Mitt Romney Wins Iowa Caucuses

On January 4, 2012, in barack obama, Uncategorized, by stuartbramhall

At Los Angeles Times , ” Mitt Romney nabs 8-vote win in Iowa .” And from the New York Times , ” Romney Wins Iowa Caucus by 8 Votes “: DES MOINES — Mitt Romney’s quest to swiftly lock down the Republican presidential nomination with a commanding finish in the Iowa caucuses was undercut on Tuesday night by the surging candidacy of Rick Santorum, who fought him to a draw on a shoestring budget by winning over conservatives who remain skeptical of Mr. Romney. In the first Republican contest of the season, the two candidates were separated much of the night by only a sliver of votes, with Mr. Romney being declared the winner by eight ballots early Wednesday morning. But the outcome offered Mr. Santorum a chance to emerge as the alternative to Mr. Romney as the race moves to New Hampshire and South Carolina without Gov. Rick Perry, who announced that he was returning to Texas to assess his candidacy. “Being here in Iowa has made me a better candidate,” Mr. Santorum said, arriving at a caucus in Clive, where he urged Republicans to vote their conscience. “Don’t sell America short. Don’t put someone out there from Iowa who isn’t capable of doing what America needs done.” The Iowa caucuses did not deliver a clean answer to what type of candidate Republicans intend to rally behind to try to defeat President Obama and win back the White House. With 99 percent of the vote counted, Mr. Santorum and Mr. Romney, whose views represent the polar sides of the party, each had 24.6 percent. “Onto New Hampshire, let’s get that job done!” Mr. Romney told supporters at a late-night rally, when he was five votes shy of Mr. Santorum. “Come visit us there, we’ve got some work ahead.” The last time the Iowa caucuses produced such a close outcome was in 1980, when George Bush beat Ronald Reagan by two percentage points. Right. See previously, ” GOP 2012 May Be Closest in History of Iowa Caucuses .”

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Mitt Romney Wins Iowa Caucuses

Whether through sound bites or live audio, “The Donald” has been making the rounds on all the news talk shows this morning in response to GOP presidential candidates Ron Paul and Jon Huntsman electing to skip the debate that Donald Trump will moderate on December 27. It’s been a war of words to say the least. (Related: Trump calls Ron Paul a “joke”) During his second NBC interview of the morning, Trump got heated with “Daily Rundown” host Chuck Todd, at one point saying, “I didn’t call you, you called me.” That was in response to Todd saying that Trump wanted to come on to the show to respond to a poll, which Trump said was “false.” But Trump wasn’t done there. He told Todd how he could improve his ratings, made a curious comment about Jon Huntsman’s religion, and took some shots at former President George W. Bush after his top advisor Karl Rove also laughed at the idea of Trump holding any sway in the GOP. “Karl Rove gave us George Bush and George Bush crashed and burned and because of that we have Obama,” Trump told Todd. “The Republicans need to get rid of Karl Rove and they need fresh blood because Karl Rove is going to lead them into doom.” You can watch it all below: By the way, Rove told “Fox and Friends” Monday that the RNC Chair should encourage all Republicans to skip the debate, which is moderated by a man who Rove believes still may run for President as an independent: And to think, Paul’s campaign was worried an event hosted by Trump may turn into a “circus-like atmosphere.” As reported by The Blaze over the weekend, Paul and Huntsman both announced that they planned to skip Newsmax’s December 27th debate hosted by, as Paul puts it, “reality television personality” Donald Trump. On CNN’s “State of the Union” Sunday morning, Paul followed up on his campaign’s statement that the event was “beneath the office of the Presidency:” “Yeah, I don’t quite understand it. I don’t understand the marching to his office. I mean I didn’t know that he had an ability to lay on hands, you know, and anoint people.” Former Utah Governor Jon Huntsman announced Saturday that he too would skip Trump’s event, telling reporters in South Carolina  “I’m not going to journey to New York City to meet with Don Trump ,” and telling Fox News Monday morning “I’m not going to kiss his ring and I’m not going to kiss any other part of his anatomy.”  Within a few hours of Paul’s appearance, Trump quickly chirped back through the New York Daily News: “‘Few people take Ron Paul seriously and many of his views and presentation make him a clown-like candidate,’ Trump said in a statement to the Daily News. ‘I am glad he and Jon Huntsman, who has inconsequential poll numbers or a chance of winning, will not be attending the debate and wasting the time of the viewers,’ Trump said.” Less than 24 hours later, Trump appeared on NBC’s Today Show  immediately taking questions about Paul’s comment, as well as comments from influential conservative Washington Post columnist George Will :

