Tuesday, November 11, 2008

Obama daughters asked to appear on "Hannah Montana" - Reuters

Obama daughters asked to appear on "Hannah Montana" - Reuters
Google News - 4 hours ago
Canada.com*Obama daughters asked to appear on "Hannah Montana"* *Reuters - 4 hours ago* LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - President-elect Barack Obama's two young daughters have been invited to appear on popular ki...
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McCain Owes Sarah Some Straight Talk - Wall Street Journal



Tuesday, November 11, 2008 Opinion Journal


Where's John McCain's honor when we need it?
We'll find out tonight, when the Arizona Republican appears on "The Tonight Show" with Jay Leno. In the week since the election, Mr. McCain's campaign team has leaked some nasty stuff about Sarah Palin. These leaks are personal, and they speak more to the character of Mr. McCain and the leakers than they do to Mrs. Palin. So it will be telling if Mr. McCain stands up for his partner and says how offended he has been by what some of his staffers have done to her.
Two weeks or so before the campaign was over, the first round of McCain campaign rumors alleged that Mrs. Palin was a "whack job," and characterized her clothes-shopping as "hillbillies looting Neiman-Marcus from coast to coast." More recently, she has been alleged to know as little about geography as Barack Obama knows about the number of states in the union (at one point, he put it at 57).
The unmistakable message here has nothing to do with Africa, the North American Free Trade Agreement or bathrobes. It is the campaign team's cry, "It's not our fault. How could we ever win with this woman on the ticket?"
The first point to make here is the most obvious: This is the language of losers.


Associated PressThis whole display calls to mind those embarrassing codas to each episode of "The Apprentice," when the losing team would sit before Donald Trump in the boardroom and then start blaming everyone but themselves for their failures. The apparent eagerness of Team McCain to indulge in this kind of fingerpointing is similarly unprofessional, and it raises an interesting question.
We are asked to believe that Mrs. Palin was not ready for a national campaign. On what evidence from any part of this election are we to conclude that anyone on the McCain campaign team was ready for a national campaign?
Let's stipulate that Mrs. Palin was not perfect. Regardless whose idea the Katie Couric interview was, it went badly and left some damage. The phone call she took from a comedian pretending to be French Prime Minister Nicolas Sarkozy didn't help. Neither did her assignment as campaign attack dog, the traditional role for any vice presidential candidate.
Yet there are other, more salient points. In the treatment of Mrs. Palin by some of the McCain staff, there is the clear whiff of condescension. That's something a sitting American governor might understandably find hard to stomach coming from a bunch of young professional Republicans who have never themselves run for office.
Ultimately, of course, this will all pass. And if Mrs. Palin goes back and continues to do a good job as governor of Alaska, these attacks will likely only reinforce her outside-the-Beltway credentials to rank-and-file Republicans.
Let's remember too that the only time Mr. McCain surged ahead -- in the polls, in the volunteers, in the mojo -- was when he picked Mrs. Palin. Before that he and his staff had been flying solo, and they were losing. When the contest returned to the top of the ticket, as presidential campaigns inevitably do, Mr. McCain and his team drove their lead into the ground.
It wasn't Mrs. Palin who dramatically flew to Washington promising a legislative answer to the most important economic issue of our day -- and then, in the words of a New York Times campaign profile, "came off more like a stymied bystander than a leader who could make a difference."
What Does the GOP Do Next?
Danny Vargas: Diversity is DestinyPaul Ryan: Take Some Political RisksHenry Olsen: What Would Reagan Do?Peter Robinson: Put California in PlayRichard Land: Stay Faithful to Core ValuesMichael Steele: Listen. Adapt. Be Positive.And what does it say when the campaign team of a man who has spent decades in the U.S. Senate cannot agree on (much less present) a coherent answer to why he should be elected president of the United States -- except that he's not Barack Obama?
In Mr. McCain's moving concession speech, he wished "godspeed to the man who was my former opponent and will be my president." He asked his fellow Americans to join him in helping President-elect Obama bridge our differences and build a better, more hopeful nation.
It will be instructive to see whether Mr. McCain will now extend the same level of graciousness to Mrs. Palin that he has to Mr. Obama, by giving a public slapdown to the very public smears emanating from his own campaign team. We have no idea what Mr. McCain will do when he sits down with Mr. Leno tonight.
But there's no doubt what a man of honor would do.
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Obama: No decision on trying Guantanamo detainees - Reuters

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I hope he really thinks about this. If he closes Guantanamo, the terrorists will be shipped to the U.S. to be tried. They can be let go here in this country. I really hope not.--------Vickie
Google News - 1 hour ago
Canada.com*Obama: No decision on trying Guantanamo detainees* *Reuters - 4 hours ago* By Deborah Charles CHICAGO, Nov 10 (Reuters) - US President-elect Barack Obama has made no decision on how try detaine...

