Friday, September 30, 2011

Is *Every* Hispanic in Alabama an Illegal???

Based on the Yahoo news article below, it would seem so.

This article shows two things. That it is very easy to make illegals move back to Mexico (or wherever they came from). Just enforce the law. (Although, they are probably just moving to California, Texas or Florida where the governments themselves don't intend to enforce our laws.)

And two, that our schools will do their best to ensure that illegals get to stay in school and here in the US.

As I've often said, it's the fault of our own government that we're in this mess. Let a law slide for 40 years or however long its been, and the result is that people who are "given an inch will take a mile."

Yes, you have to be sympathetic to most of these illegals. They've left the hellhole that is Mexico in search of a better life here. But they are bankrupting us - or at least, among one of the many factors that are bankrupting us.

Too bad Warren Buffett won't take some of his billions of dollars and create some kind of jobs factory in Mexico, so those folks won't need to leave that country to come here.

Hispanic students vanish from Alabama schools
BIRMINGHAM, Alabama (AP) — Hispanic students have started vanishing from Alabama public schools in the wake of a court ruling that upheld the state's tough new law cracking down on illegal immigration.

Education officials say scores of immigrant families have withdrawn their children from classes or kept them home this week, afraid that sending the kids to school would draw attention from authorities.

There are no precise statewide numbers. But several districts with large immigrant enrollments — from small towns to large urban districts — reported a sudden exodus of children of Hispanic parents, some of whom told officials they planned to leave the state to avoid trouble with the law, which requires schools to check students' immigration status.

The anxiety has become so intense that the superintendent in one of the state's largest cities, Huntsville, went on a Spanish-language television show Thursday to try to calm widespread worries.

"In the case of this law, our students do not have anything to fear," Casey Wardynski said in halting Spanish. He urged families to send students to class and explained that the state is only trying to compile statistics.

Police, he insisted, were not getting involved in schools.

Victor Palafox graduated from a high school in suburban Birmingham last year and has lived in the United States without documentation since age 6, when his parents brought him and his brother here from Mexico.

"Younger students are watching their lives taken from their hands," said Palafox, whose family is staying put.

In Montgomery County, more than 200 Hispanic students were absent the morning after the judge's Wednesday ruling. A handful withdrew.

In tiny Albertville, 35 students withdrew in one day. And about 20 students in Shelby County, in suburban Birmingham, either withdrew or told teachers they were leaving.

Local and state officials are pleading with immigrant families to keep their children enrolled. The law does not ban anyone from school, they say, and neither students nor parents will be arrested for trying to get an education.

But many Spanish-speaking families aren't waiting around to see what happens.

A school worker in Albertville — a community with a large poultry industry that employs many Hispanic workers — said Friday that many families might leave town over the weekend for other states. About 22 percent of the community's 4,200 students are Hispanic.

"I met a Hispanic mother in the hallway at our community learning center this morning, where enrollment and withdrawal happens. She looked at me with tears in her eyes. I asked, 'Are you leaving?' She said 'Yes,' and hugged me, crying," said the worker, who spoke on condition of anonymity because she was not an authorized spokeswoman.

In Russellville, which has one of the largest immigrant populations in the state because of its poultry plants, overall school attendance was down more than 2 percent after the ruling, and the rate was higher among Hispanic students.

There's "no firm data yet, but several students have related to their teachers that they may be moving soon," said George Harper, who works in the central office.

Schools in Baldwin County, a heavily agricultural and tourist area near the Gulf Coast, and in Decatur in the Tennessee Valley also reported sudden decreases in Hispanic attendance.

The law does not require proof of citizenship to enroll, and it does not apply to any students who were enrolled before Sept. 1. While most students are not affected, school systems are supposed to begin checking the status of first-time enrollees now.

The Obama administration filed court documents Friday announcing its plans to appeal the ruling that upheld the law.

The state has distributed to schools sample letters that can be sent to parents of new students informing them of the law's requirements for either citizenship documents or sworn statements by parents.

In an attempt to ease suspicions that the law may lead to arrests, the letter tells parents immigration information will be used only to gather statistics.

"Rest assured," the letter states, "that it will not be a problem if you are unable or unwilling to provide either of the documents."

Media, Ron Paul Stress "American-Born" for Dead Terrorist

"All terrorism originates in the Middle East."

That's part of sentence Rush said - you'll read it all below in the last paragraph.

All terrorism certainly doesn't originate in the Middle East, but I'd be willing to bet that 90% of it originates with religious fanatics...and of those maybe 70% are Muslim. Their's is the religion with fatwa's, after all.

Media, Ron Paul Stress "American-Born" for Dead Terrorist
That's Rush's headline today for the killing of al-Aulaqi. Although he was born in the USA, he was a Muslim, fighting against his birth country.

But of course - the ACLU. "American citizen Anwar Al-Aulaqi killed without judicial process." Shuddup, ACLU. The US is at war with terrorism, this guy was a terrorist, he died in war.

RUSH: What do you see in every story? "American-born." American-born! Why do you think such a big deal is being made out of that in the Drive-By Media? ... Even as we speak, Barack Hussein Obama -- the floundering president of the United States -- is spiking the ball, dancing in the end zone, in Fort Meyers, Florida, about how he killed al-Aulaqi. Yeah, it's time to get those poll numbers back up. This is Bin Laden II here. Now, the ACLU is not happy that this terrorist has been killed. The headline for the top story at the ACLU website is: "American Citizen Anwar Al-Aulaqi Killed Without Judicial Process." They're upset. The ACLU is upset at Obama taking out an American citizen like this without due process.

BREAK TRANSCRIPT

RUSH: I'm told that I didn't close the loop on my comment that all the news reports are talking about Al-Awlaki being American born. Every news story leads with that fact, that he was American born. Why do you think that is? Let me just ask you Snerdley, why do you think it's such a big deal to the media? No! No! You're sounding like Ron Paul. Snerdley says because Obama killed him without any charges, without any due process. That's what Ron Paul said. Grab audio sound bite 27. This is Manchester, New Hampshire this morning at a campaign event, Ron Paul talking to reporters about the death of the American born Anwar Al-Awlaki. Reporters said, "Overnight Al-Awlaki was killed, confirmed by the US government. What do you think about that? Is that a victory for President Obama?"

PAUL: Al Awlaki was born here. He's an American citizen. He was never tried or charged for any crimes. Nobody knows if he ever killed anybody. We know that he might have been associated with the underwear bomber. But, if the American people accept this blindly and casually, we now have an accepted practice of the president assassinating people who he thinks are bad guys. I think it's sad.

RUSH: No due process. No charges. Never tried. Nobody knows if he ever killed anybody. We know that he might have been associated with the underwear bomber, and the Fort Hood guy. But we don't know, we just wipe him out with a drone, jet missile or what have you. Not cool. The reason they refer to him as American born, isn't this obvious? In the first place, I'm not going to read his bio to you. We only have an hour left here and I don't want to bore you, but there's nothing American about the guy.

If you go through the bio, and I'm really not going to take the time here, just don't doubt me on this. There is and was nothing American about this guy. But the reason they're calling him "American-born" is the message is, "See, see? Not all the terrorists are in the Middle East. Terrorists are right here in America," meaning, "We grow them, too," meaning, "We inspire terrorism. It's not just those people over there. We've got our own terrorists here." It's politically correct. It's an attempt to blunt the notion that all terrorism originates in the Middle East. American-born. There have been a bunch of these American guys and the fact that they were American born, in some cases raised, is always front and center. Fascinating thing


___________
My Schedule of Regular Posts:
*Monday through Friday morning - schedules of President, VP and Secretary of State and her diplomats
*Monday through Friday afternoon - List of topics Limbaugh discussed on his program that day
*Monday through Friday throughout the day - My posts on anything that I feel like talking about. At least one or two a day, sometimes more.
*Saturday through Sunday morning - An addition to my booklist of political books - covering Democrats, Republicans and other interested parties.

Solar Energy - a Scam?

Rush got a call today from someone who pointed out that solar energy is hardly cost effective. Solar panels last only for abaout 20 years, apparently, and they are expensive to build - at least in the good ol' USA.
CALLER: The reason for my call is I've listened to the spin that's coming out of the administration on Solyndra, and I thought I would give you a different take on this from someone who is in this industry. I've been a tech entrepreneur for a long time, been in the semiconductor industry for over 30 years, and I've made investments and been on the board with several start-up solar companies. And the spin that I hear, which is you know they're blaming China for its failure is just so far from the truth. And there's actually a hidden story in this. And it goes to the administration's sort of war on coal and some of the other sources of power, generate power we have in the US.

RUSH: Exactly.

CALLER: And basically the industry has known for over 10 years to make solar panels viable, they need to have the panels cost $1 per watt for the consumer. That's the way that it's competitive and actually gives you a return on investment over a 20-year expected life. And they're nowhere near that. And China's nowhere near that.

RUSH: Of course. There's no business there.

CALLER: Exactly. So the failure of Solyndra was, one, it's a bad business model to begin with, and its incompetent management, which may be criminal.

RUSH: Let me tell you something, the more I learn about it and look at it, I'm beginning to wonder if solar energy was ever the real purpose of this whole thing. Because the more I look at this, this is just a giant slush fund. All of these solar energy loans, companies getting federal loans, they're all made up of Obama bundlers and donors, they're all being paid back for what they donated. They're getting their campaign contributions back under the guise of trying to create some clean energy. They're going bankrupt, going through federal money, and now they're clamming up, not saying anything. Obama in the midst of this keeps handing out more money to his bundlers and donors and the money will come back to him, at least a little of it is in the form of donations and so forth. I smell a giant rat with all of this. I think the last thing anybody was actually trying to do here was create solar panels.

CALLER: You're exactly right. And the other part of this is what they're trying to do to restrict coal and natural gas, because in the US our costs per kilowatt hour right now is about ten cents on an average. If you look at Europe, it's 30 cents. And look at what happened to Europe when the government took away its subsidy. Even at 30 cents a kilowatt hour, you would think that would make panels more competitive. But when they took the subsidies away the whole thing crashed.

RUSH: Precisely. What does that tell you? It means there's no business there. It means there's no market for it.

CALLER: So if you take away our cheap source of power in the United States here, coal and natural gas, and even nuclear, you force the price up, which is what they're trying to do. Because if you can't make the panels any cheaper --

RUSH: No.

CALLER: -- you raise the price of the alternative to the point where people have to expense it.

RUSH: Where is the government grant for fracking? Fracking is horizontal drilling. It's a way of extracting oil. It's causing a boom in the Dakotas. It's causing a boom in a number of places, and it's American. It can provide us enough energy for a century and the regime is fighting it every way and every day that they can. They don't want any part of this, because it's oil. And there's no subsidies. This is not about energy. We've got a genuine case of crony capitalism corruption here that would rival anything that's happened in any previous administration. This is redundant, too. It's happening more and more. More and more solar companies, more and more people, more and more bundlers, donors, contributors to Obama. It just keeps adding up here. As you point, there's no business.

