Joe Biden (A.K.A Chicken Little) Says Don’t Ride the Subway and Don’t Use Airplanes

Hey New Yorkers, take a cab to work today. Or walk.

Your Vice President Joe Biden says you should avoid both planes and subways.

NBC New York: “I would not be at this point … [be] suggesting they ride the subway,”  Biden said when asked whether he would advise family members to use public transportation.

Biden made his comments during a brief interview on NBC’s “Today” show during an interview with Matt Lauer.

The vice president said if one person sneezes on a plane “it goes all the way through the aircraft.”

Biden said the advice to his family differs from that of the federal government’s to the public because, “That’s me.”

But you know, that’s Joe Biden for ya! Always running his mouth, saying what’s on his mind. So charming.

Supreme Court Skeptical of Preserving Voting Rights Act

I better get all my posts in quick – since the bandwidth on the Internet is running out!

So with that – there is some hope on the horizon and some sanity that may kick in regarding the Voting Rights Act:

The fate of a key provision of the Voting Rights Act looked to be in doubt Wednesday as Supreme Court justices questioned whether the Southern states still need special supervision to prevent them from discriminating against black voters.

“Are Southerners more likely to discriminate than Northerners?” asked a skeptical Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr.

Is the “sovereignty of Georgia” entitled to less respect than “the sovereign dignity of Ohio? . . . Does the United States take that position today?” asked Justice Anthony M. Kennedy, pressing a lawyer for the Justice Department who was defending the Voting Rights Act.

The Voting Rights Act is a form of discrimination based upon regionalism at this point.  It makes Southern states feel as though they are children who need to be supervised and are not as decent and dignified as Northern states.  The South continues to retain the label of racist, years after Jim Crow laws were abolished, African-Americans received the right to vote and could physically vote, and schools are all integrated.  I don’t know about you, but I haven’t heard of any lynchings, assaults or cross burnings that were incited by racism since I was born (80′s).  Times have changed and this is an  incessant grudge and resentment held by a specific ideological party, further repressing their own constituents by playing into this propaganda.  The liberals only want this type of legislation because it helps them get votes.

The comments and questions during an hourlong argument suggested that a majority of the justices were prepared to strike down Section 5 of the Voting Rights Act. This provision requires many Southern states, counties and school districts to get approval from the Justice Department before making changes in their election rules. These rules range from the location of polling places to the makeup of districts in state legislatures.

The provision also applies to a few counties in Northern California, New York and elsewhere that have a high percentage of residents who do not speak English.
The question before the Supreme Court was whether this special Southern-only “pre-clearance” provision was still needed. “Why didn’t [Congress] extend Section 5 to the entire country?” asked Justice Samuel A. Alito Jr.

Exactly Justice Alito!  This is reminiscent of the hate speech and hate crime legislation where only specific groups are protected and I guess “the south” would not be considered a group discriminated against.  It would only seem fair that all states or none would have to comply with this Section 5 stipulation.  It’s incredibly discriminatory to segregate one specific group.

Like Roberts and Kennedy, he voiced doubt about whether Congress had sufficient reason in 2006 for singling out the South for special supervision for another 25 years. In the past, Justices Antonin Scalia and Clarence Thomas also have voiced skepticism about the reach of this provision.

Another 25 years?  The South isn’t the Jim Crow South anymore, nor are we living in the 1950′s/60′s!

Neal Katyal, the Obama administration’s deputy solicitor general, called the law and Section 5 “a landmark achievement” that deters schemes to violate the rights of minorities.

At this point there is so much legislation to help minorities that other groups are overlooked.  And what has any of this legislation actually done over the last 45 years?  If anything, inner cities and liberal bastions have gotten worse.  Minorities are helped by welfare, by affirmative action (which by itself is racist legislation – ask Ward Connerly), and there are specific crimes that exist that an African-American cannot be prosecuted for based on race.  The more we pay attention to race the more racism exists – plain and simple.  I’m getting so sick and tired of all this race baiting and all of this group segregation, all in the name of political expediency, to win votes and keep others oppressed, who don’t know any better.

Debo Adegbile, a lawyer for the National Assn. for the Advancement of Colored People’s Legal Defense Fund, agreed. He said Congress and the court should “stay the course” and continue the effort to root out subtle discrimination that disadvantages minorities. If Section 5 were struck down, “the discrimination will return,” he predicted.

