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Friday, October 19, 2007
Harry Reid letter goes sky high
Posted by: Jonathan Garthwaite at 9:43 AM
Harry Reid sent a letter to the CEO of Clear Channel saying that Rush Limbaugh shouldn't be on the air.  Reid and his Media Matter cohorts argue -- very unconvincingly -- that Rush is anti-troops.

Ooops.  Rush obtained the letter and turned it into a ebay fundraising campaign for the Marine Corps Law Enforcement Foundation.   Last week we covered the bidding process and we were excited to see the bids climbing to 40, 50, $60,000.   We hadn't paid attention to the bidding that yesterday so we were amazed to wake up this morning and see the top bid at $2.1 million.

In case you've got $2,100,100 burning a hole in your pocket, you've still got three hours to get your bid in.




Friday, October 19, 2007
Putin Likes FDR
Posted by: Matt Lewis at 8:30 AM
Putin's "expedient" hero is FDR.  Very interesting read ...




Friday, October 19, 2007
Values Voter Summit Central
Posted by: Jonathan Garthwaite at 8:03 AM
Townhall.com is covering the  Values Voter Summit today.  Stay tuned for reports from Mary Katharine, Amanda Carpenter, Matt Lewis, Hugh Hewitt, Michael Medved and anybody else we can drag in her for comment.  Here's the schedule of speakers.

Couldn't make it to Washington D.C.?   Watch the Summit online for $9.95.   Cheaper than flight, hotel, cabs, and the $95 "in d.c." rate.

Stay tuned.




Friday, October 19, 2007
Sports
Posted by: Jonathan Garthwaite at 7:36 AM
Sorry Hugh.  The Red Sox won last night.  You had to know it would happen this way.   It's about the Benjamins -- and ratings.   Prior to the post-season, they determined that the World Series would start next Wednesday, 10/24.    They already have to go eight days without a National League game.  They couldn't afford to have the Indians win it in four and have six days without baseball.  Gotta keep things interesting.   Yeah I know it's not true.  It's a rainy Friday morning and I'm in a pick-a-friendly-fight-for-some-entertainment kind of mood.   BUT.  Two years ago I wouldn't have even given it wouldn't have even entered my mind.   Now with Barry Bonds getting away with the homer record, NBA referees in jail for fixing games, and the New England Patriot doing more surveillance than the CIA --- it's not the most outrageous thing you could imagine the sports world coming up with.

Next, did anyone see the "Baseball Memories" tribute to Hank Aaron's 755 home runs?  It was an ad for State Farm but it was sponsored by Major League Baseball.  Perhaps I like to read too much into these things, but it that the back-handed passive aggressive slap at Barry Bonds record we've all wonder whether it would comes -- a sort of "Barry, don't count on your 756th home run making the baseball highlight reel."

The University of South Florida turned into a pumpkin last night after losing to Rutgers.

And Yankees skipper, Joe Torres is out and Rudy is "very sad."

In truly irrelavant sports news, David Beckham is back -- uh -- he was gone?




Friday, October 19, 2007
Fred Thompson's Energy Crisis
Posted by: Michael Medved at 2:50 AM

   

  What’s the most important attribute for a successful politician?

 

   It’s obviously not intelligence.

 

   Many people of distinctly limited brain power get elected again and again, regardless of their undeniable and frequently embarrassing stupidity. Patty Murray, Senior Senator from the State of Washington is, for example, as dumb as rock. Remember her praise for Osama bin Laden for building non-existent day care centers? In 2004, Murray won her third term in a landslide. Meanwhile, Ted Kennedy (even when his faculties haven’t been impaired by, um, good fellowship), not to mention his shockingly un-clever (and drug addicted) son, Congressman Patrick Kennedy, wouldn’t win any prizes for mental acuity. Of course, Democrats insist that President Bush also counts as an intellectually impaired dunce but his academic record (he never got expelled for cheating on a Spanish test, as did Teddy) and political successes (along with the failures) should prove them wrong.

 

   If intelligence isn’t required of a successful candidate, is it character that the politico requires? The absurdity of that contention ought to be blindingly obvious: countless politicians from both parties with no decency, substance or stature of any kind currently hold office and raise hundreds of millions of dollars for their inevitable re-elections. Those who believe that character represents a crucial asset in electoral warfare need only consider the most gifted and successful politician of his generation: William Jefferson Clinton. Whatever his supporters loved about the 42nd President, it wasn’t moral fiber or integrity.

