things, all the polls have named Obama the winner of the debate, but Senator John McCain apparently doesn't. Early in November he'll understand those things, but last Friday night the Senator didn't understand at all.
Posted at 12:43 AM in Politcally Speaking | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
Rally For Barack Obama
“It’s Time for a Change”
When: Saturday, October 4, 2008
Time: 4:00 PM to 7:00 PM.
Where: 4100 North Lincoln Blvd, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma
Speakers including some candidates,
Singing
Kids for Obama will be performing,
Voter Registration and Refreshment
I hope to see you there!
Posted at 08:14 AM in Politcally Speaking | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
My last post was done as a bit of fun. A tongue-in-cheek way of sticking out my tongue and saying "neener-neener" to whomever stole my campaign sign. Apparently, someone took it as an opportunity to insult me and leave hate-filled speech in the comments section.
Now, as a left-wing liberal, I'm all about freedom of speech. However, while I respect your right to express your opinion, that does not mean I have to tolerate it in any way. If you came to my home and spoke those words to my face, I would ask you in no uncertain terms to leave, just as I would leave your home should I hear you say it there. This is why the comment was deleted.
This blog is an extension of myself, and in a way, my home here on on the internet. I will not tolerate anything here that I would not tolerate in person. I do not currently moderate comments, and I don't want to have to start, but I will delete any comment that is blatantly offensive and insulting without question.
I don't throw shit in your house, please refrain from doing so in mine. That is all, thank you.
Posted at 01:05 AM | Permalink | Comments (1) | TrackBack (0)
Ha ha! Joke's on YOU:
I can do this ALL DAY Buddy...
Oh, and for the record:
You keep stealing them, and I'll keep putting new ones up. Or, you could grow up, and go get your own McCain/Palin sign to put in YOUR yard. Are you afraid I'll influence the entire neighborhood to vote for Obama? Don't drink the hateraide!
Posted at 04:55 PM in Politcally Speaking | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
Thanks to my mother-in-law for passing this little hilarious tidbit along!
Posted at 12:01 AM in Just For Laughs, Politcally Speaking | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
(Another great essay from my friend "Greco" at the DemoOkie.com forums.)
It's not even worth denying, that the Republican Party has always opposed federal regulations. Ronald Reagan summed it up, "Government is not the solution to our problem. Government is the problem." He also said, "I'm convinced that today the majority of Americans want what those first Americans wanted: A better life for themselves and their children; a minimum of government authority." And this remark, "I am not worried about the deficit. It is big enough to take care of itself."
He obviously believed that. Reagan inherited a deficit of $85 billion from Jimmy Carter and ran up the tab to $432 billion. Now it appears George W. Bush will increase the deficit to an estimated $11.5 trillion.
We've seen how the Republican "honor system" works. Deregulation has brought us tainted pet food, anti-freeze in toothpaste, lead paint in children's toys, Enron, MCI, oil speculators artificially driving up the price, and now this horrific mess in housing and the market. Only the oldest Americans can remember any time worse, when another Republican created the Great Depression.
It's a crisis of the highest order. The new debt these Republican-led deregulations have caused is so massive it's hard to comprehend. It's factual that my six month old grandson's grandchildren will not live long enough to pay it off. It's weakened our nation to a crisis level.
We have to change how our government does business, or we literally may be doomed. John McCain is now claiming he can fix this mess, but he actually helped create the crisis we're now facing.
During the years Republicans controlled the Senate and Congress Republican Senator Phil Gramm was a tireless advocate of de-regulating the banking and mortgage industry. From his powerful position as Chairman of the Senate Banking Committee he pushed through legislation titled the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act, making changes in the banking, insurance and securities laws which Congress had kept at bay for sixty years. He also helped push through legislation that assisted Enron during their troubles, while his wife, Wendy, served as member of the Enron Board of Directors.