They were manufacturing their solar panels at Solyndra for six bucks and selling them for three, and hoping to make it up on volume while at the same time telling us they couldn't compete with the Chicoms, because the Chicoms are underselling them. How in the world are they ever gonna get any volume sales? Now they won't say a word about it. This whole thing just stinks to high heaven. Add to that the fact that we've got this idealistic theoretical utopian grand plan of clean energy. The recent grants totaling over a billion dollars, one outfit's getting $737 billion, solar energy plant. They're going to create 55 permanent jobs.

It's going to cost in the neighborhood of between 16 and $22 million per permanent job if the business works. And this is said to be advanced thinking, forward thinking. It's the new way. It's clearly not about energy. It's not about green energy. This is just the PR selling point to convince people to support it and not oppose it, go along with it. It's not sustainable. It doesn't make any economic sense. There's no business there. This is the old adage, follow the money. Nine times out of ten, 99 times out of 100 you'll always find the answer to whatever perplexes you, if you're able to follow the money. Thanks for the call out there.

BREAK TRANSCRIPT

RUSH: White House Press Secretary Jay Carney said today that Steven Chu, the Energy Secretary, has Obama's "full confidence." Steven Chu is charged with implementing all of these subsidy programs to the solar energy outfits. This can cut two ways. In sports, when a coach or the manager gets a full vote of confidence from the owner, he's gone. In politics, it can also be the same way: Some energy secretary gets a full vote of confidence from the President, won't be long before he's seeking a job in the private sector.

News: Killing Americans: On uncharted ground in attack

One wonders if the Nobel folk will ask Obama to return his Peace Prize for this.

On the other hand, it shows decisive action against a terrorist - good for Obama!

From Yahoo News: Killing Americans: On uncharted ground in attack
WASHINGTON (AP) — President Barack Obama steered the nation's war machine into uncharted territory Friday when a U.S. drone attacked a convoy in Yemen and killed two American citizens who had become central figures in al-Qaida.

It was believed to be the first instance in which a U.S. citizen was tracked and executed based on secret intelligence and the president's say-so. And it raised major questions about the limitations of presidential power.

Anwar al-Awlaki, the target of the U.S. drone attack, was one of the best-known al-Qaida figures after Osama bin Laden. American intelligence officials had linked him to two nearly catastrophic attacks on U.S.-bound planes, an airliner on Christmas 2009 and cargo planes last year. The second American killed in the drone attack, Samir Kahn, was the editor of Inspire, a slick online magazine aimed at al-Qaida sympathizers in the West.

"Al-Qaida and its affiliates will find no safe haven anywhere in the world," Obama said in announcing al-Awlaki's death. "Working with Yemen and our other allies and partners, we will be determined, we will be deliberate, we will be relentless, we will be resolute in our commitment to destroy terrorist networks that aim to kill Americans."

Republicans and Democrats alike applauded the decision to launch the fatal assault on the convoy in Yemen.

"It's something we had to do," said Rep. Peter King, R-N.Y., chairman of the House Homeland Security Committee. "The president is showing leadership. The president is showing guts."

"It's legal," said Maryland Rep. C.A. Dutch Ruppersberger, the ranking Democrat on the House Intelligence Committee. "It's legitimate and we're taking out someone who has attempted to attack us on numerous occasions. And he was on that list."

That list is the roster of people the White House has authorized the CIA and Pentagon to kill or capture as terrorists. The evidence against them almost always is classified. Targets never know for sure they are on the list, though some surely wouldn't be surprised.

The list has included dozens of names, from little-known mid-level figures in the wilds of Pakistan to bin Laden, who was killed in his compound in a comfortable Pakistani suburb.

Before al-Awlaki, no American had been on the list.

But the legal process that led to his death was set in motion a decade ago. On Sept. 17, 2001, President George W. Bush signed a presidential order authorizing the CIA to hunt down terrorists worldwide. The authority was rooted in his power as commander in chief, leading a nation at war with al-Qaida.

The order made no distinction between foreigners and U.S. citizens. If they posed a "continuing and imminent threat" to the United States, they were eligible to be killed, former intelligence officials said.

The order was reviewed by top lawyers at the White House, CIA and Justice Department. With the ruins of the World Trade Center still smoking, there was little discussion about whether U.S. citizens should have more protection, the officials recalled, speaking on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to discuss the matter. The feeling was that the government needed — and had — broad authority to find and kill terrorists who were trying to strike the U.S.

The CIA first faced the issue in November 2002, when it launched a Predator drone attack in Yemen. An American terror suspect who had fled there, Kamal Derwish, was killed by Hellfire missiles launched on his caravan.

The Bush administration said Derwish wasn't the target. The attack was intended for Yemeni al-Qaida leader Abu Ali al-Harithi. But officials said even then that, if it ever came to it, they had the authority to kill an American.

"I can assure you that no constitutional questions are raised here. There are authorities that the president can give to officials," Condoleezza Rice, Bush's national security adviser, said. "He's well within the balance of accepted practice and the letter of his constitutional authority."

Al-Awlaki had not then emerged as a leading al-Qaida figure. Before the Sept. 11, 2001 terrorist attacks, the New Mexico-born cleric had been a preacher at the northern Virginia mosque attended briefly by two hijackers. He was interviewed but never charged by the FBI.

But at the CIA, the officers in charge of finding targets knew it was only a matter of time before they would set the Predator drone's high-definition sights on an American.

"We knew at some point there would have to be a straight call made on this," one former senior intelligence official said.

It was Obama who ultimately made that call.

After the failed Christmas bombing, the Nigerian suspect told the FBI that he had met with al-Awlaki and said he was instrumental in the plot. Al-Awlaki had also called for attacks on Americans and had attended meetings with senior al-Qaida leaders in Yemen. Al-Awlaki had gone from an inspirational figure to an operational leader, officials said.

In April 2010, the White House added al-Awlaki's name to the kill-or-capture list. Senior administration officials said they reviewed the Bush administration's executive order and discussed the ramifications of putting an American on the list but said it was a short conversation. They concluded that the president had the authority, both under the congressional declaration of war against al-Qaida and international law.

"Anwar al-Awlaki is acting as a regional commander for al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula," White House spokesman Robert Gibbs told reporters in August.

What if the U.S. was wrong, Gibbs was asked, what recourse does a citizen have to save himself? The CIA had misidentified and imprisoned the wrong person before. Gibbs sidestepped the question.

The U.S. has been inconsistent in how it describes al-Awlaki. The Treasury Department called him a leader of al-Qaida in Yemen. FBI Director Robert Mueller called him the leader. On Friday, Obama called him "the leader of external operations," the first time he has been described that way.

Al-Awlaki's family rushed to court to try to stop the government from killing him, saying he had to be afforded the constitutional right to due process.

The idea of killing an American citizen provided critics with fodder for all sorts of comparisons showing the peculiarities of national security law and policy. The government could not listen to al-Awlaki's phone calls without a judge's approval, for instance, but could kill him on the president's say-so. The Obama administration opposed imprisoning terrorist suspects without due process but supported killing them without due process.

"If the Constitution means anything, it surely means that the president does not have unreviewable authority to summarily execute any American whom he concludes is an enemy of the state," ACLU lawyer Ben Wizner said Friday.

U.S. District Judge John Bates refused to intervene in al-Awlaki's case.

"This court recognizes the somewhat unsettling nature of its conclusion — that there are circumstances in which the executive's unilateral decision to kill a U.S. citizen overseas is 'constitutionally committed to the political branches' and judicially unreviewable," Bates wrote. "But this case squarely presents such a circumstance."

Like Derwish years ago, Khan, a North Carolina native, was called collateral damage in the drone attack, not the target.

Al-Awlaki may have been the perfect test case for the government. His sermons in English are posted all over the Internet and his name has been associated with several attempted terrorist attacks. In the intelligence community, many regarded him as a bigger threat than bin Laden because of his ability to inspire Westerners and his focus on attacking the U.S.

But in taking this step, the Obama administration raised questions about whom else the president has the authority to kill. In principle, such an attack could probably not happen inside the United States because the CIA is forbidden from operating here and the military is limited in what operations it can carry out domestically. But civil rights groups have questioned whether the government has opened the door to that possibility.

At the White House, spokesman Jay Carney refused to even acknowledge the government's direct role in killing al-Awlaki. He repeatedly ducked questions about the extent of Obama's authority and said only that al-Awlaki had been an operational leader for al-Qaida.

"Is there going to be any evidence presented?" Carney was asked.

"You know, I don't have anything for you on that," he responded.

King, the Republican lawmaker, said it was necessary that the president to have the authority to act against those at war with the U.S. And it was no secret to the public, he said, that al-Awlaki was at war. But he acknowledged that it set a precedent that could make people uncomfortable.

"There could be a situation where nobody knows the evidence, where you're relying on the government to say what its intelligence is," King said. "With al-Awlaki, it was clear-cut. He made it a clear call."

30 Sept, Fri, Rush Limbaugh Headlines

--Our Two If By Tea Grand Prize Winner!
--Senate Democrats Block Obama's "Pass This Now" Tax Hike Bill Because They Want to Keep Big Oil Subsidies!
--The Regime's Obamacare Strategy
--Collapsing Obama Says the Country "Has Gotten a Little Soft" as CNN Finds "90% of Americans Say Economy Stinks"
--Dodd-Frank "Reform" Leads Banks to Hike Debit Card Fee
--Solyndra Scandal Keeps Percolating
--College Katie, EIB Correspondent?
--The Detroit Lions are For Real, Dallas
--Rush Screens New De Niro Film: Killer Elite
--Media, Ron Paul Stress "American-Born" for Dead Terrorist
--Don't Let the Left Control the Language
--School Kid from Queens, Valerie Jarrett: Rich are Greedy; Government is Good
--Morning Update: The Reformers
Rush's Stack of Stuff
--Obama Says America "had gotten a little soft" Before His Reign
--Perry Heckled Over Illegals Stand
--Senate Dems Block Obama's Jobs Bill



_____
My Schedule of Regular Posts:
*Monday through Friday morning - schedules of President, VP and Secretary of State and her diplomats
*Monday through Friday afternoon - List of topics Limbaugh discussed on his program that day
*Monday through Friday throughout the day - My posts on anything that I feel like talking about. At least one or two a day, sometimes more.
*Saturday through Sunday morning - An addition to my booklist of political books - covering Democrats, Republicans and other interested parties.