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DHL to Cut 9500 US Jobs - Washington Post

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New York Daily News*DHL to Cut 9500 US Jobs* *Washington Post - 31 minutes ago* DHL said it would significantly reduce its air and ground operations in the United States and cut 9500 jobs within the count...

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Circuit City Files for Chapter 11 Protection - Washington Post

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posted by null at Google News - 46 minutes ago
Boston Globe*Circuit City Files for Chapter 11 Protection* *Washington Post - 1 hour ago* Circuit City lost $320 million in the last fiscal year, its second straight year of losses. It announced last week...

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Exclusive - Gov. Palin on 2012: 'Don't Let Me Miss an Open Door' - FOXNews

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BBC News*Exclusive - Gov. Palin on 2012: 'Don't Let Me Miss an Open Door'* *FOXNews - 50 minutes ago* It doesn't appear that Gov. Palin rules out another opportunity at a higher office in 2012. It doesn't...

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Obamas Make Symbolic Visit to Future Home: White House

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/story/2008/11/11/ST2008111100057.html
Obamas Make Symbolic Visit to Future Home: White House

Barack Obama visited the White House yesterday for a long and cordial meeting with the man he will succeed, setting aside two years of withering criticism of President Bush's record to discuss the economy and tour the presidential living quarters.

As hundreds of well-wishers crowded the wrought-iron fence outside, the president-elect and his wife, Michelle, joined Bush and first lady Laura Bush for a traditional visit that was short on substance but long on symbolism. The women hugged, the men shook hands and all four posed for photographers.

Meeting without aides in the Oval Office, Bush and Obama talked primarily about the economy, as Obama pressed his case for rapid passage of a new economic stimulus package and help for the automobile industry, aides said. Then the pair took a stroll through the residence before returning to the West Wing. Their wives embarked on their own tour of the building that will soon be home to the Obamas and their daughters, Malia, 10, and Sasha, 7.

The meeting, while largely ceremonial, highlighted the rift in economic policy between the two men. Obama has pledged to make enactment of a stimulus package his first action as president if Bush balks during his last few weeks in office. Meanwhile, despite pleas from the auto industry and others, Bush aides have linked support for a broader stimulus bill to Democratic backing of free-trade agreements Bush backs.


Their discussion came after two years of sharp, if indirect, skirmishing between Bush and his Democratic successor, whose candidacy was built as a rebuke to the Republican administration. Obama condemned Bush's "failed policies" and said John McCain, the GOP nominee, would represent "another four years" of the unpopular commander in chief. Bush once suggested that Obama was naive on Iraq and said at another point: "He's got a long way to go to be president."

But the two couples were all smiles yesterday, with no evidence of tension. Stephanie Cutter, an Obama spokeswoman, said that the Obamas were "warmly welcomed" and that the Oval Office meeting was "productive and friendly."

"They had a broad discussion about the importance of working together throughout the transition of government in light of the nation's many critical economic and security challenges," she said. "President-elect Obama thanked President Bush for his commitment to a smooth transition, and for his and first lady Laura Bush's gracious hospitality in welcoming the Obamas to the White House."

Bush similarly described the meeting as "good, constructive, relaxed and friendly," according to a summary by Dana Perino, the White House press secretary. The two discussed world and domestic affairs, and Bush showed Obama the presidential office, the Lincoln Bedroom and the bedrooms for the Obamas' daughters, she added.

"The president enjoyed his visit with the president-elect, and he again pledged a smooth transition to the next administration," Perino said.

Obama flew from Chicago in a chartered Boeing Super 80. The president-elect sat in a regular first-class seat for the one-hour and 17-minute trip, walking back to coach briefly to talk to aides.

The couple traveled to the White House in a presidential-style limousine -- another switch from the sport-utility vehicles that were common during the campaign. Michelle Obama also spent time yesterday scouting out schools for the couple's daughters, according to sources familiar with her plans.