Two years later, Gramm left the Senate and settled in as a vice chairman of UBS's new investment banking arm. According to federal lobbying disclosure records, Gramm lobbied Congress, the Federal Reserve and the Treasury Department about banking and mortgage issues in 2005 and 2006. During those years, the mortgage industry pressed Congress to roll back strong state rules that sought to stem the rise of predatory tactics used by lenders and brokers to place homeowners in high-cost mortgages.
Phil Gramm remains tied to UBS, and he's also the general co-chairman of John McCain's presidential campaign, and his principal economic advisor. He's the individual that denied we're in a recession, claiming it's only a "mental recession" and adding that we're all "just a nation of whiners".
In 1999, McCain, a long time advocate of federal deregulation, voted for the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act, which passed in the Senate by a vote of 54-44. The deregulation bill loosened restrictions on the activities of banks, brokerage houses, and insurance companies. That's where this current crisis started
In 2008, McCain expressed approval of the results of financial deregulation he helped pass by pointing to it as a model for health care policy, writing: "Opening up the health insurance market to more vigorous nationwide competition, as we have done over the last decade in banking, would provide more choices of innovative products less burdened by the worst excesses of state-based regulation."
In a speech McCain gave in June 2008, regarding the general notion of consistency of political positions over time, McCain said, "My principles and my practice and my voting record are very clear. Not only from 2000 but 1998 and 1992 and 1986. And you know, it's kind of a favorite tactical ploy now that opponents use, of saying the person has changed. Look, none of my principles or values have changed."
Today, in the wake of the widely publicized crises involving the insurance company AIG, and the brokerage houses Lehman Brothers and Merrill Lynch, McCain stated: "In my administration, we're going to hold people on Wall Street responsible. And we're going to enact and enforce reforms to make sure that these outrages never happen in the first place." Of course that was the original purpose of the regulations John McCain and Phil Gramm worked to strip away that have now created this crisis.
When McCain huddled with his closest advisers last weekend to map out his new policy, virtually every one invited was a Washington lobbyist. His campaign manager, Rick Davis, co-founded a lobbying firm whose clients have included Verizon and SBC Telecommunications. His chief political adviser, Charles R. Black Jr., is chairman of one of Washington's lobbying powerhouses, BKSH and Associates, which has represented AT&T, Alcoa, J.P. Morgan and U.S. Airways. Senior advisers Steve Schmidt and Mark McKinnon Mark McKinnon work for firms that have lobbied for Land O' Lakes, UST Public Affairs, Dell and Fannie Mae.
So John McCain, the candidate that now claims he's going to fix the crisis, is the same Senator that voted to help create it. To form his new campaign strategy so he can release his new policy, he assembled some of the biggest lobbyists in Washington, which comprise his campaign leadership.
McCain's relationship with lobbyists became an issue last week after it was reported that his aides asked Vicki Iseman, a telecom lobbyist, to distance herself from his 2000 presidential campaign because it would threaten McCain's reputation for independence. An angry and defiant McCain denounced the stories, declaring: "At no time have I ever done anything that would betray the public trust."
I doubt that I'm the only one that remembers John McCain's active role in the regulation influence peddling scandal called "The Keating Five", when McCain tried to influence a regulatory agency on behalf of a corrupt Savings & Loan contributor.
McCain's reliance on lobbyists for key jobs, both in the Senate and in his presidential campaign, extends beyond his inner circle. McCain recently hired Mark Buse to be his Senate chief of staff. Buse led the Commerce Committee staff in the late 1990s and early 2000s, and was until last fall a lobbyist for ML Strategies, representing eBay, Goldman Sachs Group, Cablevision, Tenneco and Novartis Pharmaceuticals. McCain's top fundraising official is former congressman Tom Loeffler (R-Tex.), who heads a lobbying law firm called the Loeffler Group. He has counseled the Saudis as well as Southwest Airlines, AT&T, Toyata and the Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America.
Public Citizen, a group that monitors campaign fundraising, has found that McCain is swimming in bundlers, people who gather checks from networks of friends and associates from the lobbying community. By the group's current count, McCain has at least 59 federal lobbyists raising money for his campaign. The potential harm is that should Senator McCain become elected, those people will have a very close relationship with the McCain White House.