30 Sep 2011, Fri, SoS Clinton and Staff Schedule

http://www.state.gov/r/pa/prs/appt/2011/09/174838.htm
SECRETARY HILLARY RODHAM CLINTON
11:30 a.m. Secretary Clinton attends the dedication of the Clinton Presidential Park Bridge and Bill Clark wetlands, in Little Rock, Arkansas.
(OPEN PRESS COVERAGE)

2:00 p.m. Secretary Clinton delivers remarks as part of the Kumpuris Distinguished Lecture Series, at the Clinton Presidential Center in Little Rock, Arkansas.
(OPEN PRESS COVERAGE)

DEPUTY SECRETARY WILLIAM BURNS
1:30 p.m. Deputy Secretary Burns attends a meeting at the White House.
(MEDIA DETERMINED BY WHITE HOUSE)

3:45 p.m. Deputy Secretary Burns meets with Australian Ambassador Kim Beazley, at the Department of State.
(CLOSED PRESS COVERAGE)

DEPUTY SECRETARY THOMAS NIDES
11:00 a.m. Deputy Secretary Nides attends the farewell tribute and reception for Admiral Michael Mullen and the Armed Forces Hail for General Martin Dempsey, at Joint Base Meyer’s Henderson Hall Field in Virginia.
(MEDIA DETERMINED BY DOD)

4:00 p.m. Deputy Secretary Nides meets with Japanese Ambassador Fujisaki, at the Department of State.
(CLOSED PRESS COVERAGE)

4:30 p.m. Deputy Secretary Nides meets with Interior Deputy Secretary David Hayes, at the Department of State.
(CLOSED PRESS COVERAGE)

USAID ADMINISTRATOR RAJIV SHAH
3:30 p.m. Administrator Shah delivers closing remarks at the 11th Annual Global Health Mini-University, at George Washington University.
(MEDIA DETERMINED BY HOST)

USFOR POLITICAL AFFAIRS WENDY SHERMAN
Ambassador Sherman meets with German Ambassador Peter Ammon, at the Department of State.
(CLOSED PRESS COVERAGE)

US FOR ARMS CONTROL AND INTERNATIONAL SECURITY AFFAIRS ELLEN TAUSCHER
11:00 a.m. Under Secretary Tauscher attends the farewell tribute and reception for Admiral Michael Mullen and the Armed Forces Hail for General Martin Dempsey, at Joint Base Meyer’s Henderson Hall Field in Virginia.
(MEDIA DETERMINED BY DOD)

COUNSELOR AND CHIEF OF STAFF CHERYL MILLS
3:30 p.m. Counselor Mills meets with Korean Deputy Chief of Mission Joonkook Hwang, at the Department of State.
(CLOSED PRESS COVERAGE)

AS FOR INTERNATIONAL NARCOTICS AND LAW ENFORCEMENT AFFAIRS WILLIAM BROWNFIELD
11:00 a.m. Assistant Secretary Brownfield attends the farewell tribute and reception for Admiral Michael Mullen and the Armed Forces Hail for General Martin Dempsey, at Joint Base Meyer’s Henderson Hall Field in Virginia.
(MEDIA DETERMINED BY DOD)

AS FOR ECONOMIC, ENERGY AND BUSINESS AFFAIRS JOSE FERNANDEZ
Assistant Secretary Fernandez is on foreign travel in Madrid, Spain through October 2.

AS FOR ARMS CONTROL, VERIFICATION AND COMPLIANCE ROSE GOTTEMOELLER
Assistant Secretary Gottemoeller participates in the Conventional Armed Forces in Europe Treaty Review Conference through September 30 in Vienna, Austria.

COORDINATOR FOR INTERNATIONAL INFORMATION PROGRAMS DAWN MCCALL
Coordinator McCall is on foreign travel to Kyiv and the Crimea, Ukraine and Moscow, Russia through October 5 to co-chair a meeting of the U.S.-Russia Bilateral Presidential Commission Media Subgroup.

AS FOR POLITICAL-MILITARY AFFAIRS ANDREW SHAPIRO
11:00 a.m. Assistant Secretary Shapiro attends the farewell tribute and reception for Admiral Michael Mullen and the Armed Forces Hail for General Martin Dempsey, at Joint Base Meyer’s Henderson Hall Field in Virginia.
(MEDIA DETERMINED BY DOD)

AS FOR PUBLIC DIPLOMACY AND PUBLIC AFFAIRS ANN STOCK
10:00 a.m. Assistant Secretary Stock meets with Deputy Chief of Mission for Embassy Kuala Lumpur Lee McClenny, at the Department of State.
(CLOSED PRESS COVERAGE)

6:30 p.m. Assistant Secretary Stock attends “Something of Splendor: Decorative Arts from the White House,” at the Renwick Gallery in Washington, DC.
(MEDIA DETERMINED BY HOST)

AMBASSADOR-AT-LARGE FOR GLOBAL WOMEN’S ISSUES MELANNE VERVEER
9:00 a.m. Ambassador Verveer meets with Connie Duckworth, founder and President of Arzu, Inc., at the Department of State.
(CLOSED PRESS COVERAGE)

10:00 a.m. Ambassador Verveer meets with Judith Barnett of The Barnett Group, at the Department of State.
(CLOSED PRESS COVERAGE)

11:00 a.m. Ambassador Verveer meets with Dr. Luka Deng, co-founder of Kush, a South Sudanese NGO, at the Department of State.
(CLOSED PRESS COVERAGE)

12:00 p.m. Ambassador Verveer delivers remarks at the Gender Equality Project’s “Women in Business: Benchmarking Success in Achieving Gender Equality,” at the Woodrow Wilson Center.
(MEDIA DETERMINED BY HOST)

DIRECTORY OF POLICY PLANNING JACOB SULLIVAN
4:00 p.m. Director Sullivan meets with Ambassador to Iraq Jeffrey, at the Department of State.
(CLOSED PRESS COVERAGE)

PRESS BRIEFING SCHEDULE
12:30 p.m. Daily Press Briefing.

___________
My Schedule of Regular Posts:
*Monday through Friday morning - schedules of President, VP and Secretary of State and her diplomats
*Monday through Friday afternoon - List of topics Limbaugh discussed on his program that day
*Monday through Friday throughout the day - My posts on anything that I feel like talking about. At least one or two a day, sometimes more.
*Saturday through Sunday morning - An addition to my booklist of political books - covering Democrats, Republicans and other interested parties.

30 Sept 2011, Fri, Pres and VP Schedules

http://www.whitehouse.gov/schedule/president
10:00 am The President and the Vice President receive the Presidential Daily Briefing
Oval Office
Closed Press

11:00 am The President delivers remarks at the "Change of Office" Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff ceremony at Fort Myer. the Vice President also attends
Joint Base Myer-Henderson Hall, Virginia
Open Press

In-Town Travel Pool Gather Time 10:00AM – North Doors of the Palm Room
1:40 pm The President will be interviewed live by Michael Smerconish
Oval Office
Closed Press

8:05 pm The President delivers remarks at a campaign event
Private Residence
Print Pool

http://www.whitehouse.gov/schedule/vice-president
10:00 am The President and the Vice President receive the Presidential Daily Briefing
Oval Office
Closed Press

11:00 am The President delivers remarks at the "Change of Office" Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff ceremony at Fort Myer. the Vice President also attends
Joint Base Myer-Henderson Hall, Virginia
Open Press



___________
My Schedule of Regular Posts:
*Monday through Friday morning - schedules of President, VP and Secretary of State and her diplomats
*Monday through Friday afternoon - List of topics Limbaugh discussed on his program that day
*Monday through Friday throughout the day - My posts on anything that I feel like talking about. At least one or two a day, sometimes more.
*Saturday through Sunday morning - An addition to my booklist of political books - covering Democrats, Republicans and other interested parties.

Thursday, September 29, 2011

Do Minorities Vote For Welfare, Or For Work?

Rush had a caller today who had a message for Hispanic voters.

And I agree with the guy. Why is it that our Hispanic/Latino citizens and legal immigrants don't get the respect they deserve? Because of the illegals who have poured in here and tarnished their image! If there were no illegals - or at least a very small percentag of them, then people wouldn't automatically assume that anyone of Latino or Hispanic appearance was an illegal! (And let us not forget that our own government and business owners are culpable as well. If businesses wouldnt' have been giving these folks jobs for 30 years and if our own government hadn't been looking the other way while they did it.)
CALLER: Oh, I'm just saying to Hispanic voters. If you support continued illegal immigration, you're cutting your own throat.

RUSH: Well, there's no question that's true. I'm not disputing the logic of what you're saying, but I just don't know how high up on the totem pole I'd put the message.

CALLER: Well, we keep on handing out sugar pills to these people. We need to let them know that if you're voting for current members of the congressional Hispanic caucus, you're also cutting your throat, because they just want more people to come in and take your job and we're running out of resources for welfare.

RUSH: No, no, they don't want people coming in here working. The Democrat Party doesn't want illegal immigrants here working. They want them voting. They want them on the welfare rolls. They don't want them working. They're not a threat to anybody with a job in terms of what the Democrat Party intends for them. I don't disagree with the logic of what you're saying at all. It hinges on the belief here that identity politics works, that Hispanics are going to vote in unison in monolithic ways, and they're going to support Hispanics regardless, whether they're rapists, murderers, illegal immigrants, whatever, I don't know that that's necessarily true. I think that's another one of these myths. Now, it is true of some ethnic groups. It could be true of Hispanics, too. I don't know. I'm just not an identity politics guy. This is probably why I'm never, ever going to be a political advisor. I don't even think this way. In terms of advising somebody, a Republican candidate of what to say, that would never cross my mind.

You start calling people stupid, you're opening yourself up for all kinds of -- (interruption) I don't have a message for women voters and I don't have a message for male voters and I don't have a message for Hispanic voters, I don't have a message for black voters. I just have a message for voters. Maybe I make the mistake assuming they're all Americans, and I would speak to them that way. But, look, that's why I do this and not that. I listen to political people talk about what they've got to do to win elections, and I just scratch my head. They're the experts. How they have to go about this particular block of votes and that particular block of votes and the policy they have to have to do that, and I just don't think that way. (interruption) Hmm. Uh-huh. Well, if I went to an Hispanic audience? Yeah, I'd talk to them about American exceptionalism. I'd talk to them about American exceptionalism. You're here, you want to be an American, you want to be an exceptional American, here's what we're all about, here's how you do it. I'd give them a little American history.

