TULLYCASTS
Hillary
Bill Maher's Final March Show a Doozie
StoriesNationals won’t let Lo Duca catch Bush’s first pitch; President Loudly Booed
StoriesThe President was LOUDLY booed….
Think Progress
On Sunday, President Bush will be throwing out the ceremonial first pitch for the Washington Nationals. The team’s starting catcher Paul Lo Duca — who was mentioned 37 times in the Mitchell Report — was originally expected to catch Bush’s pitch, despite the President’s repeated denunciations of performance-enhancing drugs. But the Washington Post now reports that Lo Duca is being replaced by Manager Manny Acta:
The White House said it played no role in determining who would catch the pitch.
“Whatever the decision the Nationals make is up to them,” White House spokesman Tony Fratto said by telephone Thursday. “In no way did we, or would we, raise any issues.”
Lo Duca said after Thursday’s final Grapefruit League game that he had no animosity about the situation. […]
Lo Duca declined to speculate as to whether his role in the Mitchell report had anything to do with the decision.
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. ![]()
Bill Maher | March 21 2008 | Complete w/ New Rules and Overtime
Bagger, Bill Richardson, Bush, CNN, Hillary, Michael Ware, Obama, P.J. O'Rourke, Politics, Race, Racism, Stop Loss, Tullycast, WrightGreg Palast | The Voter Caging Story | NOW
Al Gore, Barack Obama, Broadcatching, Election 2000, Election 2004, Election 2008, Election Fraud, Hillary Clinton, Voter-CagingPart Two
John Edwards Drops Out Of Race For President
Hillary Clinton, John Edwards, Obama, PoliticsCheck out the great second paragraph of this article: The “angry populism”
Edwards bows out of the race, altering Democratic campaign
Former senator John Edwards ended his quest for the presidency yesterday where it began, in a hurricane-ravaged neighborhood in New Orleans, declaring that he had secured commitments from Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton that they would continue his fight against poverty.
Although his angry populism enthralled crowds, and he had at times seemed on the verge of catching fire, Edwards failed to win any of the early state contests and had been written off by most political observers weeks ago. He came in second in Iowa, narrowly beating Clinton, but his distant third-place finish Saturday in South Carolina, where he was born and where he won the 2004 primary, was crushing.
Still, Edwards’s announcement came as a surprise because he had declared this week that he would stay in the race through the Democratic convention. Not only did he seem to have the stomach for a long fight, but he had the potential to play kingmaker if Clinton and Obama remain neck-and-neck in the race for delegates.
“It’s time for me to step aside so that history can – so that history can blaze its path,” he said in front of a Habitat for Humanity worksite in the Ninth Ward, with his wife and children by his side. He added later, however, that the passion of his supporters had almost made him change his mind.
Edwards did not endorse either of his rivals yesterday. In the absence of a signal from him, his supporters are expected to divide up between Obama, whose critiques of politics-as-usual are similar to Edwards’s, and Clinton, who tends to poll better among the blue-collar and white voters who made up much of Edwards’s base.
In his speech, Edwards struck an optimistic note, saying, “America’s hour of transformation is upon us.” And yet, he made it clear that his approval for the two remaining candidates was conditional.
“With our convictions and a little backbone, we will take back the White House in November and we’ll create hope and opportunity for this country,” he said.
The former North Carolina senator, his party’s nominee for vice president in 2004, had been laying the groundwork for this run virtually since the last election. He moved leftward and focused his rhetoric on the harm he said corporate America and special interests in Washington do to average people.
Edwards constantly highlighted his decision not to take money from lobbyists, tried to raise the profile of poverty in America, railed against the impact of free trade on US workers, vowed to complete a full withdrawal from Iraq, and called for universal healthcare.
Joe Trippi, Edwards’s senior adviser, said yesterday that the candidate influenced his rivals to take more progressive stances.
“He’s led on everything, from global warming – he was the first one with an economic stimulus package, he was the first to offer universal healthcare,” Trippi said. “I think he pushed both of them to move their agendas.”
But Edwards was beset by woes along the way. The first was the news last March that his wife Elizabeth’s cancer had returned and was incurable. The couple, however, vowed to fight on, and Elizabeth Edwards remained a frequent presence on the campaign trail until a few weeks ago.
With his populist rhetoric, John Edwards was called hypocritical for having worked for a hedge fund and for paying $400 for a haircut. Critics said there was little in his Senate record to back up his platform. And he struggled to raise money against his rivals, deciding in September to accept public campaign financing.
His advisers have blamed the media for ignoring him in favor of two celebrity, potentially history-making candidates – Clinton trying to become the first female commander in chief and Obama seeking to become the first black president.
“What is a white male to do running against these historic candidacies?” one news anchor asked Edwards at the debate in Las Vegas two weeks ago. Edwards said he was proud of his party’s candidates, but also pointed out that he is the son of a mill worker and the first in his family to go to college.
Edwards noted yesterday that he had spoken to both Obama and Clinton to win their promise to fight poverty, but it wasn’t clear whether he was considering lending his support to either one of them. He has been more consistently critical of Clinton than of Obama, and two months ago, he refused to say if he would support her if she became the party’s nominee.
Officials in both campaigns said they will be reaching out to the politicians, party leaders, and fund-raisers who have backed Edwards to try to win them over. Both campaigns sought to claim his mantle.
Clinton “has a lifelong history of having worked on issues of poverty,” said her chief strategist, Mark Penn.
Steve Hildebrand, Obama’s deputy campaign manager, touted the “similarity of their messages and their desire to change Washington.”
Clinton and Obama themselves effusively praised John and Elizabeth Edwards yesterday for their advocacy for the poor.
“While his campaign may have ended, this cause lives on for all of us who still believe that we can achieve that dream of one America,” Obama told supporters at a rally in Denver.
“He has made poverty a centerpiece of his candidacy and it needs to be on top of the list of American priorities,” Clinton told reporters in Arkansas.
Bombardieri can be reached at bombardieri@globe.com. ![]()
Thoughts On John McCain
Stories….his surge talk is just pure nonsense though; NONE of the bench marks have even been given a sniff.
2006 was the bloodiest year of them all and these numbers appear to me to be about comparisons, only in Baghdad and environs, of the casualty rates to 2007.
Again,-no political process at all and Shiite death squads cleaning up with our resources.
McCain: “Folks, this surge is working-don’t let those pesky facts get in the way of this shiny new groupthink meme”
That said, he is indeed the least unpalatable….by far
BILL MAHER | January 18, 2007 | Mashup Pt. 1
StoriesBILL MAHER | January 18, 2007 | Mashup Pt. 1
















