Thursday, January 29, 2009

"I did not have political relations with that senator"


Blago is gone in a 59-0 vote this evening. Who would have guessed, since everyone - including the former gov'nur - openly said that it was going to happen.

We have a few ideas of new careers Blago should attempt now that he's got some free time:

High school counselor (They always have the best advice)

Hairstylist (It's a mean joke, but still funny)

Motivational speaker (Did you hear his swansong before the Senate? Amazing)

Lobbyist (Probably more true than we'd like to believe)

Felon (The most likely choice)

Blago to go-go


How long does it take state senators to impeach a guy? All the media's waiting for the Illinois crew to get to voting, so they can file their story and head to the bar for a well-earned whiskey.

But all fun aside, this is a sad day for the great state of Illinois. Here it is, making history by first impeaching the guy and then likely removing him from office. Truly, shouldn't we let our corrupt politicians stay in office? The only crime he really committed was getting caught.

You know who's really happy with all these developments - Lt. Gov. Patrick Quinn. Talk about a sweet gig. Maybe he never had what it took to get the high spot, and now he gets to slide in once Blago gets the boot, put the little (I) by his name come next election and watch the votes roll in.

Stay tuned for more developments!

Wednesday, January 28, 2009

More Obamadrama


Obama's been in office a week, and he's already setting the stage for some great high school antics. Just take a look at this story, which throws around the names of the administration's powerful as if they were in the prom queen's court.

It appears that Obama is assigning numerous people to various jobs whose duties are just close enough to make everybody involved chafe that someone else is essentially doing their job. The cherry on top is that all those who have overlapping duties have someone overseeing that particular group.

In the realm of city government, we call this "duplication of services." Imagine a city that has three different organizations that feed the poor, have a home for the battered and do an annual auction to raise money for their cause. Think they might all work together for the common good and not worry about who gets the praise?

Whatever. They typically are upset that another group is on their turf, they don't like the fact that their fief is threatened and they're more likely than not to oppose a joining of services that would better serve the very people they exist to help.

Sound like the city you live in? If so, then welcome to America!

Tuesday, January 27, 2009

Boring...


Now that the inauguration's done, there's nothing to get excited about anymore. That hasn't been the case for a long while. There was always something in the news in the weeks beforehand about President Bush about to bow out and Obama waiting to take the mantle.

And then there was the gala itself. Everyone descended upon D.C., and we all had a good time remembering where we were at noon that day. Sure, some people are still negative Nancys about the whole deal, but we'll get by.

But now, what is there? A federal stimulus that doesn't include a check for me? Blago's all but certain removal from office in a few days?

Where's Eliot Spitzer when you really need him? Or Kristen, for that matter...

Of course, there's always this little item, where beloved hack Bob Woodward hints at an upcoming scandal for Obama's administration. I guess he needs some kind of word from God, or actual verification, before he releases more tidbits.

Sunday, January 25, 2009

Weekend roundup


As a member of the liberal media, I haven't had time to post on this blog in the past few days because I was waiting for instructions from the Obama administration. However, now that I and others in the fourth estate have received their orders, I am able to once again join the ranks of the unbiased reporting establishment which you, the people, so richly deserve.

So, what have I missed?

1) Caroline Kennedy, much to my dismay, was not picked as Hillary Clinton's replacement in the Senate. This despite the myriad of qualifications she has, including that HER LAST NAME IS KENNEDY. Hillary was replaced by New York Rep. Kirsten Gillibrand , who apparently likes guns.

2) Obama reversed the Bush ban on giving cash to overseas groups that provide abortions or information on them. This was pretty much expected by everyone and is absolutely no surprise, yet it provides people on both sides of the issue a chance to once again air their grievances and spout off clever phrases that look good on bumper stickers.

3) Katie Stam of Indiana was crowned Miss America Saturday night. This is important to Georgians because if Stam stumbles just once, first runner up Miss Georgia Chasity Hardman will be there to pick up the pieces.

Congrats to all the contestants.

Tuesday, January 20, 2009

President Obama


The inauguration is one of those moments where people stop what they're doing and watch what's going on. You want to see the candidates raise their hands, take an oath and become the next executives of America.

I sat in the east wing of the Columbus Government Center watching the swearing-in and Obama's speech. Of course, it was full of rhetoric, but that's to be expected. The real test will be when Congress starts pushing legislation the White House doesn't like.

That could be a few days, even weeks. But Obama won't have a long honeymoon, and he knows it.

Obama Watch (tm) - just two hours away!


Obama Watch (tm) - where the disinterested join the ranks of the impolitic.

Did you see this story about Bush and Cheney's portraits getting removed from all federal buildings around noon today? Ya gotta love it when a plan comes together. Moving all the Bush stuff out of the White House in six hours and all the Obama stuff in takes a mammoth effort, but I like to think getting 9,000 pictures across the country removed at around the same time is just as difficult.