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The EU’s Big Kazoo

On December 5, 2011, in barack obama, Uncategorized, by AlexisChristensen28

Europe has no time for clichés, so Europe’s currency crisis has skipped two cycles. Instead of allowing one cycle of history to complete itself before it is repeated — first as tragedy and then as farce — the Eurozone nations have decided to pass by the end of the current course, skip tragedy, and go directly to farce. France’s President is pressing hard on the trigger to fire the EU’s “big bazooka” but he can’t fire because Germany’s PM has her finger stuck behind the trigger and isn’t budging. Meanwhile, Mr. Radoslaw Sikorski, Poland’s Foreign Minister, last week demanded German intervention to save Poland (and the euro). Sikorski said, “I demand of Germany that, for its sake and ours, it help the Eurozone survive and prosper. Nobody else can do it. I will probably be the first Polish foreign minister in history to save this, but here it is: I fear German power less than I am beginning to fear its inactivity.” A week before Sikorski’s plea, EU Commission chief Jose Manuel Barroso said that the only way to save the world was to give more power to — wait for it — the EU Commission. If there isn’t an increase in the EU’s power to regulate national economies, Barroso warned, Europe would “hand sovereignty to markets.” Jacques Delors, one of the euro’s creators, echoed Barroso’s remarks saying that the euro wasn’t created on a sound basis. The sound basis, according to Delors, would be centralized economic power in the EU. There’s not a lot to be learned from all this, given the fact that there’s nothing but Keynesian economics going on here. But Barroso and Delors do prove redundantly that for socialists, success and failure are one and the same. They have to be because socialism never works. So when it fails, the reason can’t be that socialism is a bad idea: it has to be that socialism wasn’t tried hard enough. The second lesson — dispensed hilariously by Barroso — is that markets are always sovereign. Dear Jose: read a little history in your spare time (which should be abundant when the euro collapses). Start with the fall of the Roman Empire (resulting in part from the devaluation of its currency), continue through the 1929 stock market crash and proceed to the 2008 banking crisis in which George Bush said we had to break the rules of the free market to save the free market. In those events we — at least those of us who aren’t Keynesians — learned that financial markets will always respond to government policy. But the response will be on the markets’ terms, not on whatever terms the government elites tried to impose. For Sarko, the problem is that the EU’s “big bazooka” can’t go “boom.” In reality, the “big bazooka” — the idea that the European Central Bank will just print enough money to bail everyone out — looks and sounds more like a marching band-sized kazoo. The European Central Bank’s creators didn’t give it the power to be the European lender of last resort. Merkel has said “nein” to that, because she knows the inflationary impact would disproportionately rob Germany and the euro would quickly become valueless. On her side, Merkel wants to rewrite the EU treaty to provide unification of power over national budgets and spending, and a means of enforcement through the EU courts. It’s a technocratic approach, a ten thousand-page repair manual written in German which, even if Greece and Italy promised solemnly to follow it, they couldn’t because their citizens aren’t, well, Germans. What will happen this week is what has happened at every “last chance” summit before it: a lot of window dressing will be peddled without any solutions to the fundamental problems that beset the euro. There will be promises of future action and an attempt to again seduce the markets to not impose the proper penalties that capitalism, in a free market, demands. This time, however, the markets won’t buy it. And they won’t buy the Eurozone nations’ national bonds because the risks are just too high. Even German bonds proved unsellable in their latest round of offerings. The crisis will build, and will probably blow up in another three months or so when Italy, Spain, and Greece have to sell another major round of bonds. If that were all we had to worry about, life would be easy. But we do have our Federal Reserve, and at its head Mr. Ben Bernanke. The Fed, under Bernanke and his predecessor — Henry Paulson — have had a penchant for lending out our money in trillions of dollars and keeping the loans secret. A week ago, we learned that the Fed — in concert with the Eurozone nations’ banks and those of Japan, Canada, the UK, and Switzerland — reduced the cost of borrowing dollars to Eurozone banks. This was, we were assured, just another “credit easing” maneuver. But “credit easing” means providing something to someone at below-market rates. It’s a subsidy and someone has to bear the cost. In this case, the biggest “someone” was, apparently, the United States. Right now, we don’t know what the cost was, or how much it may grow if it’s not repaid. And, even more dangerously, we don’t know what else the Fed is doing. A November 27 Bloomberg News report told us that the Fed — acting without congressional knowledge — gave endangered banks loans and guarantees that may have amounted to over $7.7 trillion in the last four years. In comparison, the now-infamous TARP program dispensed “only” about $700 billion. Think about those numbers. In 2008, the United States gross domestic product — all the wealth created and earned in the year by the entire nation — was about $14.6 trillion. So without our knowledge, acting on its own, the Fed gave guarantees and loans in an amount of 53 percent of our GDP. So now the Fed is in the process of “easing” European access to the dollar. Which means it is subsidizing the EUnuchs to keep doing what they do. Not even their own markets — or their putative partner, Germany — is willing to do that. What’s to prevent the Fed from throwing a TARP over Europe? At this point, not much. Let’s not dash out into the fever swamps of Ron Paulism. We need the Fed to be independent, and not subjected to the whims of the White House or Congress. But it needs to be trustworthy. When it gives loans and guarantees equaling 53 percent of our GDP to certain banks without disclosing them, it cannot be trusted. If it is designing a bailout for the Eurozone on our credit, it cannot be trusted. Let’s not seize the Fed or turn it into another vassal of the president or of Congress. But it needs to be entirely open and above board about what it is doing. Let’s shine a bright spotlight into the Fed’s darkest corners. We need to know what’s going on. It’s our money, damnit.