But even as Charles Black serves as McCain's chief political advisor, he also leads his lobbying firm, which offers corporate interests and foreign governments the promise of access to the most powerful lawmakers. Some of those companies have interests before the Senate and, in particular, the Commerce Committee, of which McCain is a member. Black said he does a lot of his work by telephone from McCain's Straight Talk Express bus.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-
dyn/content/article/2008/02/21/AR2008022101131_pf.html
So we arrive at a critical juncture in our nation. We have a massive financial crisis before us, created by the direct and systematic stripping away of federal regulations by Republicans. John McCain was an active participant in that effort. Now that his actions are problematic in his bid to become president, he convenes a group of the most powerful Washington lobbyists, all senior members of the McCain campaign, to map out their next strategy.
John McCain, who voted for bills that caused the crisis, is surrounded by lobbyists advising him on the economy. When it counted the most, John McCain's judgment was fatally wrong. He's on the record, publicly stating he knows very little about economics. Now John McCain and his lobbyist advisors want you to believe he can fix the crisis he actively helped to create.
Lobbyists! That's the brain trust of John McCain's campaign.
Just for the record, Barack Obama also has an economic advisor. His name is Warren Buffett.
Posted at 12:01 AM in Politcally Speaking | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
Well, I can't say I'm surprised!
******************************************
From Salon.com
Mean Girl
Sarah Palin has a way of using "old boys" -- then dumping them when they become inconvenient.
By David Talbot
http://www.salon.com/news/feature/2008/09/23/palin/index.html
Sep. 23, 2008 | Before Sarah Palin decided to run for the Wasilla mayor's office in 1996 against incumbent John Stein, the Palins and Steins were friends. John Stein had helped launch Palin's political career, mentoring the hockey mom during her 1994 run for City Council, along with veteran council member Nick Carney. Stein's wife, Karen Marie, went to aerobics classes with Palin.
But when she announced her candidacy for Stein's seat, vowing to overturn the city's "old boy" establishment, a different Sarah Palin emerged. "Things got very ugly," recalled Naomi Tigner, a friend of the Steins. "Sarah became very mean-spirited."
The Wasilla mayor's seat is nonpartisan, and Mayor Stein, a former city planner who had held the post for nine years, ran a businesslike campaign that stressed his experience and competency. But Palin ignited the traditionally low-key race with scorching social issues, injecting "God, guns and abortion into the race -- things that had nothing to do with being mayor of a small town," according to Tigner.
Palin's mayoral campaign rode the wave of conservative, evangelical fervor that was sweeping Alaska in the '90s. Suddenly candidates' social values, not their ability to manage the roads and sewer systems, were dominating the debate. "Sarah and I were both Republicans, but this was an entirely new slant to local politics -- much more aggressive than anything I'd ever seen," said Stein, looking back at the election that put Palin on the political map.
There was a knife-sharp, personal edge to Palin's campaign that many locals found disturbing, particularly because of the warm relationship between Palin and Stein before the race.
"I called Sarah's campaign for mayor the end of the age of innocence in Wasilla," said Carney.
Even though Palin knew that Stein is a Protestant Christian, from a Pennsylvania Dutch background, her campaign began circulating the word that she would be "Wasilla's first Christian mayor." Some of Stein's supporters interpreted this as an attempt to portray Stein as Jewish in the heavily evangelical community. Stein himself, an eminently reasonable and reflective man, thinks "they were redefining Christianity to mean born-agains."
The Palin campaign also started another vicious whisper campaign, spreading the word that Stein and his wife -- who had chosen to keep her own last name when they were married -- were not legally wed. Again, Palin knew the truth, Stein said, but chose to muddy the waters. "We actually had to produce our marriage certificate," recalled Stein, whose wife died of breast cancer in 2005 without ever reconciling with Palin.
