Doughy Pantload Frank Luntz Tries To Scare the American People – Again

Barack Obama, Birthers, Frank Luntz, GOP Talking Points, Media Manipulators, Republicans, Richard Mellon Scaife, Tea Parties

People are angry-angry I say!

Douchechills….

Online 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 Novak

I 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.

02/29/2008 | Bill Maher | Complete+O V E R T I M E

Barack Obama, Bill Clinton, Blogs, Broadcatching, Castro, Cuba, David Frum, Democrats, Dick Cheney, Douglas Feith, Election 2008, Elliot Abrams, Farrakan, FISA, George Bush, Guantanamo, Hillary Clinton, John McCain, Lobbyists, Nedra Pickler, Neocon, New York Times, Osama Bin Laden, Peter Hoekstra, PNAC, Politics, Richard Mellon Scaife, Rush Limbaugh, Saddam Hussein, Tullycast, Weekly Standard

Bill Maher | February 22, 2008 | Complete w/ New Rules and Overtime

9/11, Barack Obama, Bill Clinton, Blogs, Broadcatching, Castro, Cuba, David Frum, Democrats, Dick Cheney, Douglas Feith, Election 2008, Elliot Abrams, FISA, George Bush, Guantanamo, Hillary Clinton, John McCain, Lobbyists, Neocon, New York Times, Osama Bin Laden, PNAC, Politics, Richard Mellon Scaife, Rush Limbaugh, Saddam Hussein, Tullycast, Weekly Standard, Youtube

Part One

Part Two

Part Three

Part Four

Part Five

Part Six

New Rules

O V E R T I M E

add to del.icio.us :: Add to Blinkslist :: add to furl :: Digg it :: add to ma.gnolia :: Stumble It! :: add to simpy :: seed the vine :: :: :: TailRank

Tullycast

Andrew Tully, Baker Botts, Barack Obama, Bechtel, Bill Clinton, Carlyle Group, CIA, Dick Cheney, Don Rumsfeld, Douglas Feith, Duke Ziebert, Election 2008, Elliot Abrams, Halliburton, Hillary Clinton, Iran/Contra, Joe Wilson, John McCain, Judith Miller, Karl Rove, KBR, Kellogg Brown and Root, Lee Atwater, Osama Bin Laden, PNAC, Politics, Richard Mellon Scaife, Saddam Hussein, Scooter Libby, Tullycast, Tullycasts, Valerie Plame, Viveca Novak, Watergate, Youtube

Ambassador Joseph Wilson Endorses Hillary Clinton; Calls Her "Battle Tested"

Barack Obama, David Corn, Dick Cheney, Douglas Feith, Election 2008, Elliot Abrams, Hillary Clinton, Jane Hamsher, Joe Wilson, John McCain, Judge Thomas F. Hogan, Judith Millaer, Karl Rove, Marcy Wheeler, Matt Cooper, Patrick Fitzgerald, Richard Mellon Scaife, Robert Luskin, Robert Novak, Scooter Libby, The District, Tim Russert, Viveca Novak

BaltimoreSun.com

wilsons.jpg

Battle-tested

Hillary Clinton fought the Republican attack machine, and emerged stronger

By Joseph C. Wilson IV

February 12, 2008

With the emergence of Sen. John McCain as the presumptive Republican nominee, the choice for the Democrats in the 2008 presidential election now shifts to who is best positioned to beat him, in what promises to be a more hard-fought campaign – and perhaps a nastier one – than Democrats anticipated.

Sen. Barack Obama’s promise of transformation and an end of partisan politics has its seductive appeal. The Bush-Cheney era, after all, has been punctuated by smear campaigns, character assassinations and ideological fervor.

Nobody dislikes such poisonous partisanship, especially in foreign policy, more than I do. I am one of very few Foreign Service officers to have served as ambassador in the administrations of both George H. W. Bush and Bill Clinton, yet I have spent the past four years fighting a concerted character assassination campaign orchestrated by the George W. Bush White House.

Sen. Hillary Clinton is one of the few who fully understood the stakes in that battle. Time and again, she reached out to my wife – outed CIA officer Valerie Plame Wilson – and me to remind us that as painful as the attacks were, we simply could not allow ourselves to be driven from the public square by bullying. Mrs. Clinton knew from experience, having spent the better part of the past 20 years fighting the Republican attack machine. She is a fighter.

But will Mr. Obama fight? His brief time on the national scene gives little comfort. Consider a February 2006 exchange of letters with Mr. McCain on the subject of ethics reform. The wrathful Mr. McCain accused Mr. Obama of being “disingenuous,” to which Mr. Obama meekly replied, “The fact that you have now questioned my sincerity and my desire to put aside politics for the public interest is regrettable but does not in any way diminish my deep respect for you.”

Mr. McCain was insultingly dismissive but successful in intimidating his inexperienced colleague. Thus, in his one known face-to-face encounter with Mr. McCain, Mr. Obama failed to stand his ground.

What gives us confidence that Mr. Obama will be stronger the next time he faces Mr. McCain, a seasoned political fighter with extensive national security credentials? Even more important, what special disadvantages does Mr. Obama carry into this contest on questions of national security?

How will Mr. Obama answer Mr. McCain about his careless remark about unilaterally bombing Pakistan – perhaps blowing up an already difficult relationship with a nuclear state threatened by Islamic extremists? How will Mr. Obama respond to charges made by the Kenyan government that his campaigning activities in Kenya in support of his distant cousin running for president there made him “a stooge” and constituted interference in the politics of an important and besieged ally in the war on terror?

How will he answer charges that his desire for unstructured personal summits without preconditions with a host of America’s adversaries, from Mahmoud Ahmadinejad to Kim Jong Il, would be little more than premature capitulation?

Contrary to the myth of the Obama campaign, 2008 is not the year for transcendental transformation. The task for the next administration will be to repair the damage done by eight years of radical rule. And the choice for Americans is clear: four more years of corrupt Republican rule, senseless wars, evisceration of the Constitution, emptying of the national treasury – or rebuilding our government and our national reputation, piece by piece.

In order to effect practical change against a determined adversary, we do not need a would-be philosopher-king but a seasoned gladiator who understands the fight Democrats will face in the fall campaign and in governing.

Theodore Roosevelt once said, “It is not the critic who counts: not the man who points out how the strong man stumbles or where the doer of deeds could have done better. The credit belongs to the man who is actually in the arena, whose face is marred by dust and sweat and blood, who strives valiantly, who errs and comes up short again and again … who, at the best, knows, in the end, the triumph of high achievement, and who, at the worst, if he fails, at least he fails while daring greatly.”

If he were around today, Roosevelt might be speaking of the woman in the arena. Hillary Clinton has been in that arena for a generation. She is one of the few to have defeated the attack machine that is today’s Republican Party and to have emerged stronger. She is deeply knowledgeable about governing; she made herself into a power in the Senate; she is respected by our military; and she never flinches. She has never been intimidated, not by any Republican – not even John McCain.

Barack Obama claims to represent the future, but it should be increasingly evident that he is not the man for this moment, especially with Mr. McCain’s arrival. We’ve seen a preview of that contest already. It was a TKO.