March 9, 2008

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(Via Informed Comment.)

Congressman Steven King of Iowa, who has decided to further disgrace Congress by seeking a fifth term there, delivered himself of the sort of bigotted and ignorant comments about Barack Obama that we have come to expect from the rightwing Republicans who have made such a mess of our economy and of the world.

King is the man who dismissed torture at Abu Ghraib as mere “hazing,” and maintained that his wife was in more danger in Washington, D.C. (with all those black people, he apparently meant) than civilians were in Iraq. He also said that the 72 virgins in paradise promised to Muslim martyrs probably all looked like Helen Thomas (the distinguished octogenarian Arab-American White House reporter).

In short, King is not just a garden variety conservative. He is something close to being a white supremacist.

So King begins by saying the opposite of what he means:

‘ “I don’t want to disparage anyone because of their race, their ethnicity, their name - whatever their religion their father might have been,” he said. ‘

But of course, he does want to disparage Barack Obama on racist grounds. And he goes on to do so.

“I’ll just say this: When you think about the option of a Barack Obama potentially getting elected President of the United States — I mean, what does this look like to the rest of the world? What does it look like to the world of Islam?” ‘

I presume it would look like America is less racist than the Muslim world had thought, and therefore much less like the bigot Steve King. The left-leaning Beiruti newspaper al-Safir predicted recently that Obama will never be president, because he is being effectively smeared as “a Muslim,” and soft on terrorism and insufficiently supportive of the Israeli far right.

Back to Peasant, I mean, King:

‘ He continued: “I will tell you that, if he is elected president, then the radical Islamists, the al-Qaida, the radical Islamists and their supporters, will be dancing in the streets in greater numbers than they did on September 11 because they will declare victory in this War on Terror.” ‘

I see. And why would al-Qaeda dance in the streets that a Christian of white Kansas and Kenyan heritage, who promised to bomb them in Pakistan, had become president?

Full post here.

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(Via The Huffington Post | Full News Feed.)

In the first insider account of Pentagon decision-making on Iraq, one of the key architects of the war blasts former secretary of state Colin Powell, the CIA, retired Gen. Tommy R. Franks and former Iraq occupation chief L. Paul Bremer for mishandling the run-up to the invasion and the subsequent occupation of the country.

Douglas J. Feith, in a massive score-settling work, portrays an intelligence community and a State Department that repeatedly undermined plans he developed as undersecretary of defense for policy and conspired to undercut President Bush’s policies.

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(Via AMERICAblog: A great nation deserves the truth.)

Major hat tip to State of the Day blog for catching this. McCain said it, yesterday on CNN, then he tried to take it back. But he said it. McCain did this once before, remember? When he took a “safe” stroll in a Baghdad market… wearing body armor, flanked by 100 American soldiers, 3 Blackhawk helicopters, and 2 Apache gunships. And then said even in America leaders have to have security when walking around in markets. Watch the video of the latest evidence that McCain is either lying about Iraq, has no idea what’s going on, or has simply forgotten the facts.

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(Via MSNBC.com: Politics.)

Presidential candidate John McCain plans to travel to Europe and the Middle East for 10 days in mid-March as part of a congressional delegation, officials familiar with the trip said on Sunday.

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(Via TalkLeft.)

By Big Tent Democrat

Kevin Drum has an interesting post about when, if ever, attacks by a candidate in a primary contest was used by the opposing Party’s candidate in the general election. But I am going to focus on what is at the root of the question - will any attacks by Clinton or Obama be used by McCain in the general election - not the substance of the attacks, which would come no matter what - but the fact that the primary opponent attacked on that issue. .

Three come to mind for me - one, Hillary Clinton’s attack on Obama experience and Commander in Chief credentials. That one seems sure to surface in a McCain campaign against Obama. Two, Obama’s attack on Hillary Clinton’s health care plan mandates - the Harry and Louise stuff arguing Hillary will force you to buy health insurance even if you can not afford it. Three, Obama’s attacks on Hillary Clinton’s character, the “she’ll say anything to get elected” stuff. This is why I have been highly critical of these three lines of attack.

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(Via Taegan Goddard’s Political Wire.)

A new American Research Group poll in Pennsylvania shows Sen. Hillary Clinton leading Sen. Barack Obama, 52% to 41%.

