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Axelrod DISMANTLES Rick Davis, Stale GOP Talking Points!

See below for video of Axelrod schooling Rick Davis.

On FOX News Sunday this morning, Axelrod flashed his mastery of the verbal smackdown by dismantling Rick Davis's exhausted talking points in sensei-like fashion. Axelrod controlled the entire segment by subduing interruptions, deflecting lies and reducing Davis's patented GOP drivel to a feeble, incoherent mash-up of tired conspiracy theories.

McRacists Take Out the Noose.

A couple of days ago I asked on this blog and some others, not at all sarcastically, when the McRacists would start lynching Obama in effigy. This is close enough....

McRabbleRouser needs to be forced to publically denounce this.

ABC/WP - O 53-43

53-43 for BHO, according to ABC.  Also - Bush is at 23/73, which is the worst in the history of the poll, Nixon included.  Not bad at all.

My Hair; His Energy Policy

Bush Oil Dancing!

copyright © 2008 Betsy L. Angert.  BeThink.org

"Drill baby, drill," is the now ever-present and popular battle-cry for many Americans.  From Presidential candidates to everyday people, those who wish to consume sweet light crude as they have for a more than a century remind me of my hair, and the current President's energy policy.  I ponder the parallels and invite you to consider . . .

During a recent press conference, as I gazed upon the President of the United States, noticeably aged after years in the Oval Office, I thought of my hair and my history.  His wavy gray locks are not as the strands that fall from my head.  Nor did the diminutive curl that danced on his brow remind me of my own tresses.  The style the Chief Executive donned did not resemble the permanent waves, pompadours, or ponytails I once wore.  As George W. Bush spoke of his energy policy, I pondered.  His approach to petroleum and power were as the methodology I embraced when I colored my hair.

Palin Failin' Alaska's Poor

Crossposted from The Motley Moose

Mudflats has a piece on Sarah Palin's unmitigated failure to do anything for the grinding poverty of Alaska's rural citizens.  Josh, a former teacher in rural Alaska, writes:

We became very close with a family in our village that had a child drown in a steel container of raw sewage. Let me say that again. They had a child drown in a steel container of raw sewage. Their child was simply outside playing and since there is no playground equipment for the kids to play on, they play on anything, often things too dangerous for children. In this case it was something commonly referred to as a "honey bucket." This is a steel container where house sewage is dumped since there is no indoor plumbing.

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OCT 17: Mormons to deliver Prop 8 letters, petition to LDS Church HQ

MORMONS TO DELIVER LETTERS, PETITION OPPOSING PROPOSITION 8

Not all Mormons agree with their church's decision to forcefully support Proposition 8, the constitutional amendment that would eliminate the right to same-sex marriage in California. Now they're speaking out.

Hundreds of Mormons and friends of Mormons have written letters and signed a petition at SigningForSomething.org to oppose the church's inappropriate political posturing in California. The letters and petition will be delivered to church headquarters at 2 p.m. Friday, Oct. 17, after which Mormon dissidents will be available to talk with the media about their reasons for opposing the church's political stance. Copies of the letters and petition will also be available for the press.

Signing For Something supporters will meet at a public park in downtown Salt Lake City across from the Church Office Building. It is on the northeast corner of State Street and North Temple. (This is the southernmost part of Memory Grove Park.)

Redstate Co-Founder Voting McCain? NOPE!

Crossposted at Motley Moose and DailyKos.

Heh.  You read me right.  Ha, ha, ha, ha!  Joshua Trevino, co-founder of the conservative blogging flagship site Redstate can't pull the trigger for the McCain/Palin ticket.

I Cast My First Presidential Ballot For Barack Obama

I've been lurking around MyDD since John Kerry lost in 04, but today I thought I'd introduce myself.  My name's Dan and I'm a Democrat.  And I'm damn proud of it.  I'm a milk drinking, whatever-happens-to-be-running-this-week driving, NASCAR watching, salmon eating, progressive populist liberal.  I'm not sure what exactly that says about me and my politics, but that's the format all the cool kids in the political world are using to describe themselves and others these days, so I thought I'd better start off with that.  If you'd care to indulge my biographical ramblings,  I'll tell y'all a bit more about myself, how I came to vote for Obama today, and why I'm fired up to win this thing.

I grew up in Burlington, Iowa, which sits in the southeast part of the state right on the Mississippi.  My dad has a little farm and through most of my childhood years worked in the Case backhoe plant in town.  He's still a member of the UAW.  I still remember being too young to read, holding up signs and walking the picket line.  Like most hopeless addicts I picked up politics at young age, taking notes on the Lieberman-Cheney debate even though I was only 12 or 13.  (Yeah, I've got it bad.)  I knocked on few doors that year, but I really got my feet wet in '04 when I did some voter contact volunteering for the Kucinich campaign before the caucuses, and then John Kerry in the general.  Kucinich may be a vegan and look more like the Traveling Gnome than JFK, but you know where the man stands and who he's fighting for.  Come to think of it, I'm not sure I even knew what a vegan was before Kucinich ran, but I digress.  While I was disappointed when Kerry lost, I was mainly just more fired up to get Democrats elected in '06.  One thing I'm glad I learned early: Politics isn't about particular candidates.  If your candidate loses in the primaries it's not the end of the world, you just hope that their involvement helped shape the debate and pushed the party in the right direction.  And if your party's candidate loses in the general, you get mad as hell and work twice as hard next time.

Which brings me to the '08 election cycle.  Which started back in '06 if I'm not mistaken... Anyhow I remember watching C-Span in my senior year of high school (05-06) and excitedly calling my mom into the living room every time Barack came on and saying, "That's Barack Obama mom, he's probably gonna be the first black president.  In 2016 or 2012 if we lose in `08."  (Hopefully I'll be half right.)  And every time I'd have to coach my mom through pronouncing his name, but after a while she got it down.  I ended up becoming an early supporter of Edwards.  I liked Obama, but as I said at the time, "Marshmallows and rainbows aren't policy issues."  I thought Obama was too vague and too soft and cautious with his rhetoric and policies on the economy and health care.  He still pisses me off from time to time when he does things like easing back his criticisms on NAFTA and telecom immunity.  But the fact of the matter is I think my fellow Democrats picked the right candidate and a dang good one too.  You don't become president by agreeing with me on every single thing.  You do it by doing what Barack Obama's been doing: Running an effective campaign.  When the economy took a nosedive I was sitting in my living room, annoyed as hell, wondering, "When is he gonna hit McCain with Keating?!"  This is why his campaign staff gets paid the big bucks and I'm still in college.  Rather than being knee jerk they waited for McCain to hit and then used Keating hit back.

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