They say they'll be destroyed, you know, so people like you can't get a hold of them and use them for nefarious purposes. But how tough will it be to ensure every single portrait is disposed of this way? Could some federal worker be bribed to hand over a picture late tonight? Could some sneaky ninja purloin a portrait under the watchful eye of bailiffs?

Look on eBay in the coming weeks for stolen goods.

Monday, January 19, 2009

Obama Watch (tm) - Commie mutant traitor!


Obama Watch (tm) - keeping you misinformed for a good 20 or so hours.

Was there ever any doubt? Here Barack Obama is, talking about volunteerism as if he were Karl Marx! Just look at this lead from the Yahoo! news story:

"Barack Obama stood at the threshold of the White House on Monday, summoning fellow Americans to join him in service as tens of thousands flocked to the nation's capital to celebrate his inauguration as the first black president."

Are you actually asking me, a lazy American, to spend my free time doing something good for king and country? Hey, I gave the charity of my choice thirty bucks at Thanksgiving. What more do you want?

I think the answer to that question is pretty obvious: Obama wants a nation of card-carrying, "Communist Manifesto" loving, telekinesis-wielding, socialist-leaning commies willing to open the borders and give away our jobs to terrorists! The next thing you know he'll be OPENING THE NINTH GATE UNDER THE SEAL OF SHUGGOTH TO ASOASOPTNAPISDHGA;OSIDGA[OEA[OI

Obama Watch (tm) - just 18 hours until the big event!

Obama Watch (tm) - OMG!!!! shushhhhhh!!!!


Obama Watch (tm) - your guide to meaningless drivel.

With less than 24 hours until Obama becomes president, Joe Biden's wife reveals the unthinkable on Oprah - backroom political deals exist!

Yes, it's true! Obama offered Biden his pick of the litter: Secretary of State or the veep slot. And we, the people, were clueless! It's just another example of big politics keeping big secrets in a big closet that big Americans know nothing about!

On another note, did Joe really have to think about which one to take? Come on, of course he's going to go with being the vice president. It's better clout, more influence and a lot of steps closer to the Oval Office than being in the cabinet. Also, if Obama is a two termer, he's in a great spot to run for the big time in eight years.

Then again, he's around 66 right now, which would make him older than McCain was when he ran for president last year.

Obama Watch (tm) - we're a day away


Thanks for tuning back in to Obama Watch (tm) - your only source for pure-as-the-driven-cocaine coverage of America's newest president.

While this CNN story takes a few paragraphs to get to the meat of the story, it's a nice description of what goes on behind the scenes. We'll be watching Obama put his hand on a Bible at noon Tuesday and eating crumpets while close to 100 people move the Bush stuff out of the White House and the Obama stuff in.

Moving has always been a chore for me and everyone I've ever encountered on this planet. Who likes to move? No one. That's one reason why this story appeals to me.

Obama and Bush leave the White House at 11 a.m. Tuesday and head out for the inauguration. Bush's stuff is in his house. When Obama returns at 6 p.m. that day, it's his house and all his stuff is in place. Clothes in the closet, favorite cereal in the kitchen.

I would say sign me up, except you have to be the president for the gig and I don't want to deal with all the baggage that comes with it.

Sunday, January 18, 2009

Obama Watch (tm) - about two or so days away


Welcome to Obama Watch (tm) - the keen person's view into the events leading up to Barack Obama's inauguration as president.

Obama Watch (tm) is an ongoing series filled with stories and anecdotes about the president elect, the festivities surrounding his inauguration, the swearing-in itself and whatever happens to be on my mind as I wait for my martini glass to chill.

You know, as a card-carrying liberal, I'm pretty much required by unseen forces to listen to NPR. Just today, as I was driving away from my volunteer work with vegetarian atheist gun haters, I heard a story about Obama's option of either swearing an oath or making an affirmation.

The option to affirm, as it turns out, comes from Quakers who were pretty serious about not swearing anything. You can see the option to affirm everywhere; it's not just for the sweet offices like president. Local judges, council members and people on the witness stand across the country have the chance to affirm.

The story, however, didn't really dig into the meat of the issue, which is - why is Obama choosing to use his middle name of HUSSEIN when he takes the oath?

Jimmy Carter didn't use it. Neither did Reagan. So why does our newest president feel obligated to say it? Is it because of his secret Muslim roots? Or maybe it's the code word his handlers have implanted in him that, when said at the right moment, will flip the control switch in his mind and make the president of the United States nothing more than a puppet of foreign powers!

If the letters in his middle name are converted to the appropriate numbers, they add up to a numerological construct often used in Masonic rituals, as well as in the Skull and Bones. Perhaps this is why Obama has until this point REFUSED TO TALK ABOUT THE GOVERNMENT'S PLAN TO RELEASE AZATHOTH FROM TEH ALKST;LAA;LKSHDG;LKHASG;HAS

Tune in tomorrow, when Obama Watch (tm) gets a new writer!