Obama's return to Chicago produced some moments of minor drama for accompanying journalists. First, the president-elect went into a private 40-minute meeting at Reagan National Airport with people unknown to them. Then, after boarding his plane, reporters were able to overhear his conversation as he talked on a cellphone.


"I am not going to be spending too much time in Washington over the next several weeks," he said, adding that he did not want to "go lurching so far in one direction" and wanted to come up with "some good, solid, sensible options."

The topic of the remarks was not known, and Obama turned away after a staff member intervened.

Obama is moving rapidly to undo some of Bush's signature initiatives while also tackling the economic crisis and other pressing issues. His transition chief, John D. Podesta, said over the weekend that Obama may use executive orders to ease restrictions on stem cell research, change interrogation policies that Democrats oppose and slow plans for offshore oil drilling. In the longer term, Obama has pledged to end the Iraq war, reverse almost a decade of Bush economic policy and take a dramatically different approach toward health care and social policy.

Obama aides said the transition team has begun to review all of Bush's executive orders and will move forward with decisions once Cabinet secretaries have been chosen. The men did not discuss those issues at the meeting yesterday, Obama aides said.

The meeting focused on the economy, and that is what aides say will be among Obama's top priorities once he moves into the White House on Jan. 20. The president-elect has promised a quick focus on middle-class tax cuts, health care and energy independence.

Bush and Obama have emphasized cordiality since Election Day, focusing on the need for a smooth transition and, in Bush's case, hailing the historic event of Obama becoming the nation's first African American president. Obama spokesman Robert Gibbs called it "a bit of a momentous day" and said that Obama commented on the Oval Office. "I don't know that I would characterize him as awestruck. What he said to me is it's a really nice office," Gibbs said.

Obama had never set foot in the Oval Office before yesterday and has had only a handful of direct interactions with Bush, most recently during a September meeting on the economic crisis. In his book "The Audacity of Hope," Obama describes one of his earliest encounters with Bush, at a 2005 White House event for new lawmakers, when Obama, then a newly elected senator from Illinois, says Bush warned him that people from both parties will start "gunnin' for ya."

"Everybody'll be waiting for you to slip, know what I mean?" Bush said, according to Obama's account. "So watch yourself."

Obama's meeting with Bush was the latest in a 100-year tradition that has produced symbolic moments as political pasts met political futures.

In 2000, Bush met President Bill Clinton one week after the Supreme Court declared the Texas governor the winner of the closest presidential election in U.S. history. At the meeting, the pair discussed foreign challenges and economic good times. Clinton told reporters that his advice was to "get a good team, and do what he thinks is right."

Eight years earlier, it was President George H.W. Bush who was giving Clinton advice. They met for almost two hours, discussing the then-hot spots of Bosnia and Somalia, but, as is the tradition, took no questions from reporters after the meeting.

Stephen Hess, a presidential historian, said the potential for tension between Bush and Obama was great after last week's election. The economic crisis gave Obama the perfect excuse to assert his authority even before Inauguration Day on Jan. 20. But Obama publicly rejected that notion Friday, declaring that the United States has "only one president at a time" and signaling that he will not attend a global economic summit on Saturday.

Bush offered his own olive branch by pledging "complete cooperation" and calling Obama's election "especially uplifting" for a generation of Americans who witnessed the struggle for civil rights.

Hess called yesterday's visit a "symbolic moment" of the change to come. "When he walks out of the White House, he really is the president-elect," he said of Obama, adding: "It's part of the movement of power, the movement of democracy."

Research editor Alice Crites contributed to this report.


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Obama and wife arrive at the White House


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Friday, November 7, 2008

Obamas' pet to be a part of first family tradition

http://ap.google.com/article/ALeqM5hS22fpODkhP0lZaM8VEjsb_3etPgD949NRDG0
Obamas' pet to be a part of first family tradition
By ANN SANNER – 6 hours ago

WASHINGTON (AP) — The White House has been mostly a dog house when it comes to presidential pets. And President-elect Obama intends to keep it that way.

During the presidential campaign, Obama had promised his daughters a pet no matter the outcome of the election. He told them Tuesday night they'd be getting a pooch.

"I love you both so much, and you have earned the new puppy that's coming with us to the White House," Obama told Malia, 10, and Sasha, 7, during his victory speech in Chicago.

As a Washington guessing game, trying to predict what breed of dog the Obamas will select doesn't rank up there with whom the president-elect will pick for his Cabinet, but anticipation about a new first dog is high nonetheless.