Subtle discrimination?  What is subtle discrimination?  You can misconstrue a look or a smirk or anything as subtle discrimination if you want by playing the race card.  You can spin anything you want in order to accuse another of racism.  How about we mention the percentage of blacks who voted for Obama?  Was that not racist?  96% of the entire black community voted for Obama.  Howard Stern asked black men and women from Harlem who they were voting for and in so doing he switched John McCain’s platforms and even the VP candidate of Sarah Palin and paired it with Obama.  They didn’t know the difference… that should tell you something.  What about those of us who have lived in inner cities as a Caucasian?  Have we not experienced subtle discrimination or racism?  As a white female I don’t have any rights when it comes to that… I don’t think getting called a “white cracker b*tch” is PC.

But both advocates were met with steadily skeptical questions from the court’s conservatives.

Roberts noted that Massachusetts had a lower rate of registering Latino voters than Texas. “Why didn’t Congress extend the act to Massachusetts?” he asked.

Great point Roberts!

The Voting Rights Act of 1965, which prohibited any voting discrimination based on race, is often cited as one of most effective and far-reaching laws of the 20th century. Until then, most blacks in the South could not vote — not because of laws against voting — but because voting rolls were controlled by county registrars. And they used many schemes to prevent blacks from registering and casting ballots.

Yes, this happened but that was nearly 45 years ago – much has changed and this doesn’t exist any longer.

If the Supreme Court were to strike down Section 5, the decision would not necessarily affect the remainder of the Voting Rights Act. Discrimination against minority voters would still be illegal, but the onus would be on the Justice Department and private lawyers to bring suits to challenge discriminatory practices.

In Alabama’s Dallas County, where Selma is the county seat, only 156 blacks among 15,000 black adults were registered to vote in the early 1960s .

This figure was cited in a brief to the court by Alabama’s Republican Gov. Bob Riley to show how things have changed. Now, about 73% of blacks and whites are registered to vote in Alabama, he said, and blacks make up one-fourth of the Legislature, matching the percentage of the black population.

Yes, and please look at the number of House representatives from the South that are represented by minorities and most specifically black men and women.

He and other Southern officials said the schemes to prevent blacks from voting have been abolished, and therefore the “pre-clearance” section is outdated.

The challenge to the law arose from an unlikely locale. The Northwest Austin Municipal Utility District in Texas does not register voters, nor has it been accused of discrimination. It is a suburban community that elects members to a water board. But because of Section 5, it had to ask the Justice Department for its approval before it moved the voting location from a private home to a public school.

Gregory Coleman, a former Texas solicitor general, filed a suit on behalf of the district challenging the law as unconstitutional. He argued that the provision of the Voting Rights Act was entirely justified in 1965 but not so today. “Times have changed,” he said, but the Southern states still wear a “badge” accusing them of racism.

In his brief to the court, he cited the historic election of President Obama as evidence that the nation has come a long way since 1965, but he did not repeat that argument Wednesday.

One would think that after the election of Obama that race relations would have been resolved, but instead they get much worse – oh the irony.

Tune Into TLC @9pm for Orange County Choppers to Catch Some of Governor Palin and Alaska!

So cool – I love people that are just so down to earth!

Media Elite’s Secret Dinners at With White House Staff

Last Tuesday evening, Rahm Emanuel quietly slipped into an eighth-floor office at the Watergate.

Watergate…That may be an omen!

As white-jacketed waiters poured red and white wine and served a three-course salmon and risotto dinner, the White House chief of staff spent two hours chatting with some of Washington’s top journalists — excusing himself to take a call from President Obama and another from Hillary Clinton.

Meanwhile, the rest of us are hoping to keep our jobs and have to watch family and friends lose theirs and try to balance a budget and pay their bills.

For more than a year, David Bradley, the Atlantic’s soft-spoken owner, has hosted these off-the-record dinners at a specially built table in his glass-enclosed office overlooking the Potomac. And the guests, from Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner to Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke to Jordan’s King Abdullah II, are as A-list as they come.

That’s what it’s all about now anyway, why report the news?  We all just want to be celebrities and on the A-List (remind anyone of those needing to be popular in high school?)

“It’s just a joy for me,” Bradley says. “These are reflective, considered conversations, which is hard to do when you’re going after headlines for the next day’s publication.” While the guests seem quite open, says the businessman who bought Atlantic a decade ago, he is new enough to journalism “that I can’t tell the difference between genuine candor and deeply rehearsed candor.”

Emanuel says he enjoyed the chance to “put aside the adversarial. . . . I tried to be honest and frank and hope they felt that way. They want context, they want thinking. You’re not selling, you’re presenting.”

When has anyone in Obama’s administration presented…without a teleprompter that is?  Their entire shtick is a marketing campaign so of course they are selling.

Still, the catered gatherings also sound rather cozy, like some secret-handshake gathering of an entrenched elite. Are the top-level officials, strategists and foreign leaders there for serious questioning or risk-free spin sessions? And what exactly is the journalistic benefit if the visitors are protected by a shield of anonymity?