29 Sept 2011, Thurs, Rush Limbaugh headlines

--A Look at the Headlines Tells Us Just How Bad Things are for Obama
--ABC News Commits Random Act of Journalism on Solyndra
--State-Run Media Hypes Up El Rushbo vs. the Republican Establishment
--The Lessons of Ronald Reagan's Race for Governor in 1966
--Will Tea Party Vote for Mitt?
--Forehead: Data is Bad for Bamster
--Mayor Doomberg: Government's Highest Duty is to Control Your Diet
--The Battle for Hispanic Voters
--Why Aren't They Begging Rubio?
--Morning Update: Real Life
Rush's Stack of Stuff
--Dems Spin Gov's Call to Suspend Elections
--Solar Scandal
--Perry Backs off "Heartless" Insult
--EU Eyes Frau Merkel for Bailout

29 Sept, 2011, Thu, SoS Clinton and Staff Schedule

http://www.state.gov/r/pa/prs/appt/2011/09/174563.htm
SECRETARY HILLARY RODHAM CLINTON
11:15 a.m. Secretary Clinton holds a bilateral meeting with Kuwaiti Prime Minister Nasser al Sabah, at the Georgetown Four Seasons in Washington, DC.
(POOLED CAMERA SPRAY)

12:30 p.m. Secretary Clinton holds a bilateral meeting with Uzbek Foreign Minister Elyor Ganiev, at the Department of State.
(CAMERA SPRAY PRECEDING BILATERAL MEETING)

1:30 p.m. Secretary Clinton meets with President Obama at the White House.
(MEDIA DETERMINED BY WHITE HOUSE)

2:15 p.m. Secretary Clinton holds a bilateral meeting with Nigerian Foreign Minister Olugbenga Ashiru, at the Department of State.
(JOINT PRESS AVAILABILITY FOLLOWING BILATERAL MEETING AT APPROXIMATELY 2:50 P.M.)

3:50 p.m. Secretary Clinton attends a meeting at the White House.
(MEDIA DETERMINED BY WHITE HOUSE)

5:00 p.m. Secretary Clinton holds a swearing-in ceremony for Assistant Secretary for Legislative Affairs Dave Adams, at the Department of State.
(CLOSED PRESS COVERAGE)

DEPUTY SECRETARY WILLIAM BURNS
10:30 a.m. Deputy Secretary Burns meets with Ambassador to Iraq James Jeffrey, at the Department of State.
(CLOSED PRESS COVERAGE)

11:00 a.m. Deputy Secretary Burns meets with Ambassador Derek Mitchell, Special Representative and Policy Coordinator for Burma, at the Department of State.
(CLOSED PRESS COVERAGE)

12:00 p.m. Deputy Secretary Burns meets with Egyptian Foreign Minister Mohammed Amr, in Washington, DC.
(CLOSED PRESS COVERAGE)

US FOR ECONOMIC, ENERGY AND AGRICULTURAL AFFAIRS ROBERT HORMATS
12:00 p.m. Under Secretary Hormats delivers remarks at the Central Asia-Caucasus Institute Silk Road Studies Program, at the John Hopkins University School for Advanced International Studies.
(MEDIA DETERMINED BY HOST)

US FOR DEMOCRACY AND GLOBAL AFFAIRS MARIA OTERO
2:00 p.m. Under Secretary Otero participates in a selection committee meeting for the Department of State’s Achievement in Corporate Excellence awards, at the Department of State.
(CLOSED PRESS COVERAGE)

2:15 p.m. Under Secretary Otero joins Secretary Clinton’s bilateral meeting with Nigerian Foreign Minister Olugbenga Ashiru, at the Department of State.
(JOINT PRESS AVAILABILITY)

US FOR ARMS CONTROL AND INTERNATIONAL SECURITY AFFAIRS ELLEN TAUSCHER
9:00 a.m. Under Secretary Tauscher meets with General James Cartwright, at the Department of State.
(CLOSED PRESS COVERAGE)

10:30 a.m. Under Secretary Tauscher delivers remarks to students studying non-proliferation issues, at the U.S. Institute of Peace.
(CLOSED PRESS COVERAGE)

2:30 p.m. Under Secretary Tauscher meets with Graham Allison of the Harvard University Kennedy School of Government, at the Department of State.
(CLOSED PRESS COVERAGE)

AS FOR SOUTH AND CENTRAL ASIAN AFFAIRS ROBERT BLAKE
12:30 p.m. Assistant Secretary Blake joins Secretary Clinton’s bilateral meeting with Uzbek Foreign Minister Elyor Ganiev, at the Department of State.
(CAMERA SPRAY)

2:00 p.m. Assistant Secretary Blake participates in the U.S.-Tajikistan Annual Bilateral Consultations Six-Month Review, at the Department of State.
(CLOSED PRESS COVERAGE)

AS FOR INTERNATIONAL NARCOTICS AND LAW ENFORCEMENT AFFAIRS WILLIAM BROWNFIELD
4:45 p.m. Assistant Secretary Brownfield meets with Lieutenant General Charles H. Jacoby, Jr., Commander of the North American Aerospace Defense Command and U.S. Northern Command, at the Department of State.
(CLOSED PRESS COVERAGE)

5:00 p.m. Assistant Secretary Brownfield attends the swearing-in ceremony for Assistant Secretary for Legislative Affairs Dave Adams, at the Department of State.
(CLOSED PRESS COVERAGE)

AS FOR EAST ASIAN AND PACIFIC AFFAIRS KURT CAMPBELL
10:00 a.m. Assistant Secretary Campbell delivers opening remarks at the 20th Pacific Economic Cooperation Council General Meeting, at the Madison Hotel in Washington, DC.
(MEDIA DETERMINED BY HOST)

AS FOR ECONOMIC, ENERGY AND BUSINESS AFFAIRS JOSE FERNANDEZ
Assistant Secretary Fernandez is on foreign travel in Madrid, Spain through October 2.

AS FOR ARMS CONTROL, VERIFICATION AND COMPLIANCE ROSE GOTTEMOELLER
Assistant Secretary Gottemoeller participates in the Conventional Armed Forces in Europe Treaty Review Conference through September 30 in Vienna, Austria. Click here for more information.

AS FOR OCEANS AND INTERNATIONAL ENVIRONMENTAL AND SCIENTIFIC AFFAIRS KERRI-ANN JONES
Assistant Secretary Jones conducts public outreach related to the Keystone XL pipeline project in Atkinson, Nebraska.

COORDINATOR FOR INTERNATIONAL INFORMATION PROGRAMS DAWN MCCALL
Coordinator McCall is on foreign travel to Kyiv and the Crimea, Ukraine and Moscow, Russia through October 5 to co-chair a meeting of the U.S.-Russia Bilateral Presidential Commission Media Subgroup. Click here for more information.

AS FOR DEMOCRACY, HUMAN RIGHTS AND LABOR MICHAEL POSNER
12:00 p.m. Assistant Secretary Posner and Special Representative and Policy Coordinator for Burma Mitchell meet with Burmese Foreign Minister Wunna Maung Lwin, at the Department of State.
(CLOSED PRESS COVERAGE)

AS FOR PUBLIC DIPLOMACY AND PUBLIC AFFAIRS ANN STOCK
9:00 a.m. Assistant Secretary Stock delivers remarks via digital video conference to public affairs foreign service officers serving in the African Affairs Bureau who are meeting at the Department of State.
(CLOSED PRESS COVERAGE)

2:00 p.m. Assistant Secretary Stock attends a selection committee meeting for the Department of State’s Achievement in Corporate Excellence awards, at the Department of State.
(CLOSED PRESS COVERAGE)

5:00 p.m. Assistant Secretary Stock attends the swearing-in ceremony for Assistant Secretary for Legislative Affairs Dave Adams, at the Department of State.
(MEDIA DETERMINED BY HOST)

AMBASSADOR-AT-LARGE AND GLOBAL AIDS COORDINATOR ERIC GOOSBY
1:30 p.m. Ambassador Goosby participates in a Global Health Initiative Operations Committee Meeting, in Washington, DC.
(CLOSED PRESS COVERAGE)

DIRECTORY OF POLICY PLANNING JACOB SULLIVAN
10:30 a.m. Director Sullivan hosts a roundtable discussion with General James Cartwright and the staff of the Office of Policy Planning, at the Department of State.
(CLOSED PRESS COVERAGE)

3:45 p.m. Director Sullivan delivers remarks to the conference of deputy chiefs of missions serving in the African Affairs Bureau, at the Department of State.
(CLOSED PRESS COVERAGE)

PRESS BRIEFING SCHEDULE
12:45 p.m. Daily Press Briefing.

29 Sept, 2011, Thurs, Pres and VP Schedules

http://www.whitehouse.gov/schedule/president
9:30 am The President receives the Presidential Daily Briefing
Oval Office
Closed Press

10:00 am The President meets with senior advisors
Oval Office
Closed Press

10:30 am The President meets with Secretary of the Treasury Geithner
Oval Office
Closed Press

11:20 am The President participates in regional interviews on the need for Congress to pass the American Jobs Act now to put more people back to work and more money in the pockets of working Americans
Diplomatic Room
Closed Press

1:30 pm The President meets with Secretary of State Clinton
Oval Office
Closed Press

http://www.whitehouse.gov/schedule/vice-president
11:45 am The Vice President delivers remarks to highlight how the American Jobs Act would keep first responders on the job
Alexandria Police Department in Alexandria, Virginia | Show Details
Through the American Jobs Act, $5 billion would support the hiring and retention of public safety personnel. By supporting such jobs, the proposed investments aim to keep communities safe from crime and able to maintain critical emergency response capabilities.
Open Press

2:00 pm The Vice President meets with Prime Minister Al-Sabah of Kuwait
Roosevelt Room
Pool Spray at the Top

_____________
My Schedule of Regular Posts:
*Monday through Friday morning - schedules of President, VP and Secretary of State and her diplomats
*Monday through Friday afternoon - List of topics Limbaugh discussed on his program that day
*Monday through Friday throughout the day - My posts on anything that I feel like talking about. At least one or two a day, sometimes more.
*Saturday through Sunday morning - An addition to my booklist of political books - covering Democrats, Republicans and other interested parties.

Wednesday, September 28, 2011

Who is Tina Brown?

Rush quoted Tina Brown today - saying that Obama wasn't ready to be President.

Who is Tina Brown.

Tina Brown, Lady Evans, CBE (born Christina Hambley Brown; November 21, 1953), is a journalist, magazine editor, columnist, talk-show host and author of The Diana Chronicles, a biography of Diana, Princess of Wales. Born a British citizen, she took United States citizenship in 2005 after emigrating in 1984 to edit Vanity Fair. Having been editor-in-chief of Tatler magazine at only 25 years of age, she rose to prominence in the American media industry as the editor of Vanity Fair from 1984 to 1992 and of The New Yorker from 1992 to 1998.

In 2000 she was appointed a CBE (Commander of the Order of the British Empire) for her services to overseas journalism, and in 2007 was inducted into the Magazine Editors' Hall of Fame. As an editor, she has also been honored with four George Polk Awards, five Overseas Press Club awards, and ten National Magazine Awards. In October 2008 she partnered Barry Diller, chairman of IAC/InterActiveCorp to found and edit The Daily Beast. Two years later, in November 2010, The Daily Beast announced that it will merge with the American weekly news magazine Newsweek in a joint venture to form The Newsweek Daily Beast Company. Brown will serve as Editor-in-Chief of both publications.