Will it be a Labrador racing around the White House grounds? Or something in the lapdog range? Perhaps something in-between. Pound puppy or purebred?

The poodle was the top choice for the Obamas in an American Kennel Club survey of more than 42,000 people, the organization said.

President Bush's two Scottish terriers, Barney and Miss Beazley, and cat, Willie, currently occupy the residence at 1600 Pennsylvania Ave. Barney, who on Thursday bit a reporter's finger as he tried for an "interview," even has his own Web page on the White House Web site and stars in an annual Christmas video.

First pets have long been a tradition with first families. Dogs are among the most popular picks.

"If you want a friend in Washington, get a dog," Harry Truman once said.

George Washington got his dog, Vulcan, from the Marquis de Lafayette, a Revolutionary War hero, as a gift. James Garfield named his dog Veto as an indirect warning to Congress. Abraham Lincoln's beloved dog, Fido, was killed by a knife-wielding drunk.

The Kennedys had Marcaroni the pony. The Clintons had Buddy, a chocolate Lab, and Socks, a cat. President Clinton once told reporters the dog curled up with him when his wife, Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton, wasn't home.

"He sleeps with me when Hillary's not here," the former president said. "He's my true friend. We have a great time."

Had Republican Sen. John McCain been elected on Tuesday, more than 20 pets, mostly fish, could have moved in.

Presidential pets are often attention grabbers in their own right.

The first President Bush's spaniel, Millie, had a best-seller, "Millie's Book, As Dictated to Barbara Bush," that outsold Bush's own memoirs.

Fala, Franklin Roosevelt's Scottish terrier, received more mail than many presidents. A statue of the pooch is also part of his presidential memorial in Washington.

"Ever since President Hoover there have been dogs at the White House who have been major photographic stars," says William Bushong, historian at the White House Historical Society and curator of their exhibit on White House pets.

Pets "are part of painting a whole picture of a president's life," says Bushong, and since we consider pet lovers to be people who are warm and giving, they can be good publicity. For example, Hoover's dog, King Tut, accompanied him in campaign photos, which improved his image with the public.

President Nixon's dog, Checkers, is credited with saving his political career.

In 1952, Nixon defended his candidacy for vice president when a story spread that he had a secret slush fund. In a nationally televised address, Nixon did admit to taking one "gift" — his dog.

"The kids love the dog, and we're going to keep it!" an emotional Nixon said in an outburst known to the day as the Checkers speech.

Freelance writer Linda Lombardi also contributed to this report.

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Thursday, November 6, 2008

The Election, and some Patriotic links below it.

We are a nation that has forgotten about God. I am disappointed in the results, and disappointed in half of the American people's judgement for the first time in my life. We had a national media that didn't report the news, just their liberal views. They were in the pocket for Nobama. Reporters are supposed to be objective, and we can't trust our media in this country anymore.

Already, we have heard from Hugo Chavez, and Russia. Joe Biden said within six months. It was six hours after he won the election. Thank you America for putting our country in danger. Also, have you noticed the dive the stock market has taken? The first time in history that has happened since an election. Thanks again, Americans that voted him in.

You were just worried about your 401K, and the Bailout, weren't you? If Nobama makes the wrong decisions, we could be in some serious trouble. You didn't think about that when you voted in that Chicago Thug, did you? I might add, he didn't have the experience to be President. If he were to get a job with the FBI, he wouldn't pass the background test, yet you voted him in anyway. You knew about his associations. You did it anyway.

Now, we have a far-left President elect, and a Congress that is looney-left. The ones who voted these people in, are responsible. Nobama can do anything he wants to do now. Thanks Americans.

Nancy Pelosi (Speaker of the house, a Democrat) set up the Republicans on the bailout bill. They could have passed it on their own, but they didn't want to be blamed by the voting public for it. They refused to go along with it the first time. Now, every one of the Republicans that voted for the bailout lost their seat, or their seat is in jeopardy. That is so wrong.

Now we have people in our country that are afraid. I suspect that many will begin to appreciate President Bush when he isn't in office anymore. We haven't had a terrorist attack in seven years. From day one, the media was on him. From day one, the Democraps started in on him. Mad about the election of 2000.

I was mad about the bailout and my 401K also. I didn't let it reflect my vote. Bill Clinton, a democrat did it to you, not the Republicans. Yet, the Republicans had to take the wrap for it because it was on their watch.

This election was a great victory for the Black people. That is the only good thing about it.

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