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The EU’s Big Kazoo

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(This beauty of a parody poem appeared in my email in-box today. I had to share it… THANK YOU Elmo… wherever you are.) The Night Before Occupy Christmas By Elmo Machiore (With apologies to the OTHER Moore—Clement Clarke) ________________________________________ Twas the night before Christmas and all through Zucotti Not an Occupier was stirring—even in the Porta Potty. The stockings were hung on the fences with care, In hopes that St. Michael Moore soon would be there. We Occupy kids snuggled up—sans our tents— But visions of iPads still danced in our sense. My girlfriend and I ate our free meal, then peed, And then settled our brains with a few hits of weed. When out on the corner there arose such a clamor, I sprang from the ground to see why all the drammer. An old rag on my head and no shoes on my feet, I tore a mad dash out to Liberty Street. The snowflakes and moonlight were totally awesome. (I texted my friends: “Dude, I finally saw some!”) When what to my bloodshot-red eyes should appear But a big honkin’ limo, with eight Dems in the rear. With its ballcap-clad driver as big as a store, I knew in a moment it must be St. Moore. More rapid than Twitter, out the Democrats came, And he whistled and shouted and called them by name: “Now Nancy! Now Harry! Now, Schumer and Sherman! On, Sanders! On, Boxer! On, Baucus and Berman! To the midst of the park For our great photo call! Now tweet away! Tweet away! Tweet away all!” With the speed of a monkey digesting a kiwi Or of Anthony Weiner when sexting his wee-wee, So into the park all the Democrats flew With their big bags of toys, and St. Michael Moore, too. And then in a twinkling I felt the earth quake As if all of Zucotti had started to shake. My unwashed head turned toward the source of the din: Down the sidewalk St. Michael had just waddled in. He was dressed like a bum, from his head to his feet, The cunning disguise of the Limo Elite. A bundle of iPads he’d flung on his back. To us poor helpless souls he was carrying crack! His eyes tried to twinkle with socialist zeal, but his cheeks said it all—“I do not miss a meal.” His mouth—when not running—wore the arrogant smirk Of a man working hard to appear out of work. The ball-cap, the tee-shirt said “I’m one of you!” (Just ignore all those millions my movies accrue.) He shook when he laughed, like a bowl full of jelly— But his 401-K was as big as his belly. I started to doubt our dear Savior’s intent. And I said to myself “HE’s the ninety-nine percent?!” But St. Michael, inferring my disquietude, Gave a wink of his eye that said “No, really, dude!” Amid mumbling “George Bush,” he went straight to his bag And filled all our stockings with great techno-swag. Then slurping a Starbucks and looking quite spent, to the warmth of his limo, St. Michael Moore went. He started the engine in his big, bad-ass ride, while Schumer and company all piled inside. But I heard him exclaim, ‘ere he started to flee, “Merry Socialism to all—except of course, me!” Holiday Graphics H/T To Barry Meyer