Personal life
Early life

Tina Brown was born in Maidenhead, and she and her elder brother, Christopher Hambley Brown (who became a movie producer) grew up in Little Marlow, in Buckinghamshire, a Thames village in the countryside west of London. Her father, George Hambley Brown, was a prominent figure in the British film industry. He produced the first Agatha Christie films, starring Margaret Rutherford as Miss Marple. His other films included The Chiltern Hundreds (1949); Hotel Sahara (1951), starring Yvonne De Carlo; Guns at Batasi (1964), starring Richard Attenborough and Mia Farrow.

In 1939, he had an early marriage to the actress Maureen O'Hara; according to O'Hara, it was never consummated owing to her parents' intervention, and it was annulled. George later met and married Brown's mother, (1948), Bettina Iris Mary Kohr, who was an assistant to Laurence Olivier. In her later years, Bettina wrote for an English-language magazine for expatriates in Spain where she and her husband lived in retirement until moving to New York in the early eighties to be with their daughter and grandchildren.

School
In Brown's own words she was considered "an extremely subversive influence" as a child, resulting in her expulsion from three boarding schools. Offences included organising a demonstration to protest against the school's policy of allowing a change of underwear only three times a week, referring to her headmistress' bosoms as "unidentified flying objects" in a journal entry, and writing a play about her school being blown up and a public bathroom being erected in its place.

University
Brown entered Oxford university at the age of 17. She studied at St. Anne's College, and graduated with a BA in English Literature. As an undergraduate, she wrote for Isis, the university's literary magazine, to which she contributed interviews with the columnist Auberon Waugh and the actor Dudley Moore. Brown's sharp, witty prose garnered her publication in The New Statesman while she was still an undergraduate at Oxford. Her friendship with Waugh served as a boost to her writing career, as he used his influence to get attention drawn to her ability. Later, she went on to date the writer Martin Amis.

While still at Oxford, she won the Sunday Times National Student Drama Award for her one-act play Under the Bamboo Tree. A subsequent play, Happy Yellow, in 1977 was mounted at the London fringe Bush Theatre and later performed at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art.

Relationship
In 1973, the literary agent Pat Kavanagh introduced Brown's writings to Harold Evans, editor of The Sunday Times, and in 1974 she was given freelance assignments in the UK by Ian Jack, the paper's features editor, and in the US by its color magazine edited by Godfrey Smith. When a relationship developed between Brown and Evans, she resigned to write for the rival The Sunday Telegraph. Evans divorced his wife in 1978 and on August 20, 1981 Evans and Brown were married at Grey Gardens, the East Hampton, New York, home of then The Washington Post executive editor Ben Bradlee and Sally Quinn. Brown lives in New York City with Sir Harold Evans and their two children, a son, George born in 1986 and a daughter, Isabel, born in 1990.

Career
Early work

After graduating, while doing freelance reporting, Brown was invited to write a weekly column by the literary humour magazine, Punch. These articles and her freelance contributions to The Sunday Times and The Sunday Telegraph earned her the Catherine Pakenham Award for the best journalist under 25. Some of the writings from this era formed part of her first collection Loose Talk, published by Michael Joseph.

In 1979 at the age of 25 Brown was invited to edit the tiny, almost extinct society magazine Tatler by its new owner, the Australian real estate millionaire Gary Bogard and transformed it into a modern glossy magazine with covers by celebrated photographers like Norman Parkinson, Helmut Newton, and David Bailey, and fashion by Michael Roberts.

Tatler featured writers from Brown's eclectic circle including Julian Barnes, Dennis Potter, Auberon Waugh, Georgina Howell and Nicholas Coleridge (who today is the managing director of Conde Nast UK). Brown herself wrote in every issue, contributing irreverent surveys of the upper classes. She travelled through Scotland to portray the owners' stately homes.

She also wrote short satirical profiles of eligible London bachelors under the pen-name Rosie Boot. Tatler led the coverage of the rise of Lady Di and became the go-to magazine for information about Diana's world. She joined NBC's Tom Brokaw in running commentary for The Today Show on the royal wedding. Tatler increased its sale from 10,000 to 40,000 and was named magazine of the year in the industry awards of 1978. In 1982 when S. I. ("Si") Newhouse Jr., owner of Condé Nast Publications, bought Tatler Brown resigned to become a full-time writer again. The break didn't last long and Tina was lured back to Conde Nast.

Vanity Fair
In 1983 Brown was brought to New York by Newhouse to advise on Vanity Fair, a title that he had resurrected earlier that year. (Vanity Fair had previously ceased publication in 1936) Edited first by Richard Locke and then by Leo Lerman, it was dying with an unviable circulation of 200,000 and 12 pages of advertising. She stayed on as a contributing editor for a brief time, and then was named editor-in-chief on January 1, 1984. She recalls that upon taking over the magazine she found it to be "pretentious, humourless. It wasn't too clever, it was just dull."

The first contract writer she hired was not a writer but a movie producer whom she met at a dinner party hosted by the writer Marie Brenner. The producer told her he was going to California for the trial of the strangler of his daughter. As solace, Brown suggested for him to keep a diary and his report (headlined Justice) proved the launch of the long magazine career of Dominick Dunne.

Early stories such as Justice and livelier covers brightened the prospects of the magazine. In addition, Brown signed up among others Marie Brenner, Gail Sheehy, Jesse Kornbluth, T.D. Allman, Lynn Herschberg, James Kaplan, Peter J. Boyer, John Richardson, James Atlas, Alex Shoumatoff and Ben Brantley. The magazine became a mix of celebrity and serious foreign and domestic reporting. Brown persuaded the novelist William Styron to write about his depression under the title Darkness Visible, which subsequently became a best-selling nonfiction book. At the same time Brown formed fruitful relationships with photographers Annie Leibovitz, Harry Benson, Herb Ritts, and Helmut Newton. Annie Liebovitz's portrayal of Jerry Hall, Diane Keaton, Whoopi Goldberg and others came to define Vanity Fair. Its most famous cover was August 1991's of a naked and pregnant Demi Moore.

Three stories put Vanity Fair on the map: Harry Benson's cover shoot of Ronald and Nancy Reagan dancing in the White House; Helmut Newton's notorious portrait of accused murderer Claus von Bulow in his leathers with his mistress Andrea Reynolds with reporting by Dominick Dunne, and Brown's own cover story on Princess Diana in October 1985 entitled The Mouse that Roared. It broke the news of the fracture in the marriage of the Prince and Princess of Wales. These three stories from June to October 1985 saved the magazine after a year when rumors were rife that it was to be folded into The New Yorker just acquired by S.I. Newhouse.

Thereafter Vanity Fair became a tremendous editorial and commercial success. Sales rose from 200,000 to 1.2 million. In 1988 she was named Magazine Editor of the Year by Advertising Age magazine. Advertising topped 1,440 pages in 1991 and with circulation revenues, especially from profitable single copy sales at $20 million, selling some 55 percent of copies on the newsstand, well above the industry average sell through of 42 percent.

Despite this success, occasional references later appeared to Vanity Fair losing money. Professor Jeffrey Pfeffer who suggested as much in his book Power: Why Some People Have It - And Others Don’t was quickly rebutted by Bernard Leser, president of Conde Nast USA during Brown’s tenure. In a letter to the editor of the Evening Standard, Leser stated Pfeffer’s claim was “absolutely false” and affirmed that they had indeed earned “a very healthy profit.” Leo Scullin, an independent magazine consultant, called it a "successful launch of a franchise." Under Brown's editorship Vanity Fair won four National Magazine Awards, including a 1989 award for General Excellence.

The New Yorker
In 1992, Brown accepted the company's invitation to become editor of The New Yorker, the fourth in its 73 year history and the first female to hold the position having been preceded by Harold Ross, William Shawn and Robert Gottlieb. She has related in speeches that before taking over, she immersed herself in vintage New Yorkers, reading the issues produced by founding editor Harold Ross. "There was an irreverence, a lightness of touch as well as a literary voice that had been obscured in later years when the magazine became more celebrated and stuffy." She added: "Rekindling that DNA became my passion."

Anxieties that Brown might change the identity of The New Yorker as a cultural institution prompted a number of resignations. Of them George Trow, who had been with the magazine for almost three decades, accused Brown of "kissing the ass of celebrity" in his resignation letter. (To which Brown reportedly replied "I am distraught at your defection but since you never actually write anything I should say I am notionally distraught.") The departing Jamaica Kincaid described Brown as "a bully" and "Stalin in high heels".

But Brown had the support of some New Yorker stalwarts including John Updike, Roger Angell, Brendan Gill, Lillian Ross, Calvin Tomkins, Janet Malcolm, Harold Brodkey and Philip Hamburger and newer staffers like Adam Gopnik and Nancy Franklin.

During her editorship she let 79 go and engaged 50 new writers and editors including most of whom remain to this day: David Remnick (whom she nominated as her successor), Malcolm Gladwell, Anthony Lane, Jane Mayer, Jeffrey Toobin, Hendrik Hertzberg, Simon Schama, Lawrence Wright, Connie Bruck, John Lahr and editors Pamela McCarthy and Dorothy Wickenden. Brown introduced the concept of special double issues such as New Yorker's first annual fiction issue and the Holiday Season cartoon issue. She also cooperated with Harvard Professor Henry Louis Gates to devote a whole issue to Black in America.

Brown broke the magazine's long standing taboo against treating photography seriously when in 1992 she invited Richard Avedon to be its first staff photographer.

She also approved of controversial covers from a new crop of artists, including Edward Sorel's October 1992 cover that had people buzzing about the meaning of a punk rock passenger sprawled in the backseat of an elegant horse-drawn carriage: was it Brown's self mocking riposte to fears she would downgrade the magazine? A year later a national controversy was provoked by her publication of Art Spiegelman's Valentine's Day cover of a Jewish man and a black woman in an embracing kiss, a comment on the mounting racial tensions between blacks and the ultra-Orthodox Jews in the Crown Heights section of Brooklyn, New York.

During Brown's tenure, the magazine was honored with 4 George Polk Awards, 5 Overseas Press Club Awards, and 10 National Magazine Awards, including a 1995 award for General Excellence, the first in the magazine's history. Newsstand sales rose 145 percent.

The New Yorker's circulation increased to 807,935 for the second half of 1997 up from 658,916 during the corresponding period in 1992. Critics maintained it was hemorrhaging money. Newhouse remained supportive. At the start he said, viewing the magazine under Brown as a start-up (which routinely lose money), "It was practically a new magazine. She added topicality, photography, color. She did what we would have done if we invented the New Yorker from scratch. To do all that was costly. We knew it would be." Under Brown its economic fortunes improved every year. In 1995 losses were about $17 million, in 1996 $14 million, by 1997 they'd been cut back to $11 million.

In 1998, Brown resigned from The New Yorker following an invitation from Harvey and Bob Weinstein of Miramax Films (then owned by the Disney Company) to be the chairman in a new multi-media company they intended to start with a new magazine, a book company and a television show. The Hearst company came in as partners with Miramax.