Among those in regular attendance are David Brooks and Maureen Dowdof the New York Times, Gene Robinson and Ruth Marcus of The Washington Post, NBC’s David Gregory, ABC’s George Stephanopoulos, PBS’s Gwen Ifill, the New Yorker’s Jane Mayer, Vanity Fair’s Todd Purdum, former Time managing editor Walter Isaacson and staffers from Bradley’s Atlantic and National Journal, including Ron Brownstein, Andrew Sullivanand Jonathan Rauch.

Glad to see the “Elected Conservatives” of the Democrats, traitor Maureen and faux Brooks, were there to represent what it is we definitely are not.  I’m also happy to see that Andrew Sullivan of the Daily Dish was there, you know, the guy who started the whole Trig Trutherism?  Sick! If you lambaste a real conservative you get invited to these wonderfully expensive dinners, most likely brought to you by the taxpayer dollar.

Politicians have been sharing off-the-record meals and drinks with reporters roughly forever. During the transition, Obama attended a three-hour dinner with conservative “conservative” columnists at George Will’s Chevy Chase home.

George Will – another fake conservative!  It is so incredibly obvious how the establishment played a big part in this past election as well as many others.  The media is as much a part of the establishment as the politicians on Capitol Hill.  It’s sickening how intolerant they are of anyone who does not “fit-in.”  Like, I said in “The Establishment Hates Rocking the Boat,” look for those on the outside, not those who are part of the establishment or could be easily swayed into being part of it – those outsiders are the ones you want in the White House, they will change the way things are done and turn this country back around heading towards a Republic again, not an Oligarchy.

The Bradley dinners are different because of their regular nature — a floating group of 12 to 16 journalists, with specialists added depending on the subject matter — and the rarefied level of access. Others who have dined include General Electric chief executive Jeffrey Immelt, former Bush White House aide Karl Rove, Gen. David Petraeus, White House economic adviser Larry Summers, former Obama campaign manager David Plouffe and British Prime Minister Gordon Brown.

Bradley always begins the questioning and tries to maintain a civil tone, while the journalists tend to pursue their favorite subjects. At the dinner with Emanuel, who waved off the shortcake dessert, participants said that Brownstein asked about health-care reform, Goldberg pushed on Iran and Mayer pressed him about torture techniques in terror interrogations.

I love how the elite, who have no concept of what it means to be an average American, discuss these important topics as if it were a board game or some type of “would you rather” or “truth or dare game.” The elite, as they have always done, just sit around playing with other peoples’ lives – because they seem to always think they know what is best.  If we look back into history, how has that played out?

“The hard truth is that what may be acceptable in elite culture may not be acceptable in mass culture, that tastes which pose only innocent ethical issues as the property of a minority become corrupting when they become more established. Taste is context, and the context has changed.” ~ Susan Sontag

The networks have given President Obama more coverage than George W. Bush and Bill Clinton combined in their first months — and more positive assessments to boot.

I wonder why!?  Could it be all the fancy dinners he invites them to?  Or maybe the following quote can enlighten some:

“Only the mob and the elite can be attracted by the momentum of totalitarianism itself. The masses have to be won by propaganda.” ~ Hannah Arendt

In a study to be released today, the Center for Media and Public Affairs and Chapman University found the nightly newscasts devoting nearly 28 hours to Obama’s presidency in the first 50 days. (Bush, by contrast, got nearly eight hours.) Fifty-eight percent of the evaluations of Obama were positive on the ABC, CBS and NBC broadcasts, compared with 33 percent positive in the comparable period of Bush’s tenure and 44 percent positive for Clinton. (Evaluations by officials from the administration or either political party were not counted.)

On Fox News, by contrast, only 13 percent of the assessments of Obama were positive on the first half of Bret Baier’s “Special Report,” which most resembles a newscast. The president got far better treatment in the New York Times, where 73 percent of the assessments in front-page pieces were positive.

A striking contrast: Obama’s personal qualities drew more favorable coverage than his policies, with 32 percent of the sound bites positive on CBS, 31 percent positive on NBC and 8 percent positive on Fox.

This continues to disturb and disgust me.  His personal popularity is high but people don’t like his policies?  I don’t get it.  I don’t understand how someone so out of touch with regular folks, implementing policies that will devastate this nation and kill the economy, is still popular!?

