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Paul Weyrich, religious-right icon, dies

Hillary in high school yearbookPaul Weyrich, called by some the founding father of the religious right, is dead at the age of 66.

America is fortunate that Weyrich was born too late, because what he could have done with the Internet, oh Jesus!

The D.C.-based Weyrich has been out of the mainstream news for years now, but he was a very big deal before and during the Reagan era's Great Leap Backward. In those glory days, he was a combination of cruise director and mailroom supervisor for the religious right, a behind-the-scenes guy who liked to think of himself as a thinker.

Energetic and argumentative, Weyrich was known, especially to himself, as someone who was right about every issue. He spent his whole life networking with others to prove it.

Before everybody went web-mad, Weyrich was exploring every opportunity to fight God's battles electronically. Take a look at my February 1994 story "Passing on the Right: Conservative strategists gear up for the information highway." Miraculously, you can find the long, long ago piece online. (You can tell how old the story is by my incessant use of the phrase "information highway," for which I apologize.)

Writing at the time for the Denver alt weekly Westword, I stumbled upon a coven of religious-right folk having some embryonic satellite broadcasts beamed into their brains by one of Weyrich's creations: an electronic conservative video/TV network.

I talked with Weyrich at some length about his new network — it sounded staggeringly boring and wonky. Here's how I started the piece, which was only slightly less so:

The information highway begins with a sharp right turn just outside Windsor. From the roof of the Windsor Center, a small office building on the edge of this farm town fifty miles north of Denver, your brain will board a parabolic dish paid for by beer prince Jeffrey Coors and travel 23,000 miles above the planet to an orbiting satellite.

An instant later you will beam back down to Earth and the Washington, D.C., studios of National Empowerment Television, the newborn brainchild of former Denver newsman Paul M. Weyrich, who years ago coined the term "Moral Majority" for Jerry Falwell.

Many people will remember Weyrich for his having founded — with millions in beer money from Coors — the Heritage Foundation.

I'll remember him for producing some really bad TV.

Daily Flog: Obama strikes first in stab at replacing Cheney

As the nation's first presidential return cast a favorable omen to Barack Obama — Dixville Notch, New Hampshire, voted for the Democrat 15-6, the first time in 40 years that the country's historically first precinct has gone Democratic — let's not forget about the guy who's being replaced. From his official White House biography:

Throughout his service, Mr. Cheney served with duty, honor, and unwavering leadership, gaining him the respect of the American people during trying military times.

And don't forget the other guy:

President Bush has worked with the Congress to create an ownership society and build a future of security, prosperity, and opportunity for all Americans.

How can we forget?

For news about Cheney's replacement, watch CNN all day if you want, but if you're stuck at your computer all day, you'd be better off with the BBC's "Live Text: US Election Day 2008," which reloads automatically.

My indefatigable colleague Roy Edroso will be hammering at the keyboard all day at Runnin' Scared. Check him out.

Meanwhile, people are being raped and killed in the Congo. And you're late with your mortgage payment. So . . .

NO PARTICULAR ORDER:

Global Research (Canada): 'How McCain Could Win'

Slate: 'The Coming Obama-Press War: It's inevitable' (Jack Shafer)

Wall Street Journal: 'Homeowners Wait as Relief Plan Drags'

McClatchy: 'Ailing economy takes toll on health'

N.Y. Daily News: 'Reputed Genovese capo indicted in '77 murder'
"The feds Monday indicted a reputed Genovese capo for the 1977 murder of a gangster who, after his killer's gun jammed, snarled: 'What're you gonna do now, tough guy?' "

Washington Post: 'In Congo, a March Behind Rebel Lines: Renegade General Compels Thousands Displaced by War to Return Home and Sing His Praises'

Register (U.K.): 'Philosophy, computing, and Republican desperation'
"In a last-ditch attempt to spook credulous Americans into voting for John McCain, a Republican congressman and his brother-in-law have offered $10,000 to a software-wielding Oxford don, asking for proof that Barack Obama's memoir was written by former domestic terrorist William Ayers."