"I had a hand in creating Sarah, but in the end she blew me out of the water," Stein said, sounding more wearily ironic than bitter. "Sarah's on a mission, she's an opportunist."
According to some political observers in Alaska, this pattern -- exploiting "old-boy" mentors and then turning against them for her own advantage -- defines Sarah Palin's rise to power. Again and again, Palin has charmed powerful political patrons, and then rejected them when it suited her purposes. She has crafted a public image as a clean politics reformer, but in truth, she has only blown the whistle on political corruption when it was expedient for her to do so. Above all, Palin is a dynamo of ambition, shrewdly maneuvering her way through the notoriously compromised world of Alaska politics, making and breaking alliances along the way.
"When Palin takes credit for knocking off the old-boy network in Alaska, it drives me crazy," said Andrew Halcro, an Anchorage businessman and radio talk show host who ran against her in the 2006 GOP primary race for governor. "Sarah certainly availed herself of that network whenever it was expedient."
With its frontier political infrastructure and its geyser of oil money, Alaska has become as notorious as a third-world petro-kingdom. In recent years, scandal has seeped throughout the state's political circles -- and at the center of this widening spill is Alaska's powerful patronage king, Republican Sen. Ted Stevens, and wealthy oil contractor Bill Allen.
Despite Palin's reform reputation, she has maintained a delicate relationship with Stevens over the years -- courting his endorsement for governor, then distancing herself after his 2007 federal indictment on corruption charges, and then cozying up again when it appeared he might survive politically. As for Allen -- the former oil roughneck whose North Slope wealth has greased many a palm in Alaska -- Palin found nothing wrong with his money when she ran for lieutenant governor in 2002.
But once a powerful patron becomes a major liability, Palin is quick to jettison him. Alaska state Rep. Victor Kohring, another key Palin supporter during her political rise in Mat-Su Valley, found this out after he became a victim of the FBI's oil corruption sting operation. Kohring, who used to accompany Palin on her campaign jaunts, angrily points out that he was abandoned by his fellow Christian conservative before he even went to trial. The former Alaska legislator, who now resides in the Taft minimum security prison outside Bakersfield, Calif., communicated his views of Palin through his friend, Fred James. Kohring, said James, feels "betrayed" by Palin.
"After Vic's indictment, she didn't give him the time of day," said James. "She never went to him personally and asked if the charges were true. This is a man who helped her get started in government. She turned her back on him well before he even went on trial. Vic resents the hell out of that. He thinks she's an opportunist, pure and simple. She saw how the press were moving on Vic, and even before he had his day in court, she called on him to resign his office. He regarded that as a great insult, a personal betrayal."
Palin's reputation as a reformer stems primarily from her headline-grabbing ouster of state GOP chairman Randy Ruedrich from the Alaska Oil and Gas Conservation Commission for flagrant conflict-of-interest abuses. At the time, Palin was heralded in the press as a whistle-blower, but it was later revealed that she was guilty of the same charge that she had brought against Ruedrich -- using state office equipment for partisan political business. (While still mayor of Wasilla, she sent out campaign fundraising appeals from her office during her race for lieutenant governor.)
Others suspect that Palin had self-serving reasons for taking on Ruedrich and resigning her seat on the commission. The state energy panel had ignited a public firestorm in Palin's home base, Mat-Su Valley, by secretly leasing sub-surface drilling rights on thousands of residential lots to a Colorado-based gas producer. Outraged farmers and homeowners, who woke up one morning to find drilling equipment being hauled onto their land, were in open revolt against the commission. While Palin initially supported the leasing plan, she was shrewd enough to realize it was political suicide to alienate conservative property owners in her own district. According to some accounts, she was also growing tired of commuting to state offices in Anchorage and poring over dry, tedious technical manuals for her job. All in all, it seemed like the right move to jump ship -- and going out a hero was an added plus.
"Sarah quit the commission to make political hay," Halcro asserted.