Key findings: Obama leads among men 59% to 38% and Clinton leads among women 63% to 27%. Clinton leads among white voters 63% to 29% and Obama leads among African American voters 89% to 7%. African Americans account for 18% of likely Democratic primary voters. Clinton leads 47% to 45% among likely primary voters under 50 and she leads 58% to 37% among likely primary voters 50 and older.

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(Via Newsvine - ObamaVine - Articles.)

After stacking up victories in some of the nation’s reddest states while motivating record democratic primary turnouts, Barack Obama has purported that he can create a new Democratic coalition that Hillary Clinton cannot.

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(Via The Huffington Post | Full News Feed.)

I’m an avid reader, so chances are I would have gotten around to Barack Obama’s Dreams From My Father sooner or later. I confess that I read it sooner out of curiosity about his reported admissions of drug usage. Yes, there is such a discussion. But it accounts for only two pages in the 442-page tome; the remaining 440 pages were something entirely different and, dare I say, uniquely American.

It’s an amazing story and, regardless of the electoral ending, a uniquely American one. This country has always valued rags-to-riches tales, and Obama’s family history is nothing less. I suspect that if the story began in Poland, or Germany or the Ukraine, it would be trumpeted as an American classic, not made a subject for urban legend.

The book is the story of Obama’s search for identity. Some milestones in that journey have been reported elsewhere, including his birth in Hawaii in 1961; time in Indonesia; return to Hawaii and attendance at a prestigious prep school; college education; and work as a community organizer in Chicago before attending law school at Harvard, where he was the first African American president of the Law Review.

From that perch, he was offered his first book deal. The resulting memoir, written when Obama was 33, was first published in 1995. He was elected to the Illinois state Senate the following year. Almost a decade thereafter, he added a new preface acknowledging that “certain passages have proved to be inconvenient politically, the grist for pundit commentary and opposition research.”

Keep reading

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(Via MyDD.)

Welcome to my latest diary on the Democratic primary to represent Iowa’s third Congressional district. It’s been a while since my last summary of how the race is going, because I got sick recently and spent a week in the hospital.

Both candidates have stepped up their campaign activities in the past month, and I’ll bring you up to date in this diary.

For background on Ed Fallon’s challenge to incumbent “Bush dog” Leonard Boswell, see this diary, which has biographical information on both candidates, and this diary, which outlines the main arguments for and against each candidate.

I’m covering this race more frequently and in more detail at the Iowa progressive community blog Bleeding Heartland.

I have not seen any public polling on this race, and I have not heard anything about the results from Boswell’s internal polling.

Boswell is taking the challenge seriously. Since the beginning of the year, he has been e-mailing constituents more regularly. This past week I got my first call from a field organizer for Boswell as well as a direct-mail piece touting the incumbent’s record on the economy. Also, Boswell held a telephone town-hall meeting on Tuesday, but I was not able to listen in.

I was intrigued to read that in mid-February Boswell signed on to House Resolution 333, which calls for impeaching Vice President Dick Cheney. One benefit of Fallon’s challenge is that it has pushed Boswell toward some progressive positions he might not otherwise have taken. Another example (which Fallon likes to point out) is that Boswell did not sign on to the Safe Climate Act when it was introduced in March 2007. However, after word got around that Fallon was planning to declare his candidacy, Boswell signed on to that legislation in December.

Full post here.

(Via Balloon Juice.)

From the 60 Minutes hagiography on John McCain tonight:

“You’re saying that Senator Obama doesn’t have the experience? That he’s too naïve to be president?” Pelley asked.

“No, I am saying that I have that. And if the phone rings at 3:00a.m., I think the American people would want me to answer it first,” McCain replied.

If the Democrats lose in 2008, it can be traced directly to Hillary’s decision to enter this 3 am nonsense into the discourse in her last-ditch attempt to have super-delegates overturn the will of the people.

Also in the piece was this gem:

“In your town hall meetings you’re fond of saying that you will follow Osama bin Laden to the gates of hell,” Pelley remarked. “With respect, following him to the gates of hell is easy. What’s hard is putting several divisions of U.S. forces on the border of Afghanistan and Pakistan. What are you willing to do?”

“Well, the first thing is not tell Osama bin Laden what I’m gonna do. But I’ll get him,” McCain vowed.

Now that there is some straight talk you can take to the bank.

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