 

   While candidates can soar to victory without smarts or character, the one essential ingredient for any serious contender is, finally, energy: a level of intensity, drive, enthusiasm, vigor, force, that demands that voters pay attention. Every consistently successful politician in recent American history has possessed this indispensable quality --- and that’s a major problem for Fred Thompson’s current Presidential campaign.

 

    I like and respect Senator Thompson, a good man with an impressive record of serving his country. I’ve said on many occasions that I’d be proud to support him if he wins the Republican nomination – just as I’d be proud to back Rudy Giuliani, Mike Huckabee, John McCain, or Mitt Romney. But Thompson stands little chance of grabbing that nomination, or even winning major primaries, because of his shockingly listless personality on the campaign trail.

 

   On Wednesday, Senator Thompson spent a half hour answering friendly questions on my radio show. If you read a transcript of his remarks, they’ll look perfectly credible, articulate and astute. But if you listen to the tape of the actual interview, it’s startling to note how disengaged, bored, flaccid and tired the Senator sounds. Instead of relishing the opportunity to connect with several million listeners, Thompson came across like a guy forced to complete a necessary but onerous chore. No presidential candidate in recent history has ever succeeded with this low an energy level.

 

   I wish I could say that my show on Wednesday represented an exception in an otherwise exciting campaign. Unfortunately, the tapes of other media appearances, rallies in Iowa or South Carolina, and the last GOP debate in Dearborn, Michigan, further highlight Thompson’s energy crisis. If he hopes to re-energize his struggling campaign, the tall Tennessean must first re-energize himself.

 

  The contrast with his chief rivals for the nomination works powerfully to Thompson’s detriment. John McCain may be six years older than Thompson, but campaigns as if he qualified as a full generation younger. The Arizona Senator enjoys meeting people, goofing with the press, surprising audiences with his impertinent little jokes (remember the furor over “Bomb, Bomb, Bomb/Bomb Bomb Iran”?) and conveys an edgy, electric, sometimes even explosive energy. Rudy Giuliani similarly comes across like a passionate, operatic tough guy who, only with difficulty, manages to keep his seething emotions under control. Mitt Romney always projects a superhuman image of health, vigor and slick (sometimes too slick) self assurance, while Mike Huckabee’s learned to transmit the earthy, open-collared energy of a regular guy who’s thrilled to be part of history beyond the confines of Little Rock.

 

   No one’s won the nomination of either party in recent years without conveying this sense of excitement and edge to the crowds who come to see him or the reporters who try to interview him. President Bush, in person or on TV, may not look like the sharpest crayon in the box, but his passion and determination almost always come across: his public presentations may seem edgy and uncertain, but he seldom seems bored or exhausted. Even in their seventies, Ronald Reagan and Bob Dole communicated intensity—sunny and joyous (for the 40th President) and dark and brooding (for the defeated candidate).

 

   On the Democratic side, there’s obviously no energy shortage: both Obama and Edwards deploy charm, charisma, and kinetic presence to infect adoring crowds with their own excitement. Hillary Clinton certainly can’t match the sizzling, tireless, seductive energy of her husband, but she’s recently proven herself vastly more adept at conveying joy, bemusement, and even friendliness through the process of campaigning, and her relentless, bulldog determination always suggested a formidable focus.

 

   In conversation with apologists for Fred Thompson’s lackadaisical campaigning so far, they insist that the right comparison for the former Senator isn’t the charismatic, naturally gregarious Reagan, but rather the shy, soft-spoken, common sense “ordinary guy’ Dwight Eisenhower. After all, he never dazzled the American people with his oratory or his fiery passions and, like Fred, he ran for the nation’s highest office as an aging, unapologetic baldy (Thompson would be our first follically challenged chief executive since Eisenhower—but also our tallest president, with a full two inches on Honest Abe). Nevertheless, Ike carried with him an aura of destiny and larger-than-life heroism due to his military exploits in World War II—an aura that excited crowds, even with lackluster speeches. Moreover, in Michael Korda’s admiring new biography of Eisenhower, he makes the point that the tightly controlled “chairman of the board” who led the Allied crusade to liberate Europe actually showed himself behind-the-scenes a twitchy, frequently nervous, explosive-tempered chain smoker when he stepped away from the public eye. Like other great generals in history, Ike communicated a sense of formidable, even devastating power, purpose and focus behind the mask of bland, Midwestern geniality.

 

Obviously, any man who has achieved as much as Fred Dalton Thompson can’t be written off as an easy-going slob, or a sleepy-eyed, mellow good ‘ol boy. From the humblest blue-collar background, he won a scholarship to a classy law school (Vanderbilt) and went on to a legendary legal career even before his two landslide wins for the US Senate. However relaxed and disinterest the Tennesseean may appear, no one follows that career trajectory without drive, ambition and great inner strength. Moreover, Thompson’s achieved considerable success as an actor, and in his movie and TV roles he easily projects the sort of energy and intensity he painfully lacks in the campaign.

