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Author: Gerardo Orlando (Page 83 of 169)

The Big Oil Ticket

John McCain has paid lip service to being a “green” candidates, despite his numerous votes in that past against alternative energy. Now he’s given up the charade by picking Sarah Palin as his VP.

It’s crazy for the United States to be subsidizing oil and sending billions of dollars overseas for our energy. Of course we can’t solve this overnight with renewable energies, but investment in this area will spur economic development and over time will reduce our dependency on oil.

Tom Friedman takes on McCain:

I am not against a limited expansion of off-shore drilling now. But it is a complete sideshow. By constantly pounding into voters that his energy focus is to “drill, drill, drill,” McCain is diverting attention from what should be one of the central issues in this election: who has the better plan to promote massive innovation around clean power technologies and energy efficiency.

Why? Because renewable energy technologies — what I call “E.T.” — are going to constitute the next great global industry. They will rival and probably surpass “I.T.” — information technology. The country that spawns the most E.T. companies will enjoy more economic power, strategic advantage and rising standards of living. We need to make sure that is America. Big oil and OPEC want to make sure it is not.

Palin’s nomination for vice president and her desire to allow drilling in the Alaskan wilderness “reminded me of a lunch I had three and half years ago with one of the Russian trade attachés,” global trade consultant Edward Goldberg said to me. “After much wine, this gentleman told me that his country was very pleased that the Bush administration wanted to drill in the Alaskan wilderness. In his opinion, the amount of product one could actually derive from there was negligible in terms of needs. However, it signified that the Bush administration was not planning to do anything to create alternative energy, which of course would threaten the economic growth of Russia.”

McCain’s war with the press

For years, John McCain was the darling of the press. Now that some of them are criticizing him and questioning his VP selection, McCain is going ballistic. The fact that he won’t even go on Larry King is just a joke.

Steve Schmidt and the McCain campaign have made the tactical decision to slime the press and get their supporters all riled up over the “liberal media.” Joe Klein is having none of it.

There is a tendency in the media to kick ourselves, cringe and withdraw, when we are criticized. But I hope my colleagues stand strong in this case: it is important for the public to know that Palin raised taxes as governor, supported the Bridge to Nowhere before she opposed it, pursued pork-barrel projects as mayor, tried to ban books at the local library and thinks the war in Iraq is “a task from God.” The attempts by the McCain campaign to bully us into not reporting such things are not only stupidly aggressive, but unprofessional in the extreme.

When attacked, charge sexism

Isn’t it pathetic watching the Republican party making sexism charges? We heard it last year when George W. Bush picked his personal lawyer for the Supreme Court. When anyone questioned the selection of an unqualified woman, the Bush team pulled the sexism card. Now we’re hearing the same thing regarding the legitimate questions surrounding Sarah Palin, a political unknown.

Maureen Dowd chimes in:

Hillary cried sexism to cover up her incompetent management of her campaign, and now Republicans have picked up that trick. But when you use sexism as an across-the-board shield for any legitimate question, you only hurt women. And that’s just another splash of reality.

Flashback to 2004 – Rudy Giuliani gushes over Bush at GOP convention

Rudy Giuliani will be giving the keynote address tonight at thr GOP convention. Based on his embarassing performance four years ago, we can only imagine what he might say this year.

Four years ago, he compared George W. Bush to Chruchill. Perhaps this year he’ll tell us with conviction that Sarah Palin, due to her experience running the Alaska National Guard, is the next Margaret Thatcher.

Four years ago, he said, “Thank God George Bush is our President.” Not stopping there, he added “thank God for Dick Cheney” as well. He recounted saying this to his trusted friend, Bernard Kerik. Yeah, the same guy who got indicted and helped to sink Giuliani’s doomed campaign for president.

Giuliani proved during the primaries that he’s a buffoon. He’s a good speaker, and he’s great at delivering the canned attack lines and simplistic arguments trumped up by the GOP, but he’s lost all credibility. Unfortunately, the press still treats him like a hero, and rarely calls him on his bullshit. I’m sure they’ll be fawning tonight.

Truce between Fox News and Barack Obama?

Did Rupert Murdoch set up a meeting that included Barack Obama and Roger Ailes, President of the Fox News Channel?

Rupert Murdoch brokered a “tentative truce” between his Fox News network and Barack Obama at a secret meeting with the Democratic presidential nominee, accor­ding to the author of a book on the News Corp chairman.

Fox News is seen by the Obama campaign as among its most hostile critics. Mr Obama initially rebuffed efforts by the Kennedy family to secure a meeting with News Corp executives, Michael Wolff writes in the current issue of Vanity Fair.

However, Mr Obama agreed this summer to meet Mr Murdoch and Roger Ailes, president of the Fox News Channel, at the Waldorf-Astoria in New York.

While the senator for Illinois was “deferential” towards Mr Murdoch, who also owns the Wall Street Journal and the New York Post, he “lit into” Mr Ailes, Mr Wolff reports.

“He said that he didn’t want to waste his time talking to Ailes if Fox was just going to continue to abuse him and his wife, that Fox had relentlessly portrayed him as suspicious, foreign, fearsome – just short of a terrorist,” the report states.

Mr Ailes responded that Fox’s coverage might have been more favourable had Mr Obama been more willing to appear on its programmes. The three men agreed upon “a tentative truce”, Mr Wolff writes.

Nick Shapiro, Obama campaign spokesman, said: “They had an open and frank conversation where they got the opportunity to clear the air.”

Fox News has been accused of below-the-belt coverage of Mr Obama this year. One news segment asked whether a fist-bump greeting between Barack and Michelle Obama – a gesture commonly used by American athletes – was a “terrorist fist-jab”. The network also referred to Michelle Obama as Obama’s “baby mama”, slang that refers to a mother who never married her child’s father.

I suspect Murduch is not happy with Fox’s ratings, and the country is shifting away from the GOP with the mess created by the Bush adminsitration. Fox hasn’t been able to derail Obama, so now they don’t want to be completely cut out if Obama wins.

A truce probably makes sense for Obama, but he shouldn’t trust Ailes or Fox. Ailes has a clear agenda – elect Republicans. He’s a legend in the GOP and his loyalties are clear.

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