McCain
"Obama Is Walking Into a Quagmire" Ralph Nader on Bill Maher
Bernanke, Daly, Frank, Goldman, McCain, Nader, Obama, Paulson, Politics, Tullycast, Wall Street, Youtube Tags: PoliticsRon Suskind on Real Time w/Bill Maher | September 26, 2008
Bernanke, Daly, Frank, Goldman, McCain, Nader, Obama, Paulson, Politics, Tullycast, Wall Street, Youtube Tags: PoliticsKing George IV: "Give me 700 Billion" Ralph Nader w/ Bill Maher
Bernanke, Daly, Frank, Goldman, McCain, Nader, Obama, Paulson, Politics, Tullycast, Wall Street, Yoitube Tags: Politics"Gambling With Other People's Money" Bill Maher w/ Ralph Nader
Bernanke, Daly, Frank, Goldman, McCain, Nader, Obama, Paulson, Politics, Tullycast, Wall Street, Yoitube Tags: PoliticsChris Rock w/ Bill Maher : "Obama Thinks The Vote Count Matters"
Bill Clinton, Chris Rock, debate, Election 2008, Jackie Robinson, McCain, Obama, Politics, Tullycast, Wall StreetOnline Poker, Fantasy Football, TMZ or a Reasonable Discussion of What Exactly Happened on 9/11?
9/11, Afghanistan, Barack Obama, Bill Kristol, Bin Laden, Blackwater USA, Broadcatching, Carlyle Group, Charles Krauthammer, Civil Liberties, Consensus Journalism, Department of Homeland Security, Dick Cheney, Don Rumsfeld, Douchebaggery, Douglas Feith, Election 2008, Elliot Abrams, FBI, FISA, George Bush, GOP, Halliburton, Howard Stern, Irving Kristol, Joe Biden, Joseph Wilson, Journalism, Judith Miller, Justice Department, Karl Rove, Kellogg Brown and Root, Matt Cooper, McCain, Michael Mukasey, Ohio, Oil, Patrick Fitzgerald, Patriot Act, PNAC, Politics of Fear, Richard Mellon Scaife, Robert Luskin, Robert Novak, Roger Ailes, Rupert Murdoch, Rush Limbaugh, Saddam Hussein, Scooter Libby, Shock Doctrine, The New York Times, Tim Russert, Tullycast, Valerie Plame, Viveca NovakI was alluding to the fact that people can spend hours investigating a succotash recipe or watch hours of mindless television or play video poker until the cows come home, eat and then go back
out but immediately scoff and mock a discussion of the worst attack on the U.S. in it’s history.
It’s disturbing.
Liberal architects investigating the World Trade Center Towers?
Please.
Karl Rove’s Media Birds Chirp About Obama’s ‘Arrogance’
Dana Milbank, David Ignatitus, Eric Alterman, Karl Rove, McCain, Obama, The New York TimesThursday, July 31, 2008 by Salon.com
Glenn Greenwald
Displaying the startling prescience and unconventional insights that have long been the hallmark of his magazine, The New Republic’s Jonathan Chait wrote on June 30:
The best aspect of a McCain presidency is that, while it would probably follow the policies of George W. Bush, it would put an end to the politics of Karl Rove . . . . In Bush’s Washington, critics are enemies to be dismissed rather than engaged. A McCain presidency would promise to dismantle the whole Rovian method that has torn open such a deep wound in the national psyche.
From The New York Times Editorial Page, yesterday:
On July 3, news reports said Senator John McCain, worried that he might lose the election before it truly started, opened his doors to disciples of Karl Rove from the 2004 campaign and the Bush White House. Less than a month later, the results are on full display. The candidate who started out talking about high-minded, civil debate has wholeheartedly adopted Mr. Rove’s low-minded and uncivil playbook.
From The New York Times today:
After spending much of the summer searching for an effective line of attack against Senator Barack Obama, Senator John McCain is beginning a newly aggressive campaign to define Mr. Obama as arrogant, out of touch and unprepared for the presidency. . . .
Mr. McCain’s campaign is now under the leadership of members of President Bush’s re-election campaign, including Steve Schmidt, the czar of the Bush war room that relentlessly painted his opponent, Senator John Kerry of Massachusetts, as effete, elite, and equivocal through a daily blitz of sound bites and Web videos that were carefully coordinated with Mr. Bush’s television advertisements.The run of attacks against Mr. Obama over the last couple of weeks have been strikingly reminiscent of that drive, including the Bush team’s tactics of seeking to make campaigns referendums on its opponents — not a choice between two candidates — and attacking the opponent’s perceived strengths head-on.