 

His friends and aides must therefore insist that Senator Thompson approach his interviews and speeches and fund-raising meetings as if he were playing a part in the next Hollywood blockbuster. A good director would tell the candidate that he must now personify a hungry, driven, exciting politician with all-but-limitless ambition--- the kind of guy who, like Clinton, means to seduce every warm body in the room, male as well as female. Over the last few months, Fred’s asked supporters to indicate that they passionately want him to run; now he must display similar passion, or his campaign will inevitably fizzle.

 

A viable Thompson candidacy will strengthen the GOP and make the competition for the nomination vastly more exciting. The recent change in the primary-caucus schedule – with Iowa caucuses now set for January 3rd, right after the holidays –makes it more urgent than ever for the Senator to reignite the race by reigniting his own public persona. The old saying suggests “you only get one chance to make a first impression,” but in Thompson’s case he needs to seize additional chances. Most Americans retain only a vague sense of the shape of the campaign to date, but in the next few weeks they’ll pay far more attention. When they do, Fred ought to try a few triple espressos, or shots of Jack Daniels, or campaigning alongside his beautiful wife, or whatever makes him seem more eager, youthful and energetic. It’s time, in short, for a wake up call: be yourself by all means but find the passion to recharge the batteries. For the sake of the country and the Thompson campaign, he’s better Fred than dead.

 

 

 






Thursday, October 18, 2007
As Values Voters Meet, Rudy is Big Story
Posted by: Matt Lewis at 5:24 PM


A bunch of us Townhaller's will be checking in on the Values Voter Summit, tomorrow.  

The Family Research Council, who is hosting the event, expects more than 2,000 attendees.  As of now, all nine (I guess that counts Sam Brownback) GOP presidential candidates, will be speaking at the event.

The obvious big story is: "What will Rudy Giuliani say?"  (After all, several conservative leaders threatened to bolt the party if he wins the nomination). 

My guess is it will go something like this ...

1.  Look, I know you and I don't always agree.  But I'm man enough to come here and talk to you.  My door will always be open to you, and that should count for something ... 

2.  I'm the only Republican who can stop Hillary.  If you're a conservative, that's a big, big deal.

3.  I will appoint "Strict Constructionist" judges.  A President can't overturn Roe vs. Wade himself, and let's be honest, the most important thing we can do is appoint good judges.

... At least, that's my bet.

Here's the current schedule of speakers ...

Tags: Rudy



Thursday, October 18, 2007
School of Common Sense?
Posted by: Jonathan Garthwaite at 4:10 PM
Thirteen year-olds getting free birth-control without their parents approval.

Be careful signing your kids up for general health services. You might be getting more than you bargained for.






Thursday, October 18, 2007
SCHIP
Posted by: Mary Katharine Ham at 3:17 PM
Sunk.

Tags: veto   SCHIP



Thursday, October 18, 2007
Pete Stark: Unhinged
Posted by: Jonathan Garthwaite at 3:16 PM
Amanda Carpenter has the story of California Congressman, Pete Stark's tantrum on the House floor.

Stark said, “Republicans are worried that they can't pay for insuring an additional 10 million children. They sure don't care about finding $200 billion to fight the illegal war in Iraq”  He continued: “Where are you going to get that money? Are you going to tell us lies like you're telling us today? Is that how you're going to fund the war? You don't have money to fund the war or children. But you're going to spend it to blow up innocent people if we can get enough kids to grow old enough for you to send to Iraq to get their heads blown off for the president's amusement."

There's video too.








Thursday, October 18, 2007
The Internet Tax Ban
Posted by: John Campbell at 2:54 PM

On Tuesday, the House passed a four-year extension of the Internet Tax Freedom Act.  The billed passed by a vote of 405-2, but not before I and several of my colleagues argued for a permanent prohibition of Internet taxes. 

Rep. Mel Watt (D-NC), one of the bill’s cosponsor’s, made it clear that, “this bill is pro-consumer, pro-innovation and pro-technology." If that is so, then there should be no problem with making the ban permanent. 

It seems that Mr. Watt’s reservations revolve around the possibility of being unable to tax the internet indefinitely.  He stated that, "Four years from now everything in life may be done on the Internet. We might have a virtual world out there and we might not be able to tax anything."

Four years from now we will be again fighting to keep the Internet tax free , and it is evident that Mr. Watt believes in taxing the internet, but only once we see its full potential.