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**Written by Doug Powers In 2009, a weepy Nancy Pelosi denounced rhetoric she claimed was coming from the Tea Parties, claiming the protest could lead to a climate of violence. Since then, however, Pelosi has given Occupy Wall Street her blessing . Kelly Maher’s piece at the Daily Caller might have some wondering where Pelosi’s deep concern is now: The young University of Colorado student may appear too young to have much life experience, but yessir — he’s mad as hell and he isn’t going to take it anymore. He sure looks comfortable in that designer jacket, though. (Ladies: Is that Burberry or a knock-off?) “There’s a lot of stuff that needs to change,” our boy added, “and if it doesn’t, violent revolution will come.” How to change things for the better? Apparently it just takes a box of bullets and some rope. “If you get the thirteen families that own the world, including George Bush and his administration, get them in front of the White House and hang them and shoot them, because they deserve that.” Roll tape (language warning): Pundit Press has more about rhetoric that would be getting front page coverage from the MSM and crocodile tears from Nancy Pelosi if it were coming from the Tea Party. **Written by Doug Powers Twitter @ThePowersThatBe

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Denver Occupier Promotes New Tone: ‘Hang and Shoot’ Bush Administration

Everyone loves a good parody. Except sometimes the person being parodied and especially when it’s too much like the real thing. RedState.com agreed to remove a blog post Tuesday in which the fake account “Totally Meghan McCain” mimicked the writing style and “voice” of Meghan McCain after receiving a threatening letter from McCain’s lawyer. The letter said RedState acted “in reckless disregard” and portrayed McCain in a “false light,” according to Gawker. The site’s editor Erick Erickson clarified the reason he agreed to remove the post in a separate blog entry. He even republished part of the offending material: Firstly in the first place, some people had a question about my very obvious statement, “I don’t necessarily agree that Rick Perry is George Bush on crack, but he could definitely be described as George Bush 2.0.” The question, I have most often, been asked, is why I did not include literally anything in the piece to back up this claim or point out, the places where Perry and Bush are similar, the reason for that being simple. Hello? They are both from Texas. I guess I should apologize for, assuming that most people knew that already, but I guess they don’t. Well I am here to tell you in case you didn’t know: both George W. Bush and Rick Perry are from Texas. Now, in the entire time I have been paying attention to politics, there has only been one President of the United States elected from Texas. And if electing someone, from Texas was a winning strategy, then obviously, there would have been more. Some ignorant jerk, clearly who doesn’t know about the young people, pointed out that George W. Bush 1.0 won, two elections, which is two more than my dad did. Let me just respond to that jerk by saying that George W. Bush only won those elections because he didn’t have to go against my dad either time. FACE! At the request of McCain’s lawyer, Erickson wrote : [The] posts were not written, submitted, or authorized by Meghan McCain or anyone associated with her. For those of you who were confused, we apologize profusely that you could read those posts and think any reasonable person could write them. We’re actually stunned that any reasonable person could read those posts and think a living human being wrote them. For anyone unfamiliar with McCain’s writing style (and for scientific purposes), here’s a sample from her interview with Donald Trump : Is The Donald serious? As his poll numbers continue to soar, it’s starting to look that way. On TV, Trump headlines The Apprentice , but on the telephone with me he sounded like he was considering a presidential run. He even invited me to his press conference later this spring, where he could announce his decision. One of the biggest obstacles for the Republican Party is they’ve yet to find a candidate with the same mass appeal and charisma as Barack Obama. If Trump runs, he’ll dominate the airwaves. He could actually pull it off in the same way Arnold Schwarzenegger surprised the pundits and became the governor of California. Similar? Maybe a little.

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RedState’s Meghan McCain parody too close to home

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America’s Broken Unity After 9/11