In the end, Ruedrich admitted wrongdoing and settled the ethics case by paying $12,000 in civil fines. But Palin did not drive the well-connected Republican operative into exile. In fact, he remains the party's state chairman and he could be seen on the floor of the Republican convention in St. Paul, Minn., hugging the newly crowned vice-presidential candidate and cheering her feisty speech against greedy old boys like, well, him.
"The idea that Sarah shook up the state's old-boy network is one big fantasy, it's complete bullshit," Halcro said. "She got all this public acclaim for throwing people who backed her under the bus -- but she only did it after they became expendable, when she no longer needed them.
"The good old boys in Alaska are still the good old boys -- they're alive and kicking. Randy is still running the Republican Party -- he wasn't happy about being turned into a national poster boy for corruption, but he went along with the program. Ted Stevens is still running for reelection. And [scandal-tainted Alaska Rep.] Don Young is, too. So where's the new era of change that Palin supposedly brought to Alaska?"
-- By David Talbot
Posted at 12:01 AM in Politcally Speaking | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
Hello and welcome!
I've had the honor of being added to the BlogNetNews feed for Oklahoma. My blog was chosen for it's liberal leanings, to help balance the conservative blogs that are featured there as well. I hope you find what I post here worth reading, and I welcome your comments. So kick back and stay awhile, won't you?
Posted at 10:39 AM in Politcally Speaking | Permalink | Comments (4) | TrackBack (0)
(This is courtesty of my friend Kevin aka "Greco" over at DemoOkie.com .)
John McCain has some serious problems that are just now going from sparks to a raging fire. He doesn’t need advisors, he needs firemen.
Earlier this year, when questioned about the sea of lobbyists that are running his campaign he said, "At no time have I ever done anything that would betray the public trust." Richard Nixon, another Republican, once said, “I am not a crook.” We all remember how accurate that claim turned out.
Here are three non-debatable, documented events that might make John McCain wish he’d never had that senior moment when he uttered that claim.
The Keating Five Scandal
According to Wikipedia, The Keating Five were five United States Senators accused of corruption in 1989, igniting a major political scandal as part of the larger Savings and Loan crisis of the late 1980s and early 1990s. John McCain was one of those Senators.
Charles Keating was Chairman of Lincoln Savings and Loan Association, which had come under investigation for highly questionable investment activities. The Federal Home Loan Bank Board feared their risky investment practices were exposing taxpayers to huge potential losses. Keating primed the pump with $1.3 million in campaign contributions, including John McCain and called in his favors.
He arranged for the five Senators to meet with the Federal Home Loan Bank Board and ask them to pull back from their investigation. They did. Keating was asked whether his contributions had bought him influence, he said, “I want to say in the most forceful way I can: I certainly hope so.” His company failed and taxpayers were stuck with the massive debt to bail them out.
Keating was hit with a $1.1 billion fraud and racketeering action. Keating ultimately served five years in prison for his corrupt mismanagement of Lincoln Savings and Loan.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Keating_Five
"At no time have I ever done anything that would betray the public trust."
---John McCain
The Criminal Thefts Scandal
John McCain’s wife Cindy, has had a problem with drug abuse and addiction. She claimed it was brought on in part by her direct role in the Keating Five corruption scandal both Cindy and John McCain were involved in. Earlier, Cindy McCain founded the American Voluntary Medical Team (AVMT), which was a non-profit organization that organized trips for doctors, nurses, and other medical personnel to provide emergency medical care to disaster-struck or war-torn third-world areas. During 1992, Tom Gosinski, the director of government and international affairs for AVMT, discovered that she was stealing drugs from her own charity that were intended for disaster relief in third-world countries.
In January 1993, Cindy McCain terminated Gosinski's employment, the man that discovered her drug thefts, on grounds of "budgetary reasons". In spring 1993, Gosinski tipped off the Drug Enforcement Administration to investigate McCain's drug theft, and a federal investigation ensued. McCain's defense team, led by Washington lawyer John Dowd, combined with the considerable influence John McCain could wield, secured an agreement with the U.S. Attorney's office that limited her punishment to financial restitution and enrollment in a diversion program without any public disclosure.