N.Y. Daily News: 'Wall St. scammer gets 6 1/2 year sentence, will pay back millions'

N.Y. Post: 'BLIND DAD DIES AFTER MARATHON'

Der Spiegel (Germany): 'Germany and France Compete for Role of Financial Savior'
"As tremors shake markets around the world, European partners Germany and France have gone separate ways in fighting the crisis. Sarkozy wants to bring banks and threatened industries under the government's protection, but Merkel is opposing such state intervention."

Jurist: 'Federal judge orders Cheney aide to testify in VP records lawsuit'

Al Jazeera: 'End of Chicago free-market ideas?'

Washington Post: 'China Faces Faltering Economy'
"After first declaring itself unaffected by crisis, officials turn to bailouts to forestall unrest."

Der Spiegel (Germany): 'Obama and the Overseas Vote: Grassroots in the Age of Social Networking'

Al Jazeera: 'Analysis: US battleground states'

In The News (U.K.): 'Analysis: The DRC's deep-rooted conflict'
"Latest estimates from the UN put the number of Congolese who have abandoned the homes in fear of their lives over the one million mark."

N.Y. Times: 'Afghan Officials Aided an Attack on U.S. Soldiers'

N.Y. Times: 'Bin Laden's Son Seeks Asylum in Spain'

Der Spiegel (Germany): 'Court Says Kaczynski Can Be Called a Duck'
"A court in Poland ruled on Monday that it was not slanderous to refer to President Lech Kaczynski as a duck."

Telegraph (U.K.): 'Heavy rainfall could be linked to autism, scientists claim'

Christian Science Monitor: 'Congo's riches fuel its war'

N.Y. Times: 'New Terrain for Panel on Bailout'
"A committee of five little-known officials is picking winners and losers among institutions seeking a slice of the bailout."

Daily Flog: Future mortgaged; balloon payment due; either Obama, McCain on hook

Obama's stock keeps rising on the InTrade prediction market. This morning, he's trading at 89.7, up 1.2, while McCain's trading at 11, down 1.2. Think of it as percentages — nearly 90 percent of hundreds of thousands of predictors trading over a million shares see an Obama victory.

But no matter what happens tomorrow, at least one of them will take over for George W. Bush, whose disinterested moronism is the last thing the planet needs to combat the financial crisis.

Ill-prepared for his responsibilities, Bush mortgaged our future, and now we're facing the balloon payment.

The latest of many Bush gaffes occurred last month, according to reports out of Australia and the U.K.

Passing without much notice in the U.S. press was this Bush blunder, according to the Times (U.K.) — which incidentally is a Murdoch paper: 'Australian PM under fire over alleged Bush gaffe leak'

A conversation between the Australian Prime Minister [Kevin Rudd] and out-going US president George W. Bush has threatened to turn into a diplomatic row between the two countries, after details of the private chat were leaked to the Australian media.

During a pre-arranged phone call between the two leaders, held during a dinner party at the Prime Minister's Sydney residence on the evening of October 10, Mr Bush and Mr Rudd discussed the G-7 plan for a co-ordinated response to the world financial markets crisis.

As Mr Rudd argued plans to resolve the global financial turmoil should include Asian countries and should therefore be discussed at a summit of the broader G-20 grouping, Mr Bush asked the Australian leader: "What's the G-20?", according to The Australian newspaper.

The details of the conversation have since been denied by both leaders. However foreign diplomatic sources told Sydney's Sunday Telegraph newspaper that their Washington counterparts were "gobsmacked" at the leak of details of such a phone call.

You can't spell "dumb" without "duh" (except for the "h").

Neither McCain nor Obama is that stupid. In fact, Bush will go down in history as the country's dumbest, most unaware president.

Hoover was smart; Washington and Eisenhower were generals; Truman and Harding were adept local pols; Reagan was an actor, but he had been immersed in Hollywood politics in the '40s, which counted for something. Bush was none of that, just a rich, unsuccessful kid. At least he could have displayed some noblesse oblige, but he didn't have one iota of that. The people around him were smart enough to take advantage of his inadequacies and push their own agendas. And the rest was hysteria.

Thanks in large part to de facto U.S. CEO Dick Cheney — for details, see David Bromwich's New York Review of Books piece "The Co-President."

Exactly how did we get to this situation? I dare the Bush people to release Bush's daily diary — dare them. Take a look at Harry Truman's diary, or Ike's or any other president's.