On September 10, 2011, in Iraq, Uncategorized, by old dog

ICYMI, be sure to read Daniel Henninger’s, ” Whatever Happened to 9/11? “, from a couple of days ago. Henninger recalls where he was on the morning of the attacks, and what it was like for him. Then he begins discussing the American response to the terror, for example, with the USA Patriot Act. There’s more like that, and then he writes: Virtually every aspect of the Bush antiterror policies became a target for litigation from the ACLU, opposition in Congress and press exposures: the wiretaps, Guantanamo, the Swift program to track terrorist finances, military courts, the Bush Doctrine of pre-preemptive strikes, terrorist interrogations. Opposition to the Iraq war rose, too, but the effort to thwart the provisions of the Patriot Act was a separate front. Policy disagreements are inevitable. But how does one account for the intense personal animosity directed toward George Bush and those who worked for him in the government? They were hated, reviled, mocked. Recall, for instance, the effort to disbar former Justice Department officials John Yoo and Jay Bybee for writing the legal opinions on aggressive interrogations. Opposition wasn’t enough. The destruction of reputation became a policy goal. This Sunday’s 10th anniversary commemorations will evoke some semblance of the unity then in the face of an enemy attack on U.S. soil. But make no mistake: It’s gone. What happened? Well, continue reading. But as noted above, political opposition wasn’t enough for the left. The utter destruction of opponents is required, for according to progressive/socialist ideology, conservatives and Republicans are greater enemies to America than the terrorists. And the left’s bloodlust demands for revenge and recrimination continue right into the 10th anniversary. I watched Rachel Maddow on MSNBC while working on this post. Her broadcast, “Day of Destruction, Decade of War,” was one long repudiation of America’s response to the terrorist attacks, from the decade-long war footing and military mobilization, to the interrogation techniques that helped generate actionable intelligence to track down and kill Osama Bin Laden. Plus, I’m reading David Cole, at New York Review , ” After September 11: What We Still Don’t Know .” Cole is a far-left activist professor of law at Georgetown University. He’s repeatedly argued that the bigger threat to American security is the U.S. government and not the terrorists determined to decapitate it. At Cole’s New York Review piece, he revives calls for war crimes prosecutions against Bush administration officials, taking President Obama to task for purportedly not standing up for constitutional values: As President Obama entered office, he sought to make a clean break with his predecessor. But at the same time, he has insisted that we look forward, not back. His administration has refused to conduct the criminal investigation that the Convention Against Torture requires wherever there are credible allegations that a person within our jurisdiction has committed torture. His Justice Department vetoed the recommendation of its own Office of Professional Responsibility that lawyers John Yoo and Jay Bybee be referred to their bar associations for disciplinary action in view of their having failed to provide candid legal advice in drafting the “torture memos.” The administration has sought to derail efforts in Spain to investigate US responsibility for torture of Spanish citizens held at Guantánamo. And President Obama continues to oppose even a high-level commission to investigate and report on the nation’s departure from the rule of law and descent into torture, abduction, and disappearances. Obama appears to believe that such an investigation would be divisive, and might undermine his efforts to portray himself as above partisan wrangling. But division is a fact of life in Washington these days. And being above the fray is not an unmitigated good; some things are worth fighting for. A legal and moral accounting of the wrongs we have done should be high on the list. Cole goes on like that, and it’s interesting that he picks out John Yoo for special condemnation, twice in fact, basically renewing the call that Yoo should have been disbarred for his work in the Bush administration, and by extension, tried as a war criminal. Behold the mind of the progressive left on the eve of the 10th anniversary of the attacks. For radical progressives, it’s America that’s the problem, not the fanatical killers who continue to wage war against us.

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America’s Broken Unity After 9/11

Within the first few minutes of the GOP presidential debate, Mitt Romney and Rick Perry were at each other’s throats over the issue of job creation. NBC moderator Brian Williams opened the debate by questioning the two on their respective records of job creation. Soon after, the sparks started to fly. Romney kicked off the festivities by stating that he wouldn’t be running for president “if I had spent my whole life in government,” insinuating Perry was a career politician. Perry praised Romney for doing “a great job of creating jobs in the private sector,” before turning the tables, stating, “when he [Romney] moved that experience to government, he had one of the lowest job creation rates.” He added that “we created more jobs in the last three months in Texas,” than Romney did during his entire term as governor. Romney didn’t concede, however, stating that Perry benefited from his home-state’s lack of income tax and its all-Republican legislature.  To take credit for that, Romney said, would be “like Al Gore saying he invited the Internet.” Perry gave his own zinger when he retorted, “Michael Dukakis created three times faster than you did.” “George Bush and his predecessor created jobs at a faster rate than you did,” Romney blasted back. Watch the two trade blows:

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Minutes Into Debate, Perry and Romney Go for the Jugular on Job Creation

ContributorNetwork – COMMENTARY | Do you know how to tell people recognizes they are in trouble for something they claim isn’t their fault? They can’t stop talking about how it’s not their fault. Between [still] blaming George Bush, business owners who are too afraid to hire, Congress – particularly Republicans – the Arab Spring uprisings, a Tsunami in Japan and the European debt crisis and even ATM’s, the president has pretty much absolved himself of every catastrophe that his economic policies have set into motion.

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Obama’s New Jobs Initiatives Bus Tour: Second Verse, Same as the First
(ContributorNetwork)

Just kidding. He decided to blame George Bush, 2 1/2 years after Mr. Obama took office President Barack Obama said on Monday he inherited many of the country’s problems with high debt and deficits when he entered the White House, sounding a theme likely to dominate his 2012 re-election campaign. Speaking at a Democratic fundraiser, where families

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At Fundraiser, Obama Tells Big Money Donors To Send Money To IRS

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