Archive for October 24th, 2008

Re: Education Funding

Friday, October 24th, 2008

Statement from Austin Shafran, Spokesman for the Democratic Senate Campaign Committee Re: Education Funding 

“Senate Republicans can’t seem to get their lies straight on education funding. First they say no cuts, now Kemp Hannon says nothing is off the table. Democratic Senate Leader Malcolm A. Smith made it clear last week- we’re not cutting education funding. While Democrats protected your child’s education, Republicans protected their special interest friends. This new lie proves it’s time for a change,” said Austin Shafran, spokesman for the Democratic Senate Campaign Committee.

Hayes Has Taken Over a Million From Special Interest Groups

Friday, October 24th, 2008

Truth on the Street:  Jim Hayes has received over a million dollars from special interest groups.  It’s time he goes out and finds a real job.

Allegations That Pigeon Repeatedly Broke Election Laws

Friday, October 24th, 2008

This story didn’t surprise this writer at all.  I’ve been critical of the shenanigans of Golisano and Pigeon for longer than I care to admit.  Something smells fishy.  As they say, if it looks like a duck, walks like a duck and sounds like a duck it most certainly IS A DUCK.

“Erie County’s Republican Elections Commissioner, Ralph Mohr, is charging that former Erie County Democratic party chairman Steve Pigeon broke state election law more than 20 times over the past three years.”

“Mohr says Pigeon has repeatedly hid campaign donations he’s received, as well as contributions he’s made to political candidates, evading campaign disclosure laws.”

“”What you have is a financial shell game,” says Mohr. “That allows candidates to take money in excess of the campaign election law, and they would be able to take money from people that they would not want to have disclosed on their election reports.”"
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Half of Doctors Routinely Prescribe Placebos

Friday, October 24th, 2008

You go to the Doctor when you have a medical complaint.  You pay for the office visit and then walk out with a script for a medication that the Doctor tells you is “a medicine not typically used for your condition but might benefit you.”  Guess what?  You likely have been prescribed a placebo rather than bonafide medication for your condition.

“Half of all American doctors responding to a nationwide survey say they regularly prescribe placebos to patients. The results trouble medical ethicists, who say more research is needed to determine whether doctors must deceive patients in order for placebos to work.”
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Friday, October 24th, 2008

Hindsight is 20/20.  I remember my mother saying that from the time I was a small child.  As I grew I began to understand the importance of that statement.  Now Alan Greenspan is telling us it has hit him.  Too late.  We’re paying big time.

“For years, a Congressional hearing with Alan Greenspan was a marquee event. Lawmakers doted on him as an economic sage. Markets jumped up or down depending on what he said. Politicians in both parties wanted the maestro on their side.”

“But on Thursday, almost three years after stepping down as chairman of the Federal Reserve, a humbled Mr. Greenspan admitted that he had put too much faith in the self-correcting power of free markets and had failed to anticipate the self-destructive power of wanton mortgage lending.”
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The Man Remembers His Family’s Pain

Friday, October 24th, 2008

Do the Wright Thing

By Holly Bailey | NEWSWEEK

Senior advisers think John McCain should attack Barack Obama’s ties to his former pastor. He won’t.                                                          

For a man who boasts of delivering “straight talk,” John McCain was sending mixed messages. Supporters who gathered earlier this month outside Milwaukee thought he needed to amp up his campaign rhetoric. One by one, they stood and railed against the “shady characters” linked to Barack Obama. The crowd roared its approval when McCain blasted Obama’s ties to William Ayers, the former Weather Underground radical. But then James T. Harris, an African-American host of a conservative radio show, urged him to hit Obama’s “soft spot.” “It’s absolutely vital that you take it to Obama,” Harris said. “We have the good Reverend [Jeremiah] Wright … I am begging you, sir. I am begging you. Take it to him.” McCain looked uncertain, pausing ever so slightly. “Yes, I’ll do that,” he said. But then he promptly changed the subject to the economy.

Top aides to McCain share the dismay of his hard-core supporters. Many senior advisers, as well as McCain’s running mate, Sarah Palin, believe the campaign should remind voters of Obama’s ties to Wright, whose inflammatory sermons emerged as a problem for the Democratic nominee during the primary. “If we were to go up with an ad during the final weeks of this campaign just showing excerpts of [Wright's] sermons, we would probably win,” says one senior McCain aide, who declined to be named discussing internal debates on tactics. “But we won’t.”

McCain has refused to do it. The main reason, according to two aides who did not want to be named discussing private conversations with the candidate: any attack could be viewed as racially insensitive—or stir up racist sentiments—and that gets personal for McCain. He has not forgotten the racial smear directed at his own family during the South Carolina primary in 2000, when he ran against George W. Bush. Back then, supporters of Bush (their precise identities were never known) papered cars outside churches and McCain events with nasty fliers. They suggested his adopted daughter, Bridget—who was then just eight years old—was in fact his illegitimate child by a black prostitute. The McCains were sickened about the impact this might have on Bridget and planned to wait until she was much older to tell her about it. Not long ago, Bridget, who is now 17, found out what had happened when she Googled herself

There are probably other factors at play, too, in McCain’s thinking. Bringing up Wright at this point would open his campaign to charges of hypocrisy and even desperation. Last spring, McCain himself condemned the North Carolina Republican Party for running an ad featuring Wright’s sermons, including one in which the preacher said, railing against the treatment of blacks, “No, no, no. Not God bless America. Goddam America.” McCain trashed the ad, saying it “degrades our civics and distracts us from the very real differences we have with Democrats.”

Shortly after the North Carolina ad ran, Obama said on “Meet the Press” that Wright was a “legitimate political issue.” At that point, McCain criticized some of Wright’s more extreme views—including, as he put it, likening U.S. Marines to the Roman legionnaires “responsible for the death of our savior.” But McCain also said that he didn’t believe Obama shared Wright’s “world view.” His comments prompted pushback from the Obama campaign nonetheless. Spokespeople said McCain was contradicting his earlier position that Wright shouldn’t be an issue. In May, Obama broke his ties to Wright after the pastor restated some controversial views to the National Press Club.

McCain won’t try to stop independent groups from hammering Obama on his former association with Wright. Last week, the Republican Jewish Coalition began running ads suggesting Obama had surrounded himself with advisers who are “anti-Israel.” The ad includes a photo of Obama with Wright, captioned HOSTILE TO AMERICA. The McCain campaign said it would not ask the group to desist. “Senator McCain’s position on Wright is very clear,” says spokeswoman Jill Hazelbaker. “He’s not the referee in this race.”

The debate over Wright within the campaign is part of a larger conflict over how negative McCain should go in the final weeks before the vote. In spite of polls showing that McCain has been losing support among swing voters, senior advisers remain split over whether character attacks have benefited their candidate. Last week, McCain scaled back on the attacks, focusing more on his own proposals. That may or may not help him win. But looking back after Nov. 4, McCain will likely argue that no matter what happened, he did the right thing.

© 2008