We'll never see anything but a heavily bowdlerized version of Bush's. And if we do, it will have been written by his staff. The odds are that Bush himself, unlike other presidents, didn't even keep a daily diary.

Once things settle down after tomorrow's vote, check out snippets of Truman's diary or LBJ's diary. You'll see some warts, but at least there's substance.

We can only hope that Bush's handlers were as paranoid as Nixon and thus bugged the Oval Office — not that we'll ever get our hands on any Bush tapes.

After that last lick at Bush — OK, maybe it won't be the last, because his list of pardons is sure to be as astonishing as Clinton's — it's time to move on to other topics . . .

NO PARTICULAR ORDER:

N.Y. Daily News: 'Mortgage borrowers warned of more woe'

Bloomberg: 'Congo Rebels Warn Government Will Fall If No Talks'

N.Y. Post: 'BARACK BORN TO RUN AWAY WITH IT: SPRINGSTEEN SINGS PRAISES OF POLL-CLIMBING DEM'

Slate: 'Stock Surge Sweeps Asia'

Reuters: 'UK's Brown seeks Saudi cash in latest crisis salvo'

Wall Street Journal: 'China Journal: A Rare and Violent Strike Among Cabbies'

Jewish Daily Forward: 'Gruesome Scenes From the Poultry Line Are a Sign of Agriprocessors' Troubles'

Guardian (U.K.): 'Brown confident of Middle East cash for bail-out fund'
"Gordon Brown yesterday said he felt confident that he has successfully enlisted the help of Gulf states for international plans for an emergency bail-out fund, with both Qatar and Saudi Arabia indicating they will offer funds when leaders of the 20 most developed countries meet in Washington in a fortnight.

"As the prime minister arrived in Qatar on the second leg of his whistlestop Gulf tour last night, the Qataris hinted they would contribute money to an International Monetary Fund bail-out fund — being billed as a 'new Bretton Woods' after the initiative of 1944 — the details of which will be thrashed out in Washington on November 15."

New Yorker: 'The Test' (Steve Coll)
"The accumulating failures in the country's health-care system are a cause of profound weakness in the American economy; unaddressed, this weakness will exacerbate the coming recession and crimp its aftermath . . ."

Slate: 'If Obama Loses, Who Gets Blamed?: His loss would be disastrous for the media and political establishment'

N.Y. Review of Books: 'The Co-President at Work'
"The shallowest charge against Dick Cheney is that he somehow inserted himself into the vice-presidency by heading the team that examined other candidates for the job. He used the position deviously, so the story goes, to sell himself to the susceptible younger Bush. The truth is both simpler and more strange.

"Since 1999, Cheney had been one of a group of political tutors of Bush, including Condoleezza Rice and Paul Wolfowitz; in this company, Bush found Cheney especially congenial — not least his way of asserting his influence without ever stealing a scene. Bush, too, resembled Cheney in preferring to let others speak, but he lacked the mind and patience for discussions: virtues that Cheney possessed in abundance."

N.Y. Post: 'HILLARY CAN KISS HER W. HOUSE HOPES GOODBYE'

N.Y. Times: 'Soldiering On, Clinton Preserves Her Options'

N.Y. Post: 'PENSION FUNDS BUCK BUYOUT BIGS'

N.Y. Times: 'Voting Experts Say High Turnout May Add to Problems at the Polls'

The Onion: 'Struggling Lower-Class Still Unsure How Best To Fuck Selves With Vote'

N.Y. Post: 'LET 'EM EAT CAKE: BOFA'S BARE-BONES BONUSES MAY SPUR MERRILL EXODUS'

N.Y. Post: 'IMMIGRANT JAIL SURGE: NY-AREA DETAINEES UP 3,000 & RISING'

Washington Post: 'A Positively Negative Home Stretch: McCain, Obama Break Tradition By Staying On the Attack'

Washington Post: 'Hard-Fought Battle in Hard-Hit Ohio'

The Onion: 'Obama's Record-Breaking Fundraising Effort Bankrupting NPR, World Wildlife Fund, ACLU'

Washington Post: 'Study First to Link TV Sex To Real Teen Pregnancies'

Washington Post: 'Experts Question AIG Bailout: Some say a bankruptcy filing by the insurance giant would better serve taxpayers, shareholders'

N.Y. Post: 'POLO FOR DUMBOS'

Washington Post: 'The End of the Report Card?: Online grades allow students -- and their parents -- to keep track of their performance in real time'

N.Y. Daily News: 'Will Closet Racism Hurt Obama?'
"Point/Counterpoint: Are potential voters telling pollsters they'll vote for Obama, when they secretly plan to back McCain?"