“It’s time we asked ourselves if we still know the freedoms intended for us by the Founding Fathers. James Madison said, “We base all our experiments on the capacity of mankind for self-government.” This idea that government was beholden to the people, that it had no other source of power, is still the newest, most unique idea in all the long history of man’s relation to man. This is the issue of this election: Whether we believe in our capacity for self-government or whether we abandon the American Revolution and confess that a little intellectual elite in a far-distant capital can plan our lives for us better than we can plan them ourselves. (October 27, 1964)” Ronald Reagan

Fact Check: Obama’s Latest Presser (AP Article!?)

I can’t believe this article came from AP.  The tone of this article was especially striking!

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Save this entire article – you may never see the likes of it again from the AP:

“That wasn’t me,” President Barack Obama said on his 100th day in office, disclaiming responsibility for the huge budget deficit waiting for him on Day One.

It actually was partly him — and the other Democrats controlling Congress the previous two years — who shaped the latest in a string of precipitously out-of-balance budgets.

And as a presidential candidate and president-elect, he backed the twilight Bush-era stimulus plan that made the deficit deeper, all before he took over and promoted spending plans that have made it much deeper still.

Obama met citizens at an Arnold, Mo., high school Wednesday in advance of his prime-time news conference. Both forums were a platform to review his progress at the 100-day mark and look ahead.

At various times, he brought an air of certainty to ambitions that are far from cast in stone.

His assertion that his proposed budget “will cut the deficit in half by the end of my first term” is an eyeball-roller among many economists, given the uncharted terrain of trillion-dollar deficits and economic calamity that the government is negotiating.

He promised vast savings from increased spending on preventive health care in the face of doubts that such an effort, however laudable it might be for public welfare, can pay for itself, let alone yield huge savings.

A look at some of his claims Wednesday:

OBAMA: “We began by passing a Recovery Act that has already saved or created over 150,000 jobs.” — from news conference.

THE FACTS: This assertion is flawed on several levels. For starters, the U.S. has lost more than 1.2 million jobs since Obama took office, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. Even if Obama’s stimulus bill saved or created as many jobs as he says, that number is dwarfed by the number of recent job losses.

But Obama’s number is murky, at best. The White House has not yet announced how it intends to count jobs created by the stimulus bill. Obama’s number is based on a job-counting formula that his economists have developed but have not made public. Until that formula is announced — probably in the coming week or so — there’s no way to assess its accuracy.

Whatever the formula, economists who study job creation say it will require some creative math. That’s because Obama has lumped “jobs saved” in with “jobs created.” Even economists for organizations that stand to benefit from the stimulus concede it probably is impossible to estimate saved jobs because that would require calculating a hypothetical: how many people would have lost their jobs without the stimulus.

___

OBAMA: “We must lay a new foundation for growth, a foundation that will strengthen our economy and help us compete in the 21st century. And that’s exactly what this budget begins to do. It contains new investments in education that will equip our workers with the right skills and training; new investments in renewable energy that will create millions of jobs and new industries; new investments in health care that will cut costs for families and businesses; and new savings that will bring down our deficit.” — news conference.

THE FACTS: While the budget does set a roadmap for achieving the president’s goals, it says nothing about how to pay for his health plan, expected to cost more than $1 trillion over the next 10 years. And while the deficit, under the plan, would drop to $523 billion in 2014, it achieves it with unrealistic assumptions, such as projections that spending in Iraq and Afghanistan will amount to only $50 billion a year.

___

OBAMA: “Number one, we inherited a $1.3 trillion deficit. … That wasn’t me. Number two, there is almost uniform consensus among economists that in the middle of the biggest crisis, financial crisis, since the Great Depression, we had to take extraordinary steps. So you’ve got a lot of Republican economists who agree that we had to do a stimulus package and we had to do something about the banks. Those are one-time charges, and they’re big, and they’ll make our deficits go up over the next two years.” — in Missouri.

THE FACTS:

Congress, under Democratic control in 2007 and 2008, controlled the purse strings that led to the deficit Obama inherited. A Republican president, George W. Bush, had a role, too: He signed the legislation.

Obama supported the emergency bailout package in Bush’s final months — a package Democratic leaders wanted to make bigger.

To be sure, Obama opposed the Iraq war, a drain on federal coffers for six years before he became president. But with one major exception, he voted in support of Iraq war spending.

The economy has worsened under Obama, though from forces surely in play before he became president, and he can credibly claim to have inherited a grim situation.

Still, his response to the crisis goes well beyond “one-time charges.”

He’s persuaded Congress to expand children’s health insurance, education spending, health information technology and more. He’s moving ahead on a variety of big-ticket items on health care, the environment, energy and transportation that, if achieved, will be more enduring than bank bailouts and aid for homeowners.

The nonpartisan Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget estimated his policy proposals would add a net $428 billion to the deficit over four years, even accounting for his spending reduction goals. Now, the deficit is nearly quadrupling to $1.75 trillion.

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