Election 2008
Barack Obama Victory Speech | Part One
AEI, Al Qaeda, Ashcroft, Bremer, Britain, Broadcatching, Bush, Bush Apologists, California, Children, CIA, Coalition Provisional Authority, Consensus Journalism, Conservatism, Constitution, Corn, Debates, Democrats, District Of Corruption, Evolution, Framing, Freepers, Global Warming, Gonzales, Gootube, Guns, Habeas Corpus, Healthcare, Hillary, Immigration, Iran, Iraq, Jeff Gannon, Jeff Guckert, Kerry, Luntz, Media Landscape, Moonbats, New York, New York Herald Sun, Obama, Olbermann, Politics, Politics Rundown, Poverty, Republic_Party, Right-Wing Conspiracy, Rosie, Rumsfeld, Shiite, Soldiers, Sunni, Surge, Taxes, Vandenheuvel, veterans, War Criminals, web 2.0, Wingnuttia, Wolfowitz, YoutubeElection 2008's Best Douchebag Moment | That Baldwin Brother Challenges Obama To A Fight
Barack Obama, Douche-Chills, Election 2008, GOP, Joe Biden, John McCain, Neocon, Republicans, Sarah PalinStephen Baldwin, who has threatened to move to Canada if Barack Obama is elected, has now challenged the candidate to box for charity. “I’d like to knock some good sense into Barack,” Alec’s right-wing bro said at the Printing House Gym in the Village. “I wouldn’t hurt him. But if he wins the election, he’ll hurt me. He’s a cultural terrorist.” This from the man who enriched us all with “Sex Monster” and “Snakeman.”
Norman Mailer on Iraq | Part Two
9/11, Barack Obama, Bin Laden, Election 2008, Mainstream Media, Politics, Propaganda, Tullycast, Voting, WarTullycast is Number One on Youtube
Barack Obama, Broadcatching, Don Imus, Election 2008, Howard Stern, Joe Biden, John McCain, Politics, Sarah Palin, Tullycast, tullycast2, Video, YoutubeDead Bear Covered With Obama Signs Found at School
Election 2008, RacismRacism On The Campaign Trail
Mon Oct 20, 10:03 pm ET
CULLOWHEE, N.C. – Police at Western Carolina University and wildlife officials were investigating the discovery early Monday of a dead bear cub draped with a pair of Barack Obama campaign signs.
Leila Tvedt, associate vice chancellor for public relations, said Monday night that maintenance workers found the 75-pound bear cub shot to death in front of the school’s administration building at the entrance to campus. The Obama yard signs were stapled together and placed over the bear’s head, Tvedt said.
The bear had been shot in the head, Tvedt said.
“Western Carolina University deplores the inappropriate behavior that has led to this troubling incident,” Tvedt said. “We cannot speculate on the motives of the people involved nor who those people might be. Campus police are cooperating fully with authorities to investigate this matter.”
University police called in state Wildlife Resources officials to remove the body and help in the investigation.
Bear season is under way in western North Carolina.
New Rules For October 10, 2008 | Bill Maher
Comedy, Economy, Politics, Tullycast, Video, Wall Street, YoutubeBill Maher | October 10, 2008 | Nixon Warned of U.S. Becoming Pitiful Helpless Giant
Comedy, Economy, Politics, Tullycast, Video, Wall Street, YoutubeThe 56 Trillion Dollar Deficit | Bill Maher Interviews Fmr. Comptroller General David Walker
Comedy, Economy, Politics, Tullycast, Video, Wall Street, YoutubeDAVID WALKER in CNN online:
CNN) — The Emergency Economic Stabilization Act contains plenty to make lawmakers on the left and right shudder. On the right, it’s the apparent abandonment of free-market principles. On the left, it’s the absence of punishment for high-flying Wall Street CEO’s.
Looking down the middle, what I found downright unnerving was how hard Washington struggled to pass a bill that, in reality, represents less than 1 percent of our current federal financial hole.
Don’t get me wrong. Congress and the Bush Administration are to be commended for acting to relieve the credit crunch and trying to minimize any immediate, adverse effect on our economy and by consequence, on American jobs and access to credit.
The ultimate cost of the act should ring up at less than $500 billion, less than the advertised $700 billion because of anticipated proceeds from the government’s sale of the assets it will acquire with the appropriated funds.
The nation’s real tab, on the other hand, amounted to $53 trillion as of the end of the last fiscal year. That was the sum of our public debt; accrued civilian and military retirement benefits; unfunded, promised Social Security and Medicare benefits; and other financial obligations — all according to the government’s most recent financial statement of September 30, 2007.
Don’t Miss * Fed pumps billions more into banks * Dollar plummets against yen * In Depth: CommentariesThe rescue package and other bailout efforts for Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, AIG and the auto industry, escalating operating deficits, compounding interest and other factors are likely to boost the tab to $56 trillion or more by the end of this calendar year.
With numbers and trends like this, you might ask, “Who will bail out America?” The answer is, no one but us!
Since we’re going to have to save ourselves, recent events could hardly be called encouraging. It took an additional $100 billion in incentives — some would call them “sweeteners;” others might call them bribes — to get lawmakers to pass the rescue package. Regardless of what you call these incentives, ultimately the taxpayers will have to pick up the tab, with interest.
The process that was employed to achieve enactment of this bill was hardly a model of efficiency or effectiveness. The original proposal represented an over-reach and under-communication by the administration.
Neither lawmakers nor ordinary citizens had enough information to properly assess the real risks, the need for action and what an appropriate course of action might be. Furthermore, the key players allowed the legislation to be characterized as a $700 billion bailout of Wall Street, which was neither an accurate nor a fair reflection of the legislation.
Passage of the credit-crunch relief provisions in the act was understandable, not just because of what risks and needed actions the Treasury and the Federal Reserve were aware of, but more importantly, because of what policymakers didn’t know and eventually might have to address.
Let’s face it — the regular order in Washington is broken. We must move beyond crisis management approaches and start to address some of the key fiscal and other challenges facing this country if we want our future to be better than our past.
A good place to start would be for the presidential candidates to acknowledge our $53 trillion (and growing) federal financial hole and commit to begin to address it. Their endorsement of the need for a bipartisan fiscal future commission along the lines of the one sponsored by Rep. Jim Cooper, D-Tennessee, and Rep. Frank Wolf, R-Virginia, also would make sense.
Any such commission should, at a minimum, address the need for statutory budget controls, comprehensive Social Security reform, a first round of tax reform and a first round of comprehensive health care reform. It should hold hearings both inside and beyond the Beltway. And, its recommendations should be guaranteed to receive an up-or-down vote by Congress if a super-majority of the commission’s members can agree on a comprehensive proposal.
Editor’s Note: David M. Walker served as comptroller general of the United States and head of the Government Accountability Office (GAO) from 1998 to 2008. He is now president and CEO of the Peter G. Peterson Foundation.
Our fiscal time bomb is ticking, and the time for action is now!
DAVID WALKER







