Real Time With Bill Maher ~ March 12 2010 ~ One

Broadcatching, Politics

Real Time With Bill Maher ~ March 12 2010 ~ One

Glenn Beck Attacks Tullycast [Video]

Glenn Beck, Tullycast

Beck takes on Tullycast…

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Al Gore Might Get The Last Laugh, Douchebags

Al Gore, Barack Obama, Obama's People, Politics
By Alexander Mooney
CNN

goreWASHINGTON (CNN) — Former Vice President Al Gore is set to meet with President-elect Barack Obama and Vice President-elect Joe Biden Tuesday, leading to speculation Obama is eyeing Gore for a slot in his administration.

According to the Obama transition office, the meeting will focus on issues relating to energy and climate change, and how the new administration’s environmental policies can spur job creation.

Democratic officials have said Obama is not looking to tap Gore for a Cabinet-level post or any other position in the administration.

But a Gore appointment would almost certainly be greeted with celebration from members of the party’s liberal wing, many of whom are still angry he lost the White House in 2000 despite winning the popular vote.

Gore has also rocketed to stardom in the years since his failed presidential bid, winning a Nobel Peace Prize last year for his work to raise awareness on the dangers of global warming. The former vice president’s documentary on climate change, “An Inconvenient Truth,” also won two Oscars in 2007.

But Gore, who has made millions in the private sector since his days at the White House, has suggested he has little interest in returning to government.

A spokesman for Gore flatly said last week the former vice president has no interest in serving the Obama administration.

Nonetheless, Gore’s high profile visit to Chicago, Illinois, to meet Obama and Biden is raising eyebrows, even among some of Gore’s close advisers.

“The Gore trip is for more than just a chat,” a close friend of Gore told CNN’s John King. “He wouldn’t burn that much carbon flying to Chicago just to talk.”

But Obama, who eagerly courted Gore’s endorsement during the heated presidential race, has long said he would welcome the Democratic elder into his White House, at least as an informal adviser.

“I will make a commitment that Al Gore will be at the table and play a central part in us figuring out how we solve this [climate change] problem,” Obama said in April.

While this is the first time Gore is set to sit down with the president-elect since Election Day, the two regularly speak, aides have said. The meeting comes as the Obama transition team turns its focus toward naming its energy secretary and Environmental Protection Agency administrator — two key posts that remain vacant.

Gore notably sat on the sidelines during the prolonged Democratic primary process, refusing to endorse a candidate until the outcome became clear — a move viewed by some as a snub to Sen. Hillary Clinton who was engaged in a closely fought race with Obama at the time.

The former vice president made his debut on the campaign trail days after Clinton formally conceded the race, hailing Obama as a leader able to transcend Washington’s poisonous partisanship.

“For America to lead the world through the dangers we’re facing, to seize the opportunities before us, we’ve got to have new leadership,” he said then. “Not only a new president, but new policies. Not only a new head of state, but a new vision for America’s future.”

April 18, 2008 | Bill Maher | Part One

Stories


Bill Maher's Complete April 4th Show + Overtime

Al Gore, Amy Holmes, Barbara Lee, Bear Stearns, Bill Clinton, Esai Morales, Hillary, Iran, Iraq, John McCain, Martin Luther King, Mortgage Crisis, Obama, Politics, Racism, Real Time, Robert Reich, Ron Paul, terrorism, Tullycasts

TULLYCASTS

Bill Maher | February 8 2008 | Part Six

Al Gore, Barack Obama, Bin Laden, Blogs, Buffoonery, Douchebaggery, Election 2008, France, Healthcare, Hillary Clinton, Humor, McCain, Neocon, Politics, Right-Wing Talking Points, Scaife, Tullycast, Wall Street, Writers

Part Six

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Tears and Drama In Bali As The World Takes On The U.S.A.

Al Gore, Bali, Climate Change, Global Warming, John Bolton, United Nations

hovershiphall.jpgTelegraph UK

By Charles Clover, Environment Editor, in Bali

An extraordinary day began with a fresh text of the Bali “road map” which Indonesia’s Environment Minister Rachmat Witoelar, as president of the conference, presented to delegates saying a “delicate balance” had been achieved.

India’s ambassador immediately made clear that he was not prepared to go along without it being made clear that there was responsibility of industrialised nations to supply developing countries with clean technologies, finance and support to deal with them problem “in a measurable manner.”

The crucial part of the agreement for developing countries had been rewritten overnight in a way that G77 countries said made it unclear that the supply of finance and clean technology, such as clean coal plants, had to be measurable reportable and verifiable.

China piled in, then Pakistan, and it became clear that this was a full scale row.

The conference was stopped, then restarted by Mr Witoelar, leading to wild accusations by China that the UN’s top climate official, Yvo de Boer, had allowed it to re-start while negotiations, chaired by the Indonesian foreign minister, were still continuing.

This Mr de Boer, in tears after two nights without sleep, later denied, to supportive applause.
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Then Mr Witoelar called for another break in which he summoned the UN Secretary General, Ban Ki-moon, and the Indonesian President Yudhoyono, to read the riot act to delegates and break the deadlock.

Mr Yudhoyono urged the conference not to allow “the planet to crumble because we can’t find the right wording.”

Mr Ban said he was “disappointed at the lack of progress” and pointed out the conference was already due to have ended five hours earlier. This was at 1.20 pm local time.

The conference reconvened. South Africa made an emotional appeal for the Americans to reconsider their statement – and was supported by delegation after delegation from the developing world while Miss Dobriansky and James Connaughton, President Bush’s climate change adviser, talked increasingly animatedly off-microphone.

The killer blow came from the Harvard-educated representative of Papua New Guinea, Kevin Conrad, who used Mr Connaughton’s diplomatic gaffe of earlier in the week to humiliate the Americans.

Mr Connaughton had said: “We will lead. We will continue to lead but leadership also requires others to fall in line and follow.” Mr Conrad said, to applause: “If you are not willing to lead, then get out of the way.”

Miss Dobriansky finally pressed her button to speak again and said: “We will go forward and join the consensus.”

After cheers and diplomatic congratulations, the president of the conference assessed that “we are very, very close”, then banged his gavel down on India’s proposal to mark that a consensus had been achieved.