The departing verdicts after Brown's New Yorker tenure included:

“ She had to move fast. She was decisive...went against the tradition of popular culture unfriendly to the written word. And what was she doing? She was pumping energy and life into a magazine devoted to publishing aesthetically and intellectually demanding writing. She saved the The New Yorker. - Hendrik Hertzberg (editoral director)”

“ The magazine will remain smarter and braver - more open to argument, and incomparably less timid - for her presence here. - Adam Gopnick (writer)[29] ”
“ I assume we can now look forward to Miramax becoming a shallow, celebrity obsessed money loser she made The New Yorker. - Randy Cohen (writer) ”
“ She is the best magazine editor alive. What more can I say? - Michael Kinsley (writer)”

“ The most important thing, I think, has been [Tina Brown's] effort to bring together the intellectual material and the streets. When she was in charge, despite all the complaints from the old New Yorker crowd, one got a much stronger sense of the variousness of American society than one did under the editorship of perhaps the rightfully sainted Mr. Shawn." - Stanley Crouch (writer)[30] ”

Talk Magazine:
Tina Brown next created Talk magazine, a monthly glossy, and appointed Jonathan Burnham and Susan Mercandetti to manage Talk Books. The magazine was due to be launched during a party at the Brooklyn Navy yard in New York City but was banned by the mayor Rudy Giuliani, who did not feel it was an appropriate use of the site.

The star-studded event mixing political leaders, writers and Hollywood, was then moved to Liberty Island, where on August 2, 1999 more than 800 guests - including Madonna, Salman Rushdie, Demi Moore and George Plimpton- arrived by barge for a picnic dinner at the feet of the Statue of Liberty under thousands of Japanese lanterns and a Grucci fireworks display.[32] An interview with Hillary Clinton in its very first issue caused an immediate political sensation when she claimed that the abuse her husband suffered as a child led to his adult philandering.

Despite having achieved a circulation of 670,000 Talk magazine's publication was abruptly halted in January 2002 in the wake of the advertising recession following the September 11, 2001 attacks and the terrorist destruction of the World Trade Center.

It was Brown's first very public failure but she had no regrets about embarking on the project. "My reputation rests on four magazines - three great successes, one that was a great experiment. I don't feel in any way let down. No big career doesn't have one flame out in it and there's nobody more boring than the undefeated."

Talk Miramax Books flourished as a boutique publishing house until it was detached from Miramax in 2005 and made part of Hyperion at Disney. Out of 42 books published during Brown's time, 11 have appeared on the New York Times Best Seller List including Leadership by Rudy Giuliani, Leap of Faith by Queen Noor of Jordan and Madam Secretary by Madeline Albright.

Topic A:
Brown went on to host a series of specials for CNBC. The network followed up by signing her to host a weekly talk show of politics and culture titled Topic [A] With Tina Brown, which debuted on May 4, 2003. The program welcomed guests ranging from political figures, such as the then Prime Minister of the UK, Tony Blair, and Senator John McCain, to celebrities, such as George Clooney and Annette Bening. Topic A struggled to find an audience on Sunday nights airing after a day of infomercials.

It averaged 75,000 viewers in 2005, about the same as The Big Idea with Donny Deutsch (79,000) and John McEnroe's McEnroe (75,000.) On being offered a lucrative deal with tight deadlines to write a book about Princess Diana, Brown resigned, airing her last Topic A interviews on May 29, 2005.

The Diana Chronicles:
Brown's biography of Princess Diana, was published just before the 10th anniversary of her death in June 2007. The Diana Chronicles went straight to the top of the New York Times bestseller list for hardback nonfiction, with two weeks in the number one position.[37] It was received well: John Lanchester in The New Yorker wrote

“ [Tina Brown] tells the story fluently, with engrossing detail on every page, and with the mastery of tone that made her Tatler famous for being popular with the people it was laughing at.”

The New York Times:
“ Tina Brown knows this world better than many who inhabit it...This book resembles the Queen in its calm, credible, quietly chattering view of life inside the Royal hothouse.”

The Wall Street Journal:
“ The book's greatest attraction...is its sheer wealth of detail, by turns salacious, vinegary, depressing, and hilarious...a psychodrama, a morality play, a pageant of recklessness and revenge, of passion and pity, of loneliness and looniness.”

The Daily Beast
On October 6, 2008 Brown had teamed up with Barry Diller to launch The Daily Beast, an online news magazine that mixes original journalism with news aggregation. The website's name comes from the fictional newspaper in Evelyn Waugh's 1938 novel Scoop.

The Daily Beast had an immediate impact with an early sensation when Christopher Buckley, son of William F. Buckley, Jr., chose The Daily Beast rather than the magazine his father founded (National Review), to announce he could not support the Republican candidate in the 2008 presidential election: "Sorry, Dad, I'm voting for Obama."

Early recognition of The Daily Beast came in a series of awards: Online Journalism Award 2009 for Online Commentary/Blogging, Christopher Buckley; OMMA Awards 2009 Winner - Politics; Winner - News; MinOnline Top 21 Social Media Superstars 2009 for Tina Brown;[42] MinOnline 2010 Best of the Web Awards: New Site (co-winner); Webby Award nominations for Best Practices and Best News 2009

In August 2010, Time Magazine's review of the 50 Best Websites of 2010 named The Daily Beast among the top five news and information sites.[45] (The Onion at 16, The Guardian at 17, The Daily Beast at 18, National Geographic at 19, and WikiLeaks at 20)

“ It's just not the caliber of writers flocking to The Daily Beast that is making the site a must-read for any serious news consumer. It's also the willingness of the Beast's editors to slash and sift the day's top headlines so you can quickly digest the most essential elements. As a news site, it's something of a triple threat: a trendsetter, an insightful and analytical clearinghouse of events and ideas, and thanks to the thorough and easy-to-scan Cheat Sheet, quite the time saver. ”

The Daily Beast's writers include Christopher Buckley, Peter Beinhart, Les Gelb, Mart McKinnon, Meghan McCain, John Avlon, Lucinda Franks, Bruce Reidel, Lloyd Grove, Tunku Varadarajan and Resa Aslan.

In a joint venture with Perseus Book Group, The Daily Beast formed a new imprint, Beast Books, that focuses on publishing timely titles of no more than 50,000 words by Daily Beast writers - first as e-books, and then as paperbacks in as little as four months. The first Beast Book was entitled Wingnuts: How the Lunatic Fringe is Hijacking America by John P. Avlon.

Partnering with Diane von Furstenberg, Vital Voices and the UN Foundation in 2010, The Daily Beast brought some of the world's most inspiring female leaders together at the Hudson Theatre in New York City for the first annual Women in the World Summit.

The mission of the three-day summit was to focus on the global challenges facing women, from equal rights and education, to human slavery, literacy and the power of the media and technology to affect change in women's lives. Attendees included Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, Meryl Streep, Leymah Gbowee, Sunitha Krishnan, Madeleine Albright, Edna Adan Ismail, Queen Rania of Jordan, Cherie Blair and Valerie Jarrett.

On November 12, 2010 The Daily Beast and Newsweek announced that they would merge their operations in a joint venture to be owned equally by Sidney Harman and IAC/InterActiveCorp. The new entity is to be called The Newsweek Daily Beast Company with Tina Brown as Editor-in-Chief and Stephen Colvin as CEO.

Democrat Governor Bev Perdue of NC Wasn't Joking: She Wants to Cancel the 2012 Congressional Elections

I'm a bit late posting today, so I'll only make one post. The very interesting comment made by Bev Perdue of North Carolina.
RUSH: So the governor of North Carolina is just joking about canceling the 2012 congressional elections. She was just joking, she was just having some fun out there. That's the spin of the local media in Raleigh, North Carolina. It's also the spin of the Drive-Bys, State-Controlled Media, but it's not true. We have the audio of Bev Perdue suggesting the elections be canceled and she's not joking, as you will hear, and it's quite interesting. The Democrats, the more they get in trouble, and the more that things unravel, the more they show us who they really are. She's not the first one suggesting we cancel the elections. Peter Orszag, the former budget director of the White House, suggested pretty much the same thing in the New Republic last week. We just got too much democracy going on right now. We need to dial back the democracy so that correct decisions can be made.

What it all adds up to is that the left and the Democrats demonstrate their authoritarian instincts, their statist ideals when times grow very tough, and they are growing very tough.




BREAK TRANSCRIPT

RUSH: Let's start with Beverly Perdue, the governor of North Carolina. This is The Daily Caller website: "As a way to solve the national debt crisis, North Carolina Democratic Gov. Beverly Perdue recommends suspending congressional elections for the next couple of years. 'I think we ought to suspend, perhaps, elections for Congress for two years and just tell them we won’t hold it against them, whatever decisions they make, to just let them help this country recover,' Perdue said at a rotary club event in Cary, NC. 'I really hope that somebody can agree with me on that.' She said she thinks that temporarily halting elections would allow members of Congress to focus on the economy." Now, my friends, they're trying to say now in the aftermath here that she was just joking. We have an excerpt of the actual audio from Governor Perdue at a Rotary Club event in Cary, North Carolina.

PERDUE: I think we ought to suspend, perhaps, elections for Congress for two years and just tell them we won’t hold it against them, whatever decisions they make, to just let them help this country recover. I really hope that someone can agree with me on that.

RUSH: No laughter. No applause, either, but there was no laughter; there's no jocularity there. This effort to say that she was just kidding is gonna fall flat because she wasn't. She was dead serious. Folks, do you remember, I spent a lot of time on a monologue yesterday telling you my opinion just how bad it is for the Democrats and for Obama right now. We had a poll result from The Economist magazine that shows Obama 36% approval, all the other domestic polls show him at 42, 43. I think it's worse than that. I think the White House internal polls show it to be much worse than that.

Stanley Greenberg, and he's a Democrat Clinton pollster, works with Carville, and he's got polling data out, it is not pretty. It's in the National Journal. "One of the Democratic party’s leading pollsters released a survey of 60 Republican-held battleground districts today." Battleground district is one that's up for grabs. A battleground district means that Republicans hold the seat but they could lose it, it's in contention. "A survey of 60 Republican-held battleground districts today painting an ominous picture for Congressional Democrats in 2012. The poll shows Democratic House candidates faring worse than they did in the 2010 midterms, being dragged down by an unpopular president who would lose to both Texas Gov. Rick Perry and Mitt Romney."

And the story goes on to say, "Instead of an overall anti-incumbent sentiment impacting members of both parties, voters are taking out more of their anger on Democrats. When voters were asked whether they’re supporting the Republican incumbent or a Democratic candidate, 50 percent preferred the Republican and just 41 percent backed the Democrat." Pete Wehner wrote about this, and he said, "[H]ere's the really ominous news for Democrats: Voters in these districts said they were more supportive of Republicans than they were during the 2010 midterms," two years ago, "when 48 percent said they backed the Republican candidate and 42 percent said they backed the Democrat. (Republicans won 55 percent of the overall vote in these 60 battleground districts, while Democrats took 43 percent.)