N.Y. Times: 'Level of White Support for Obama a Surprise'
"If Tuesday's election were confined to white America, polls show, Senator Barack Obama would lose.

"And yet Mr. Obama's strength across racial lines lies at the heart of his lead in the polls over Senator John McCain heading into Election Day. Remarkably, Mr. Obama, the first black major party presidential nominee, trails among whites by less than Democratic nominees normally do.

"America's political parties grew decisively polarized by race after 1964, the year President Lyndon Johnson signed civil rights legislation that his Republican presidential opponent, Barry Goldwater, opposed. Since then, election pollsters estimate, Democratic nominees have averaged 39 percent of the white vote. In last week's New York Times/CBS News poll, Mr. Obama drew 44 percent support among whites — a higher proportion than Bill Clinton captured in his general election victories."

N.Y. Times: 'Republicans Scrambling to Save Seats in Congress'

BBC: 'How Congo's heaven became hell'

GOP pulls out all stops, shows love for Hillary

Hillary%20Republican%20Obama240.jpg Last month the Republican Jewish Coalition angered co-religionists and even some fellow Republicans with a mudslingin' "push poll" that tried to plant a link in voters' brains between Barack Obama and that nefarious trio of Pat Buchanan, Iran, and Palestinians.

Now, with the election only a few days away, the GOP Jews are so desperate that they're openly showing love to Hillary Clinton in a last-minute ad campaign aimed at showing that Obama is a soul brother to Iranian crackpot Mahmoud Ahmadinejad.

The ad (shown above) is running in the Jewish Daily Forward and probably elsewhere.

Last month's GOP gaming of Obama was less of a shock than its new campaign of praising Hillary. But it was much more devious. The Forward's Brett Lieberman reported on September 18:

[T]he Republican Jewish Coalition is mounting an unusually aggressive campaign that has drawn criticism from Democrats and even some Republicans.

Obama supporters led a September 16 protest outside a Manhattan calling center, where pollsters asked 750 Jewish households in the battlegrounds of Florida, Pennsylvania, Ohio, Michigan and New Jersey whether several negative statements about Obama changed their attitude toward the Democratic presidential candidate. The RJC, which sponsored the poll, said it was researching Jewish public opinion. Critics say it amounted to a "push poll" that is sometimes used to spread untruths about a candidate.

If you're uncertain how such "push polls" work, the story continues with a good explanation:

According to the Web site Politico.com, Jewish Democratic groups, and others who documented the calls, those surveyed were asked whether their vote would be affected if they learned, for instance, that Obama had given money to the PLO or if they learned that the leader of Hamas hoped for Obama's victory.

Respondents were asked about how they would react to other "ifs": if Obama's political advisors are "pro-Palestinian," if Obama once said "the Palestinians have suffered the most," if Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad endorsed Obama, or if former President Jimmy Carter's anti-Israel national security advisor is one of his foreign policy advisors.

"I'm sure that a part of this is to be provocative so that you can raise these issues, and without your fingerprints on it, raise doubts," said Norm Ornstein, a political expert at the conservative American Enterprise Institute. "Those questions are certainly much more push-poll questions than traditional questions."

On October 23, the Forward reported that angry Obama aides pulled out of any event featuring the Republican Jewish Coalition.

The Republican Jews' fanatical embrace of identity politics plays well with American Jews in Israel.

But not so much with Jews who live in the U.S. Most of whom are more liberal and moderate than the right-wing leaders of most major U.S. Jewish organizations. The Voice of America reports that the American Jewish Committee's national survey late last month showed Obama leading John McCain 57 percent to 30 percent.

That's not as strong a showing as most Democrats have made in past AJC surveys, but what do you want from me?