Thursday, January 15, 2009

America!


This is why our country is great. Long live freedom and the American way!

Just think of it - in some countries, people can't sell their virginities to the highest bidder. Not here, though. We live in the best country in the world. This is where laws are made to serve the populace, not the other way around.

Of course, there's always someone trying to impose their will on the free. Like Buzz Killington from this story, Mathew Staver, director of the Liberty Center for Law and Policy.

Staver thinks Nevada's always been out of touch with the rest of the country on morality. He thinks people don't want to see Nevada's nefarious ways spread throughout our great nation.

Well, I've got two words for Staver - states' rights! Ya don't like it, go live in Alabama. You can close down all the sex shops you want there, but leave Nevada's brothels alone!

And the icing on the cake of this young woman's courageous choice to sell her body is that prosecutors on all different levels of government don't want to fool with it. That's because Natalie Dylan, whose real name is being withheld for pretty obvious reasons, is advertising something where it's legal and will perform the act where law allows.

Dylan's choice to sell her virginity for money that she intends to use for higher education is a freedom all Americans should rejoice in. We truly are blessed to hold citizenship in a country where this behavior can make national news in a free press that can use the words "sells virginity online" in its headline.

Wednesday, January 14, 2009

Polemic pontification


Here's a problem that's going to get more headlines in the coming months with the new Democratic administration - What do we do about all these Gitmo prisoners?

Sure, this has been discussed before, but it'll take on a new relevance with Obama in office. Bush wasn't going to shut Gitmo down, so it was easy to scream about abuses and constitutional rights.

Now that Obama's poised to take office, and has made noise about shutting the place down, opinions may very well change.

The linked story tells about a boy who was 14 when put inside Gitmo. At 21, he's finally getting out.

It seems pretty silly to think that a 14-year-old would be capable of everything our government accused him of, but fear is a strong emotion and it shook America like a doll after 9/11.

But what about the real terrorists being held in Gitmo who would try to damage our country if released? Bush used word play to get around conventions and hold people without good evidence. Many are still being held without a host of rights.

Oh, but I hear the right scream - they shouldn't have any rights! Why should they share guarantees that Americans have?

It's a dangerous slope. We put ourselves up as a paragon of freedom, yet we hold our enemies for years without good evidence. We torture, then change the name to remove the taint of doing something wrong.

I don't think Gitmo's going to close any time soon. People will argue over it, but Obama will likely change his opinion on the prison. It will stay open, despite the left whining over it.

And we'll just have to deal with our leaders saying one thing and doing another. We've done it before.

Tuesday, January 13, 2009

Joe the ... you know what? Just shut up.


Joe the Stooge has just about worn out my welcome in the various news stories I frequent. This guy was newsworthy when he asked Obama a question at a campaign rally, and was launched into the spotlight when John McCain wouldn't stop mentioning his name.

Fair enough. We need an Everyman at certain times to bring things into perspective. But now he's a war correspondent that doesn't think journalists should cover wars? Here's a quote:

"To be honest with you, I don't think journalists should be anywhere allowed war [sic]. . . . I liked back in World War I and World War II, when you'd go to the theater and you'd see your troops on the screen and everyone would be real excited and happy for them," he said in an interview with the Associated Press.
"Now everyone's got an opinion and wants to down soldiers—our American soldiers, our Israeli soldiers. I think media should be abolished from reporting," he said.

So, where do you start with ignorance like this? I could point out various atrocities committed under the veil of secrecy when a free press isn't allowed into war zones, but maybe Joe likes the idea of a monolithic government doing whatever it likes during war time.

Or I might mention the films Joe mentioned, which were propaganda and not true reporting. Of course, there's nothing better than an ill-informed populace that the government fills with false reports and can then twist to its own devices. Maybe Joe should work for the Ministry of Truth.

But then again, I'd rather point out that Joe is essentially arguing why he shouldn't even have his current job. Here he is, working as a war correspondent, saying that his job should be abolished.

Say it ain't so, Joe.

Samuel J. Wurzelbacher has changed from an Everyman into a Lauren Conrad - someone who likely began their media blitz as a real person but has now been distorted into a caricature of themselves, an empty persona with nothing to add to the public discourse.

Read my lips - Joe the Plumber has no place on my TV or in my media. Neither does LC, for what that matters.

Sunday, January 11, 2009

What's really important


You can tell Americans want more than just hard news out of their media. Just take a look at the tail end of this Yahoo! news story:

"The Obamas are deciding between a labradoodle or a Portuguese water hound puppy, in the search for an appropriate pet for their daughters, ages 7 and 10. Obama said they're ready to start visiting shelters."