"In 2010, Republicans netted 63 House seats -- their best showing since 1948," even better than it was in 1994. So it's looking bad. The Democrat pollsters are admitting it's looking bad, and everybody on the Democrat side knows how bad it's looking. They're doing their best to cover it up; they're doing their best to soft sell it. Obama has lost everybody that voted for him. He's lost the independents. He's lost the base! That's why all this class envy, class warfare rhetoric is going on. He's trying to get his base back. So Bev Perdue comes along in the midst of all this and says, "Why don't we just cancel these elections?" Now, I don't know much about Beverly Perdue, but I'll tell you this: She can't be too bright.

28 Sept 2011, Wed, Rush Limbaugh headlines

--Democrat Governor Bev Perdue of NC Wasn't Joking: She Wants to Cancel the 2012 Congressional Elections
--Tina Brown: Obama Wasn't Ready
--Analysis of Chris Christie's Speech
--Callers Weigh In on Christie
--Will Somebody Please Tell Me How We Compromise with Socialists?
--How Reagan Attracted Independents
--Where We Stand on Obamacare
--Morning Update: True Lies
Rush's Stack of Stuff
--Chris Christie Wows 'Em at Reagan Library
--Europe Rips "Stupid" Obama Plans
--GOP Primary Shuffle with Florida Moving Ahead?

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My Schedule of Regular Posts:
*Monday through Friday morning - schedules of President, VP and Secretary of State and her diplomats
*Monday through Friday afternoon - List of topics Limbaugh discussed on his program that day
*Monday through Friday throughout the day - My posts on anything that I feel like talking about. At least one or two a day, sometimes more.
*Saturday through Sunday morning - An addition to my booklist of political books - covering Democrats, Republicans and other interested parties.

Republicans Trashed For Not Voting on Jobs BIll, But Dems Are on Vacation!

President Obama has been making various speeches calling for Republicans to pass his Jobs Bill, making it seem that Republicans were the ones standing in the way.

But as some media have reported, some Democrats have had issues with it too.

But more than that...Congress is going on a week's vacation - and when they come back the Democrats are going to work on some lil ol' problem with China first before they vote on Obama's jobs bill.

I would think that would not only infuriate Obama but also the whole jobless portion of the US populace. If this jobs bill is such a panacea, and if 16% or more of people are out of work, what right does Congress have to take yet another vacation before they vote on that bill?

Senate won't tackle Obama jobs plan right away
WASHINGTON — Despite early and regular pleas from the White House, Senate Democrats say they will not move immediately to take up President Obama's jobs bill when they return next week from a short recess.

"We'll get to that," Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., said Monday night when asked if the likely passage of a temporary spending bill to keep the government functioning meant the Senate could now consider the president's package.

Given Obama's message of urgency, Reid's position has Republicans chortling that it is congressional Democrats who appear to be standing in the way of a quick vote on the president's plan.

Reid, who is sponsoring the package in the Senate, said Monday the Senate will first take up debate next week on a bill to punish China and other nations for currency manipulation.

"I don't think there's anything more important for a jobs measure than China trade, and that's what we're going to work on next week," he said.

Work on the Chinese measure has been on the back burner for months, and it has strong bipartisan support in the Senate, where leaders see it as a jobs-protection bill that has a good chance to pass.

The measure has been particularly championed by Democratic senators whose states have been hit hard by outsourcing and who will face tough re-election battles next year, including Sens. Sherrod Brown of Ohio and Debbie Stabenow of Michigan.

"We understand that there's conversations going on about the president's jobs bill, which I support, I'm in agreement with," Reid said. "We'll get to that. But let's get some of these things done that we have to get done first."

Consideration of the president's jobs plan, on the other hand, will probably be blocked by Senate Republicans. Once the whole package is put aside, Congress may move to consider pieces of the package such as a payroll tax cut, as Republicans have urged.

A senior Senate Democratic aide insisted the decision to complete the Chinese currency measure first simply means the chamber will take up a bill that is likely to pass before tackling a likely vote of political positioning on the jobs plan.

The aide predicted the Senate will debate the jobs plan sometime next month. The delay, he said, also fulfills a request from the White House that it have time to sell the public on the package before it faces its first congressional vote.

"It was at the White House's request that they be allowed an opportunity for the president to explain the details of the plan to the public," the aide said.








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My Schedule of Regular Posts:
*Monday through Friday morning - schedules of President, VP and Secretary of State and her diplomats
*Monday through Friday afternoon - List of topics Limbaugh discussed on his program that day
*Monday through Friday throughout the day - My posts on anything that I feel like talking about. At least one or two a day, sometimes more.
*Saturday through Sunday morning - An addition to my booklist of political books - covering Democrats, Republicans and other interested parties.

28 Sep 2011, Wed, SoS Clinton and Staff Schedule

http://www.state.gov/r/pa/prs/appt/2011/09/174109.htm
SECRETARY HILLARY RODHAM CLINTON
9:15 a.m. Secretary Clinton meets with the assistant secretaries at the Department of State.
(CLOSED PRESS COVERAGE)

10:15 a.m. Secretary Clinton chairs a Millennium Challenge Corporation (MCC) Board Meeting, at the Department of State.
(CLOSED PRESS COVERAGE)

2:30 p.m. Secretary Clinton holds a bilateral meeting with Egyptian Foreign Minister Mohamed Kamel Amr, at the Department of State.
(JOINT PRESS CONFERENCE AT APPROXIMATELY 3:20 P.M.)

5:15 p.m. Secretary Clinton meets with Secretary of Defense Leon Panetta and National Security Advisor Tom Donilon, at the White House.
(MEDIA DETERMINED BY WHITE HOUSE)

DEPUTY SECRETARY WILLIAM BURNS
10:15 a.m. Deputy Secretary Burns meets with Israeli Ambassador Michael Oren, at the Department of State.
(CLOSED PRESS COVERAGE)

11:30 a.m. Deputy Secretary Burns delivers remarks to the conference of Deputy Chiefs of Mission serving in the African Affairs Bureau, at the Department of State.
(CLOSED PRESS COVERAGE)

6:30 p.m. Deputy Secretary Burns delivers remarks at the 62nd Anniversary of the Founding of the People’s Republic of China Reception, in Washington, DC.
(MEDIA DETERMINED BY HOST)

DEPUTY SECRETARY THOMAS NIDES
10:15 a.m. Deputy Secretary Nides participates in a Millennium Challenge Corporation (MCC) Board Meeting, at the Department of State.
(CLOSED PRESS COVERAGE)

12:00 p.m. Deputy Secretary Nides attends a meeting at the White House.
(MEDIA DETERMINED BY WHITE HOUSE)

4:00 p.m. Deputy Secretary Nides meets with Dr. Charles Morrison of the East West Center, at the Department of State.
(CLOSED PRESS COVERAGE)

USAID ADMINISTRATOR RAJIV SHAH
9:30 a.m. Administrator Shah delivers remarks at the World Vision Pastor Advocacy Summit, at the Eisenhower Executive Office Building.
(CLOSED PRESS COVERAGE)

12:00 p.m. Administrator Shah attends a meeting at the White House.
(MEDIA DETERMINED BY WHITE HOUSE)

2:30 p.m. Administrator Shah meets with Representative Chris Van Hollen, at the Longworth House Office Building.
(CLOSED PRESS COVERAGE)

4:30 p.m. Administrator Shah delivers remarks at the Global Campaign for Microbicides (GCM) event on “Collaborations that Change Lives: How governments, donors and advocates are working together to protect women from HIV,” at GCM’s Washington, DC offices.
(MEDIA DETERMINED BY HOST)

UNDER SECRETARY FOR ECONOMIC, ENERGY AND AGRICULTURAL AFFAIRS ROBERT HORMATS
10:00 a.m. Under Secretary Hormats meets with former Senator Timothy E. Wirth, President of UN Foundation, at the Department of State.
(CLOSED PRESS COVERAGE)

11:30 a.m. Under Secretary Hormats attends a meeting at the White House.
(MEDIA DETERMINED BY WHITE HOUSE)

3:00 p.m. Under Secretary Hormats meets with Ambassador to Morocco Samuel Kaplan, at the Department of State.
(CLOSED PRESS COVERAGE)

4:15 p.m. Under Secretary Hormats speaks with Washington State Governor Christine Gregoire.
(CLOSED PRESS COVERAGE)

4:30 p.m. Under Secretary Hormats meets with Luis Alberto Moreno, President of the Inter-American Development Bank, at the Department of State.
(CLOSED PRESS COVERAGE)

UNDER SECRETARY FOR DEMOCRACY AND GLOBAL AFFAIRS MARIA OTERO
11:00 a.m. Under Secretary Otero meets with Ambassador Robin Raphel at the Department of State.
(CLOSED PRESS COVERAGE)

1:00 p.m. Under Secretary Otero delivers remarks on the Open Government Partnership, at American University.
(MEDIA DETERMINED BY HOST)

3:00 p.m. Under Secretary Otero and Assistant Secretary Posner co-host a roundtable discussion on the human rights situation in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) with non-governmental organizations, at the Department of State.
(CLOSED PRESS COVERAGE)

US FOR ARMS CONTROL AND INTERNATIONAL SECURITY AFFAIRS ELLEN TAUSCHER
10:30 a.m. Under Secretary Tauscher meets with Cristian Diaconescu, Vice President of the Romanian Senate, at the Department of State.
(CLOSED PRESS COVERAGE)

12:00 p.m. Under Secretary Tauscher meets with Indian Ambassador Nirupama Rao, at the Department of State.
(CLOSED PRESS COVERAGE)

CHIEF OF PROTOCOL AMBASSADOR CAPRICIA PENAVIC MARSHALL
10:00 a.m. Ambassador Marshall hosts a farewell reception in honor of the Ambassador of the Republic of Austria, Dr. Christian Prosl, at Blair House.
(CLOSED PRESS COVERAGE)

2:00 p.m. Ambassador Marshall hosts a farewell reception in honor of the Ambassador of the Republic of Iraq, Samir Sumaida’ie, at Blair House.
(CLOSED PRESS COVERAGE)

AS FOR AFRICAN AFFAIRS JOHNNIE CARSON
1:00 p.m. Assistant Secretary Carson meets with Burundi President Nkurunziza.
(CLOSED PRESS COVERAGE)

AS FOR ECONOMIC, ENERGY AND BUSINESS AFFAIRS JOSE FERNANDEZ
Assistant Secretary Fernandez is on foreign travel in Madrid, Spain through October 2.

AS FOR ARMS CONTROL, VERIFICATION AND COMPLIANCE ROSE GOTTEMOELLER
Assistant Secretary Gottemoeller participates in the Conventional Armed Forces in Europe Treaty Review Conference through September 30 in Vienna, Austria.