(http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cindy_Hensley_McCain)
Cindy McCain has had several other questionable encounters with violations of the law. During several of John McCain's campaigns he used her family's office equipment, such as computers and copiers and Cindy McCain personally paid some of the campaign's bills. Cindy McCain's father, James Hensley, and other Hensley & Co. executives gave so much the Federal Election Commission ordered McCain to give some of it back. During this presidential campaign, the use of Cindy McCain's private jet by her husband is again coming under campaign scrutiny.
(http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2008/04/03/cindy-mccains-fortune-pro_n_94833.html
"At no time have I ever done anything that would betray the public trust."
---John McCain
The Financial Meltdown Scandal
In 1999, John McCain, a long time advocate of federal de-regulation, voted for the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act, which passed in the Senate by a vote of 54-44. The deregulation bill loosened restrictions on the activities of banks, brokerage houses, and insurance companies. That's where this current crisis started.
In 2008, McCain expressed approval of the results of financial deregulation he helped pass by pointing to it as a model for health care policy, writing: "Opening up the health insurance market to more vigorous nationwide competition, as we have done over the last decade in banking, would provide more choices of innovative products less burdened by the worst excesses of state-based regulation."
John McCain is now claiming he can fix this mess, but he actually helped create the crisis we're now facing. Former Senator Phil Gramm was one of the authors of the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act, making changes in the banking, insurance and securities laws which Congress had kept at bay for sixty years. Two years later, Gramm left the Senate and according to federal lobbying disclosure records, Gramm lobbied Congress, the Federal Reserve and the Treasury Department about banking and mortgage issues in 2005 and 2006. During those years, the mortgage industry pressed Congress to roll back strong state rules that sought to stem the rise of predatory tactics used by lenders and brokers to place homeowners in high-cost mortgages.
Phil Gramm is also the general co-chairman of John McCain's presidential campaign, and his principal economic advisor. He's the individual that denied we're in a recession, claiming it's only a "mental recession" and adding that we're all "just a nation of whiners".
Last weekend McCain assembled his closest advisers last to map out his new policy. Virtually every one invited was a Washington lobbyist. His campaign manager, Rick Davis, co-founded a lobbying firm whose clients have included Verizon and SBC Telecommunications. His chief political adviser, Charles R. Black Jr., is chairman of one of Washington's lobbying powerhouses, BKSH and Associates, which has represented AT&T, Alcoa, J.P. Morgan and U.S. Airways.
Senior advisers Steve Schmidt and Mark McKinnon Mark McKinnon work for firms that have lobbied for Land O' Lakes, UST Public Affairs, Dell and Fannie Mae. McCain's top fundraising official is former congressman Tom Loeffler (R-Tex.), who heads a lobbying law firm called the Loeffler Group. He has counseled the Saudis as well as Southwest Airlines, AT&T, Toyota and the Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America.
We have a massive financial crisis before us, created by the direct and systematic stripping away of federal regulations by Republicans. John McCain was an active participant in that effort. Now that his actions are problematic in his bid to become president, he convenes a group of powerful Washington lobbyists, all senior members of his campaign, to map out their next strategy.
When it counted the most, John McCain's judgment was fatally wrong. He's on the record, publicly stating he knows very little about economics. When his new plan is unveiled it won't be McCain's Plan, it will be the lobbyist's plan. But John McCain and his lobbyist advisers want you to believe he can fix the crisis he actively helped to create.
"At no time have I ever done anything that would betray the public trust."
---John McCain
If that’s not enough, consider the possibility that if John McCain should win the election and then become incapacitated, it would be Sarah Palin, the zero credentialed moose hunter that would be responsible for saving our nation from financial ruin. That’s another display of McCain’s flawed judgment.
Posted at 10:32 AM in Politcally Speaking | Permalink | Comments (1) | TrackBack (0)