Forget the spiraling deficit or the insanely large bailout for failing banks. This is the meat of what we want, and it turns out that it's dog meat. Yes, that's right, knowing exactly what breed of canine the Obamas will get for the White House is what this country needs right now.

Why do we care about this fluff? Good question. My guess is that it's somewhere in between news about celebrities and feel-good stories about people that have done good deeds all their lives. It's not necessarily what many might think of news, but we want to talk about famous pets and fuzzy, wuzzly things so this meets the mark.

And, of course, it beats the hell out of talking about how all our 401k's have blown up in the past year.

Wednesday, January 7, 2009

How things change


A few days ago, Roland Burris was a nonentity. He couldn't get on the Senate floor on Tuesday. On Wednesday, however, the Byzantine halls of the Capitol had changed their shape and its minions were using different words.

A hard stance against anyone appointed by Blago turned into Jello. Pictures of Harry Reid and Burris being all friendly and cordial abound. The 71-year-old politician appears poised to take Obama's former seat.

It's a strange game.

So why the shift? Could be because Blago called the Senate's bluff, as one source said. Could be the racial element. Could be there's been a deal worked out behind closed doors, and everyone feels much more comfortable now that it's made.

Like Reid said during one of the tense moments: "I'm an old trial lawyer. There's always room for negotiation."

In a few days, likely once Burris has taken his Senate seat, we'll find out exactly what those negotiations are.

Tuesday, January 6, 2009

News of the dumb


Here's a shocker - teens talk about stuff like sex and drinking.

You've got to be joking me. I thought the worst thing our teens were doing was chewing gum in school. Not so, says the linked story. A majority of them talk about dangerous behavior and post pictures of drinking, drug use or other unsavory activities.

Well, what can we do? The answer provided by some shrink wannabe:

"In some cases, parents should even have their children's passwords for these social networking sites, especially when the children are around age 13 or 14 ..."

BWAAHAHAHHHAHAH

Yeah, and they should also know where their precious snowflake keeps the 1970s Playboys his friend's dad once kept in the attic. Do professionals actually think a 13-year-old kid isn't wise enough to get around a snooping parent? They may not be that smart, but young teens have a scary level of cunning.

I think these shrinks are missing the point. Parents need to be involved in their child's upbringing, teaching them the lessons and values that should be instilled. They don't need to be spies.

There are always going to be bad apples, but that doesn't mean we need helicopter parents peeking into every kid's MySpace page. That's the equivalent of looking at their diary, though admittedly it is a diary the kid's opened up for everyone on the net.

How about talking to your kid, helping them with homework, taking them to ball games, reading to them, joining them in a hobby, walking the dog together - activities that build bonds between parent and child.

Or is it just easier to use their password to find out who your kid really is?

Monday, January 5, 2009

Two types of people


Most people have some type of cute phrase about what they claim to be the two types of people in the world. It could be good and bad, boxers or briefs, heaven or hell bound. Whatever.

I like to simplify things, so let's bring this down where the goats can get it. There are people with power, and there are those without it.
This article here is a nice little piece of reporting, IMO. Most news stories focus on the details of a specific event, such as Bill Clinton stating who he hasn't had sexual relations with.
The aforementioned story, however, takes more of a featurey look at the Senate, those who walk its halls and how power moves and shifts throughout it.

It's a club that has rules, but only uses them when it wants to. Usually, things get done because of agreement. For example, if senators wanted Blago's pick of Obama's replacement to join, they'd allow it and disregard any rule that said otherwise, and who would be able to stop them?
Since they don't, they take the time to find a phrase in a dusty book that lets them close the door to Roland Burris.

Orwell defined power as the ability to make someone else suffer. I think we'll see more of that in the coming weeks as senators decide who's going to be the next senator from Illinois, and whose political career will suffer.

Sunday, January 4, 2009

omg ... jeb bush fer prez lolz


Yes, he really is serious. Former President George H.W. Bush declares that not only is the media being unfair toward his son who currently holds the office, but that another son - Jeb - is qualified to be president.

Ah, yes, Jeb Bush - the governor of Florida when there was that rather nasty issue of balloting in the sunshine state during 2000. Jeb Bush, the man who's been waiting in the wings for far too long. Doesn't he deserve a chance to lead this country?

It all just makes me want to pour some tea in the ocean. OK, let's say that Jeb Bush is this absolutely incredible leader. A top shelf kinda guy that this country just has to have in a position of power.

Even if that's true, and I'm reaching here, haven't we had enough of dynasties? Do we really need to continue this hereditary form of government? I understand that parents who are good actors often have children that act well. It's genetics.

When that happens in government, I call it feudalism. New York is likely going to hand Caroline Kennedy a Senate seat just because of her name. Can we stop the nepotism there and not have it extend to yet another offspring of the first Bush?

Or do you like having dukes and lords instead of presidents?

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