ACTING ASFOR WESTERN HEMISPHERE AFFAIRS ROBERTA JACOBSON
11:30 a.m. Acting Assistant Secretary Jacobson meets with Guatemalan Attorney General Claudia Paz y Paz, at the Department of State.
(CLOSED PRESS COVERAGE)

AS FOR OCEANS AND INTERNATIONAL ENVIRONMENTAL AND SCIENTIFIC AFFAIRS KERRI-ANN JONES
Assistant Secretary Jones engages in public outreach related to the Keystone XL pipeline project in Lincoln, Nebraska.

COORDINATOR FOR INTERNATIONAL INFORMATION PROGRAMS DAWN MCCALL
Coordinator McCall is on foreign travel to Kyiv and the Crimea, Ukraine and Moscow, Russia through October 5 to co-chair a meeting of the U.S.-Russia Bilateral Presidential Commission Media Subgroup.

AS FOR DEMOCRACY, HUMAN RIGHTS AND LABOR MICHAEL POSNER
12:30 p.m. Assistant Secretary Posner attends a working lunch to discuss EU policy in the Middle East, hosted by the Dutch and Danish Ambassadors, at the residence of Dutch Ambassador Renée Jones-Bos.
(CLOSED PRESS COVERAGE)

3:00 p.m. Assistant Secretary Posner and Under Secretary Otero co-host a roundtable discussion on the human rights situation in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) with non-governmental organizations, at the Department of State.
(CLOSED PRESS COVERAGE)

AS FOR POLITICAL-MILITARY AFFAIRS ANDREW SHAPIRO
2:00 p.m. Assistant Secretary Shapiro attends a farewell reception in honor of the Ambassador of the Republic of Iraq, Samir Sumaida’ie, at Blair House.
(CLOSED PRESS COVERAGE)

AS FOR PUBLIC DIPLOMACY AND PUBLIC AFFAIRS ANN STOCK
9:15 a.m. Assistant Secretary Stock delivers remarks to the conference of Deputy Chiefs of Mission serving in the African Affairs Bureau, at the Department of State.
(CLOSED PRESS COVERAGE)

10:00 a.m. Assistant Secretary Stock hosts a farewell reception in honor of the Ambassador of the Republic of Austria, Dr. Christian Prosl, at Blair House.
(CLOSED PRESS COVERAGE)

4:00 pm. Assistant Secretary Stock delivers remarks at a reception for the International Visitor Leadership Program’s “The Spirit of Volunteerism: Celebrating 50 Years of the Peace Corps,” an initiative of the Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs, at the Department of State.
(CLOSED PRESS COVERAGE)

AMBASSADOR-AT-LARGE AND COORDINATOR FOR COUNTERTERRORISM DANIEL BENJAMIN
10:00 a.m. Ambassador Benjamin meets with Joep Wijnands of the Dutch Foreign Ministry and Wim Bargerbos of the Dutch Defense Ministry, at the Department of State.
(CLOSED PRESS COVERAGE)

AMBASSADOR-AT-LARGE AND GLOBAL AIDS COORDINATOR ERIC GOOSBY
3:00 p.m. Ambassador Eric Goosby participates in a Global Health Initiative (GHI) Policy Hearing with the Office of Management and Budget (OMB), at the White House Conference Center.
(OPEN PRESS COVERAGE)

AMBASSADOR-AT-LARGE FOR GLOBAL WOMEN’S ISSUES MELANNE VERVEER
11:00 a.m. Ambassador Verveer meets with Zambian Ambassador Sheila Siwela, at the Department of State.
(CLOSED PRESS COVERAGE)

2:00 p.m. Ambassador Verveer meets with Treasury Under Secretary Lael Brainard on women’s economic empowerment.
(CLOSED PRESS COVERAGE)

PRESS BRIEFING SCHEDULE
12:30 p.m. Daily Press Briefing with Spokesperson Victoria Nuland.

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My Schedule of Regular Posts:
*Monday through Friday morning - schedules of President, VP and Secretary of State and her diplomats
*Monday through Friday afternoon - List of topics Limbaugh discussed on his program that day
*Monday through Friday throughout the day - My posts on anything that I feel like talking about. At least one or two a day, sometimes more.
*Saturday through Sunday morning - An addition to my booklist of political books - covering Democrats, Republicans and other interested parties.

28 Sep 2011, Wed, Pres and VP Schedules

http://www.whitehouse.gov/schedule/complete

11:25 am The President participates in an “Open for Questions” roundtable
Map Room
Press Information
The “Open for Questions” event will be streamed live at whitehouse.gov/live in both English and dubbed into Spanish

12:30 pm The President and the Vice President meet for lunch
Private Dining Room
Closed Press

1:30 pm The President delivers his third annual Back-to-School Speech
Benjamin Banneker Academic High School, DC, Washington
Open Press

In-Town Pool Gather Time 12:45PM – North Doors of the Palm Room
4:30 pm The President and the Vice President meet with Secretary of Defense Panetta
Oval Office
Closed Press

___________
My Schedule of Regular Posts:
*Monday through Friday morning - schedules of President, VP and Secretary of State and her diplomats
*Monday through Friday afternoon - List of topics Limbaugh discussed on his program that day
*Monday through Friday throughout the day - My posts on anything that I feel like talking about. At least one or two a day, sometimes more.
*Saturday through Sunday morning - An addition to my booklist of political books - covering Democrats, Republicans and other interested parties.

Tuesday, September 27, 2011

Who Was Obama Talking to When He Told Blacks to Stop Complain'?

Obama was making a speech to the Congressional Black Caucus when he said his bit about "Stop complainin'.... get out of your bedroom slippers and into your marching shoes and join me."

I assumed that even though he was making his speech to the Congressional Black Caucus - he was actually addressing the entire black community - they are the ones of whom a high percentage are on welfare, a high percentage can't get jobs because they have no job skills and so on.

But according to Maxine Waters, she thought he was telling the Black Caucus to stop their whining and start fighting with him.

And Tavis Smiley was really ticked off about what Obama had said.

Rush shared many soundbytes of this on his show today.
RUSH: All right, bedroom slippers. "Take off the bedroom slippers and put on the marchin' shoes." Last night on CNN's Situation Room, Wolf Blitzer was with Maxine Waters. "I think Obama was complaining. He was talking about Cornel West has been talking about him, as you know -- and at least remarks that you've made, Maxine. Other White House officials have said, 'Why is Maxine Waters complaining so much, doesn't she realize Obama wants to improve the economy, the job situation for everybody?'"

WATERS: Maxine Waters does not complain.

BLITZER: "Everybody."

WATERS: Maxine Waters does two things: Public policy and organizing. I don't go around complaining and so I don't really think he was talking to us or the people in that room.

BLITZER: So you're gonna take off your slippers and you're gonna get out there and march with him?

WATERS: I've never owned a pair of bedroom slippers.

BLITZER: (chuckle)

RUSH: Ohhhh! So Maxine doesn't even have a pair of bedroom slippers, and now she says that Obama just got excited and insulted the Congressional Black Caucus by accident.

WATERS: The President can get to know the Black Caucus a lot better. I think there should be more interaction. I think we should work on strategies together. I think that there's a lot of room for a lot more cooperation. I think he got carried away; he got fired up. He meant to talk about what he wanted to do, but I think he knew that he was talking to hardworking members of the Congressional Black Caucus and civil rights leaders and workers who have been doing this for years who have been marching for years and really understand what it means to march, not people sitting around in bed slippers or house shoes.

and
WATERS: I don't know who the president was talking to. Certainly not the Congressional Black Caucus. We have been working hard. Not only have we been doing the job fairs and the town halls, but we've spent --

RUSH: All right. [Note to Rush - and Glenn Beck and Sean Hannity. This JIP-ing thing (Joining In Progress) just sounds stupid. Stop it!]

WATERS: -- a lot of time --

RUSH: All right.

WATERS: -- documenting --

RUSH: All right.

WATERS: -- the misery and the unemployment --

RUSH: All right.

WATERS: -- and the joblessness.

RUSH: Okay.

WATERS: So he certainly wasn't talking to us.

RUSH: Okay.

WATERS: We didn't go on vacation.

RUSH: All right.

WATERS: We were actually working --

RUSH: Ohhhh.

WATERS: -- during our break.

RUSH: "We didn't go on vacation." I was gonna say, it sounds like Maxine is back on the leash, but with the vacation comment... (interruption) Well, you know, she asked to be "unleashed." She asked her supporters to be unleashed in going after Obama and her supporters unleashed her and she went after Obama and now Obama didn't mean it when he replied. He wasn't talking about her, so she's back on the leash. Last night on the Tavis Smiley show, PBS -- getting ugly out there, folks -- talked to representative Sheila Jackson Lee of "Mars," and during a discussion about Obama's remarks to the Black Congressional Caucasians, Sheila Jackson Lee said...

WATERS: There were words, of course, such as taking off bedroom slippers and marching that I will say to you in the auditorium that night, the audience was on their feet. They were caught up in the idea that here is a captain that is going to right the ship, that he is not gonna allow us to sink -- and the words didn't have the words of dissection or analysis. It was: We're gonna march; we're gonna fight.

RUSH: So Sheila Jackson Lee was inspired by the bedroom slippers comment. The rest of the black community is insulted by it, but she's inspired that... (interruption) Well, I think so. It's as good a guess as anybody else's just what she meant, but it was "We're gonna march; we're gonna fight." So she didn't dissect it; she just dissected it. Well, they didn't dissect it they were so inspired. And now the Congressional Black Caucasians are going on vacation for another week along with everybody else in Congress. "[T]he words didn't have the words of dissection..." We need a translator here, and I don't have time for it. One more: Tavis Smiley responded to her. Tavis, I guess, understood what she said.

And here's Tavis Smiley - really ticked off at Obama.
SMILEY: People were cheering and jumping up and down when they crucified Jesus. So the fact that people are jumping up and down and cheering, don't mean that what's going down is right. Would the president ever say to an audience of our Jewish brothers and sisters concerned about the crisis in the Middle East, "Stop complainin', stop grumblin', stop cryin'"? Would this president ever say to Wall Street, "Stop complainin', stop grumblin', stop cryin'"? [Actually Tavis, he would and did, didn't he?]

Would he ever say to our Hispanic brothers and sisters on immigration and their concerns, "Stop complainin', stop grumblin', stop cryin'"? Did he say to gays and lesbians, "Stop complainin', stop grumblin', stop cryin'"?

SMILEY: How does he get away with saying this to black folk, when he would never form his lips to ever say that to any other constituency?
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My Schedule of Regular Posts:
*Monday through Friday morning - schedules of President, VP and Secretary of State and her diplomats
*Monday through Friday afternoon - List of topics Limbaugh discussed on his program that day
*Monday through Friday throughout the day - My posts on anything that I feel like talking about. At least one or two a day, sometimes more.
*Saturday through Sunday morning - An addition to my booklist of political books - covering Democrats, Republicans and other interested parties.