I firmly believe that this ban should have been made permanent








Thursday, October 18, 2007
A Moment of Grace in the Post-Post-Modern South
Posted by: Mary Katharine Ham at 2:20 PM
American Digest writes my home and writes it well. Stick with it to the end. It's worth it, and beautifully written all the way. 




Thursday, October 18, 2007
Goodbye Yellow Brick Road
Posted by: Matt Lewis at 2:15 PM
Sam Brownback is getting out.  His quixotic campaign is over.  This is possibly good news for Romney or Huckabee, who may inherit his .001 percent of the vote.  But it is tremendous news for all of us who watch debates, and who have longed for some of the 3rd tier candidates to phase-out. 



When he got into the race, he promised to take "the yellow brick road" to the White House.  Instead, he learned he's not in Kansas anymore ...


Tags: brownback



Thursday, October 18, 2007
Romney vs. Rudy: The PowerPoint
Posted by: Matt Lewis at 1:48 PM
MyManMitt has it here.




Thursday, October 18, 2007
Dallas Minister: Don't Vote for Romney
Posted by: Matt Lewis at 12:49 PM
In the past few days, has received the endorsement of several prominent Evangelicals.  

Now, this is comes from in the Dallas News:

A prominent Dallas minister told his congregation that if they wanted to elect a Christian to the White House, Republican Mitt Romney wasn't qualified.

Dr. Robert Jeffress, pastor of First Baptist Church of Dallas, said Mormonism is a false religion and that Mr. Romney was not a Christian.

"Mitt Romney is a Mormon, and don't let anybody tell you otherwise," Dr. Jeffress said in a sermon on Sept. 30. "Even though he talks about Jesus as his Lord and savior, he is not a Christian. Mormonism is not Christianity. Mormonism is a cult."

This is not some random pastor who is getting attention.  This is one of the most prominent Baptist churches in Dallas. 

The other day I wrote that Romney would likely give a "JFK-style" religion speech, soon.  This story illustrates why he will have to address this issue head on, sooner rather than later ...

H/T:  Dwayne Horner

Tags: Romney


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SJA (11-12 @ 10:20 AM): Agreed!!!!
 Re: AP: Obama Rejects All Proposed Strategies for Afghanistan
  By Bea
Bill knows brothels, apparently
 Re: AP: Obama Rejects All Proposed Strategies for Afghanistan
  By Juniper
Town Hall readers
 Re: Patients First: "Harry's Chamber and the Bill of Secrets"
  By vladimir estragon
Glen Beck in the only FOX
 Re: Obama and Fox News: Together Again?
  By RonnaRonna
SJA
 Re: Mark McKinnon: Bob McDonnell's Election Shows Card Check is a 'Huge Liability for Democrats'
  By Juniper
The ronnas
 Re: AP: Obama Rejects All Proposed Strategies for Afghanistan
  By Juniper
tribeck
 Re: AP: Obama Rejects All Proposed Strategies for Afghanistan
  By vladimir estragon
NOTW
 Re: AP: Obama Rejects All Proposed Strategies for Afghanistan
  By Juniper
More misleading headlines
 Re: AP: Obama Rejects All Proposed Strategies for Afghanistan
  By vladimir estragon
Too Smart to be a Liberal
 Re: AP: Obama Rejects All Proposed Strategies for Afghanistan
  By RonnaRonna
hey Juni
 Re: Mark McKinnon: Bob McDonnell's Election Shows Card Check is a 'Huge Liability for Democrats'
  By SJA
Can't wait to see Major
 Re: Obama and Fox News: Together Again?
  By Juniper
Hard-hitting analysis
 Re: 'V' is for Obama? Not So Fast
  By vladimir estragon
Lou Dobbs
 Re: Lou Dobbs Quitting CNN; Obama Grants Fox News Interview
  By Kenny Z
Bea
 Re: AP: Obama Rejects All Proposed Strategies for Afghanistan
  By SJA
Bottom line: CLUELESSNESS
 Re: 'V' is for Obama? Not So Fast
  By Juniper
Running away from Obama
 Re: Mark McKinnon: Bob McDonnell's Election Shows Card Check is a 'Huge Liability for Democrats'
  By Juniper
SJA--I did not notice until...
 Re: Obama's Veteran's Day Remarks
  By clarityseeker
My apologies to the leftists
 Re: AP: Obama Rejects All Proposed Strategies for Afghanistan
  By Bill
Jupiter
 Re: AP: Obama Rejects All Proposed Strategies for Afghanistan
  By NOTW

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