Clinton
Bill Clinton on David Letterman
Barack Obama, Bill Clinton, David Letterman, Health Care, PoliticsBill Maher on Conan Part Two
Anthony Weiner, Barack Obama, Betsy McConaughey, Big Pharma, Blue Dogs, Broadcatching, California, Charles Grassley, Conan O'Brian, Glenn Beck, Healthcare Industry, Hlth Care Reform, Howard Dean, Insurance Companies, Kent Conrad, Marijuana, Max Baucus, Orrin Hatch, Politics, Public Option, Real Time, Rick Scott, Rush Limbaugh, Ted Kennedy, Tonight ShowBill Maher on Conan
Anthony Weiner, Barack Obama, Betsy McConaughey, Big Pharma, Blue Dogs, Broadcatching, California, Charles Grassley, Conan O'Brian, Glenn Beck, Healthcare Industry, Hlth Care Reform, Howard Dean, Insurance Companies, Kent Conrad, Marijuana, Max Baucus, Orrin Hatch, Politics, Public Option, Real Time, Rick Scott, Rush Limbaugh, Ted Kennedy, Tonight ShowRealTime With Bill Maher | April 18, 2008
Politics, TullycastReal Time With Bill Maher | August 29, 2008
Barack Obama, Hillary Clinton, Politics, Real TimeWhat He Just Said: The Brilliant Bob Somerby on the Madness of Maureen Dowd
Al Gore, Beltway Journalism, Bill Clinton, Colin Powell, DARPANET, Duke Zeiberts, Frank Rich, Keith Olbermann, Love Story, Mario Cuomo, Maureen Dowd, New York Times, Rachel Maddow, The VillageMarch 30, 2009 9:46 est.
BS was the second guy I ever read on the tubes…-JT
Feel free to focus for five…you little freaks…

STILL DUMBING US DOWN! A former sports guy—and a former Rhodes Scholar—continue to dumb liberals down: // link // print // previous // next //
MONDAY, MARCH 30, 2009
Since we asked: On Friday, we asked a question (see THE DAILY HOWLER, 3/27/09): Now that the Washington Post had semi-corrected its bungled report about the weakling Obama Admin, would Rachel Maddow follow suit? Last Tuesday night, Maddow’s report had been even more wrong than the Post’s efforts had been.
Did Maddow correct? We’d have to say no. She did devote a lengthy segment to the topic in question—a segment we thought was quite remarkable for the ways it seemed to pretend that Maddow was brilliantly right all along. To see Friday’s segment, just click here (it runs more than seven minutes). We’ll discuss this topic later this week.
By the way, do you want to see Maddow’s original segment? It seems to have disappeared.
The emperor’s favorite columnist: Sadly for you and your whole family, “The Emperor’s New Clothes” may be Hans Christian Andersen’s most contemporary fable. Quite frequently, people simply can’t see lunacy, even as it stands before them—if the lunacy in question involves a famous authority figure.
We thought of Andersen when we read Maureen Dowd’s Sunday column. Dowd is the most famous columnist at our most influential newspaper—and she’s been visibly crazy for years.
Plan to Destroy Dozens of Palestinian Homes: "Not Helpful" Says Sec. of State Clinton
AIPAC, Gaza, Hillary Clinton, Israel, Palestinians, Settlements
In “an unusual public criticism of Israel,” Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said yesterday that the country’s “plan to destroy dozens of Palestinian homes in Arab East Jerusalem was ‘unhelpful’ and contrary to Israel’s obligations under a U.S.-backed peace plan.” She added she would raise the issue, along with “concern over the growth of Israeli settlements in the West Bank, with Israeli officials.”
Inauguration 2009
Barack Obama, Inauguration
B.O. by Tullycast

The Douchebag Who Conned The World
Ben Bernanke, Bernie Madoff, Chris Cox, Citibank, Fairfield, Funds of Funds, Greenspan, Hedge Funds, Henry Paulson, Merrill, Spielberg, SummersStephen Foley (From New York)
CHRIS COX
Investors around the world are counting the spiralling cost of the biggest fraud in history, a $50bn scam that has ensnared billionaire businessmen and tiny charities alike and whose tentacles have stretched further and deeper than anyone imagined.
The fallout from the arrest of the Wall Street grandee Bernard Madoff was continuing to grow last night, as institution after institution detailed the extent of their possible losses, and the victims in the UK were headlined by HSBC and the Royal Bank of Scotland, which is majority-owned by the British Government.
A charity set up by the Hollywood director Steven Spielberg was among those revealed to be among the victims, along with a foundation set up by Mort Zuckerman, one of the richest media and property magnates in the United States, dozens of Jewish organisations, sports team owners and a New Jersey senator.
But the biggest confessions were coming from Wall Street, from the City of London and from the headquarters of European banks and from banks around the world. They have poured billions of dollars into Mr Madoff’s too-good-to-be-true investment fund, which appeared to post double-digit annual returns come rain or shine.
RBS said that it could take a hit of £400m if American authorities find there is nothing left of the money Mr Madoff had pretended to be investing for many years. HSBC, Britain’s largest bank, said a “small number” of its clients had exposure totalling $1bn in Mr Madoff’s funds.
The Spanish bank Santander, which owns Abbey and the savings business of Bradford & Bingley in the UK, could be on the hook for $3.1bn. Japan’s Nomura said it has hundreds of millions of dollars at risk. City analysts said that even banks who invested only on behalf of clients could end up on the hook, because clients are almost certain to sue for bad advice.
Mr Madoff confessed last week that his business was “all one great big lie”. The investment returns were fake, and he had been paying old clients with money from new ones. In its conception, the scam is a classic. In its size, it is breathtaking, eclipsing anything seen before. He personally estimated the losses at $50bn, according to the FBI, and as investors owned up to their exposure yesterday that did not seem impossible. For 48 years, until Thursday morning, Mr Madoff was one of Wall Street’s best-respected investment managers, able to harvest money from a vast network of contacts and to trade on his name as a former chairman of the Nasdaq stock exchange.
His arrest has further shaken confidence in the barely regulated hedge fund industry, which is already suffering some of the worst times in its short history. Mr Madoff – who is now on a $10m bail and under orders not to leave the New York area – was able to operate his fraud under the noses of regulators for many years.
Mort Zuckerman, the owner of the New York Daily News and one of the 200 richest Americans, said that one of the managers of his charitable trust had been so taken by Mr Madoff that he invested $9bn with him, including all the money from Mr Zuckerman’s trust. “These are astonishing numbers to be placed with one fund manager,” he said. “I think we have another break in whatever level confidence needs to exist in money markets.”
Nicola Horlick, the British fund manager known as Superwoman for juggling her high-flying City career with bringing up five children, turned her fire on US regulators. Her Bramdean Alternatives investment fund had put 9 per cent – about £10m – with Mr Madoff. She told BBC Radio: “This is the biggest financial scandal, probably in the history of the markets.”