There’s obviously nothing surprising about the McCain campaign’s reliance on the standard, personality-based attacks that the GOP uses every election year. It’s long been obvious to everyone outside of The TNR Circle that McCain’s only prospect for winning would be to move the election away from debates over issues (where his positions are widely rejected by the public) and instead demonize Barack Obama as an effete, elitist, effeminate, far Leftist, terrorist-loving radical, and it was equally obvious that McCain — “drooling for power like a fruit bat with rabies,” as Matt Taibbi put it in November, 2006 — would eagerly employ those Rovian tactics. That may be a surprise to long-time Beltway McCain worshipers such as Chait and The Washington Post’s David Ignatitus (who today longed for McCain’s “healing gift,” “this fiercely independent man,” and “not the heroism but the humility”), but not to anyone else.
What is far more notable than McCain’s now almost-complete reliance on Rovian demonization themes is how obediently the establishment media has been spouting and disseminating them. Five weeks ago, on June 23, Karl Rove appeared at a breakfast with Republican insiders at the Capitol Hill Club, mocked Obamacooly arrogant.” Ever since, that Obama is “arrogant” — and the related sin: “presumptuous” — has become standard, mandated media script. as “the guy at the country club with the beautiful date, holding a martini and a cigarette that stands against the wall and makes snide comments about everyone who passes by,” and labeled him “
It’s now literally difficult to find a discussion of Obama in the establishment press that isn’t based on this personality-based theme — with media stars either expressing the opinion themselves or repeating it as a McCain talking point. Last night, CNN’s Campbell Brown, hosting Anderson Cooper’s show, framed the show this way:
But is Obama vulnerable? Is he arrogant? . . . David, the McCain campaign, Republicans, they are consistently playing up this notion that Obama is presumptuous, arrogant. Can they stick him with this label?
Here’s the front page of Politico today:

This is exactly what happens every single election cycle. The Right spews some petty, personality-based attack, and the chirping media birds then mindlessly repeat it until it’s lodged into our discourse as accepted fact. That’s the media strategy on which the Right is relying to win the election this year again — dictating the songs sung by the vapid, chirping press birds — even as they petulantly and incessantly complain that the same media stars who serve this strategy are stacked against them. Yesterday’s, National Review’s Rich Lowry posted what he called “musings from a shrewd friend” about a Dana Milbank column in yesterday’s Washington Post that repeated every last “Obama-is-arrogant” cliché (”there are signs that the Obama campaign’s arrogance has begun to anger reporters”). Lowry’s “shrewd” friend:
[Obama’s] showing hubris and contempt for the rest of us in how he considers America fundamentally broken and he’s the solution. Messianism is usually a quality you don’t want in a president. This was always the soft underbelly of his candidacy. They’ve gotten too caught up in their own story. What always does in a celebrity? Overexposure. The question now is whether Dana Milbank is the bird leaving the wire and every other bird in the press follows him or not. If this narrative sets in, Obama might have to move up his VP announcement to change the story.
Sirius-XM Merger Approved by Justice Department
Artie Lange, Bear Stearns, Beetlejuice, Benjy Bronk, Bloodhound Gang, Eric the Midget, Fred Norris, Gary Dell'Abate, High-Pitched Eric, Hillary, Howard Stern, J.D., J.P. Morgan, Jeff The Drunk, Jim Florentine, Justice Department, Mark The Bagger, McCain, Obama, Ralph, Richard Christie, Robin Quivers, Ronnie the Limo Driver, Sal the Stockbroker, Satellite Radio, Sirius, Sirius XM Merger, Wall Street, XMJustice Department gives thumbs up to satellite radio merger more than one year after it was first announced.
In its decision, the Department of Justice determined that an XM-Sirius merger was not anti-competitive. The Justice Department argued that other media companies such as Clear Channel (CCU, Fortune 500), CBS (CBS, Fortune 500), or even Apple (AAPL, Fortune 500) with its iTunes software and iPod music player served as alternate options for music and media customers.
The Department of Justice did not place any conditions on the merger.
“Since we determined that there was no competition between the companies, we did not need to set any conditions as such,” said Assistant Attorney General Thomas Barnett during a conference call with reporters Monday afternoon.
But the Federal Communications Commission must also approve the deal. The FCC has yet to make a decision on the merger and it could decide to place conditions on the deal. A spokesperson for the FCC was not immediately available for comment.
Since Sirius and XM are still awaiting approval from the FCC, it is unclear exactly what a merger would mean for consumers. Both companies charge their customers a $12.95 per month subscription fee for their most basic packages. Some have feared that if Sirius and XM are allowed to merge, the two companies would raise the monthly price.
However, the companies said last year that they would be willing to offer a so-called “a la carte” price plan where consumers could pick certain packages for less money.
The merger would combine the nation’s only two satellite radio companies and create a company with about 14 million subscribers. It would bring together Sirius’ most well-known content, including shock jock Stern and National Football League games with XM’s Major League Baseball as well as programming from Oprah Winfrey.
Currently, subscribers for either Sirius or XM can only receive broadcasts from one of the two services with their satellite radios. But in a statement Monday, XM reiterated that radios owned by its current subscribers would not need to be replaced in order to continue receiving programming.
Shares of XM (XMSR) and Sirius (SIRI) both rose after the announcement. ![]()