Daily Flog: Doom day -- Election shakes, global bombings, massive firings

You can only pray that Tuesday's election won't be bollixed too severely by ridiculous voter-ID rules and other GOP-driven schemes designed to thwart democracy. That is voter fraud, not the "voter fraud" that Republican operatives are braying about.

What's scarier than the election shakes, the continuing financiopathic mood swings, a staggering loss of jobs ("Layoffs Sweep From Wall St. Across New York Area," New York Times), and the hoarding of billions of dollars by hedge funds? A new wave of bomb blasts and bad behavior across the planet:

L.A. Times: 'Suicide bomber penetrates Afghanistan government ministry, killing 3'

Irish Times (Dublin) 'At least 29 die in bombings across northern Somalia'

BBC: 'Chaos grips major DR Congo city'

Voice of America: 'Serial Bomb Blasts Rock India's Assam State'

And to top it off, we find out that many hospitals are doing a poor job of easing our pain. As McClatchy's Robert S. Boyd reports, in "Adequate pain care sorely lacking for patients":

Medical science has learned a great deal about the causes of pain and ways to relieve it, pain experts say, but for a host of reasons, the treatment of pain and suffering has improved hardly at all in recent years.

John Seffrin, the president of the American Cancer Society, calls this "a national health-care crisis of under-treated pain."

Back to election bellyaching: Just the latest of many warnings come this morning not only on the macro level — L.A. Times: "Vote watchdogs warn of troubles on election day," — but also on the local level — Evansville (Indiana) Courier & Press: "Voter registry concerns emerging." Dateline Evansville:

Expectations of a record voter turnout Tuesday are being tempered by concerns about the accuracy of new registrations and whether local election officials are doing all they can to encourage voting.

The "accuracy of new registrations"? Some reporters mistakenly assume that the GOP-driven "fraud" propaganda points to a huge problem, but the second part — whether local election officials are doing all they can to encourage voting — is the real concern.

Meanwhile, some people even fear an assassination attempt on Barack Obama (cf. Martin Luther King Jr.). Paul G. Buchanan's essay — "Campaign Rhetoric As An Invitation To Violence" — via the New Zealand news site Scoop may be bloviated claptrap, but it's interesting bloviated claptrap:

" . . . The subject is ugly, unthinkable in polite society, and impolitic to mention. That is the possibility of political assassination, specifically that of Barack Obama. Let us discuss it here. . . .

"In their negative campaigning, in the tone of their vitriol, in the repetition of false accusations and smears that lead their followers to believe that Obama is un-American, treasonous (for which the penalty under US federal statutes includes death, particularly in wartime), that he is a closet Arab, disguised Muslim, foreign born, etc., what the Republican campaign managers and their media surrogates are doing is something much more dangerous than trying to win an election.

"Elementary discursive analysis reveals the not-to-subtle cues to direct action embedded in the Republican campaign rhetoric. Put bluntly: by demonising Barack Obama, it is a subliminal invitation to murder. . . ."

Speaking of the devils, the Presidential Prayer Team — given God's well-known sense of humor, He/She definitely does not listen to entreaties from this donation-hungry crew — reminds us:

As we count down to the presidential election on 11/4, pray for God’s will to be done in our nation through the votes of citizens — that each one will consider the profound privilege and blessing of their vote and will cast it in a way that honors God.

Don't get off your knees yet:

As dedicated intercessors gather at courthouses and public areas across the country for solemn assemblies and prayer gatherings on Sunday and Monday, Election Eve, pray for them as they meet, asking the Holy Spirit to guide and direct. Pray for safety for every gathering, for the powerful presence of God to graciously visit each one, and for many to be strengthened in their efforts. Are you aware of an election-oriented prayer gathering?

If not, you can do this from home:

Pray for First Lady Laura Bush as she celebrates her 62nd birthday with the President this weekend at Camp David; this year, her birthday falls on Election Day, 11/4. Pray for God’s richest blessings on her as she prepares for the next chapter of her life, giving thanks for the profound impact she has had for the past eight years, serving the nation and the world with strength, grace and dignity.

Yes, best wishes, Laura. Now get outta here. Seriously. Leave.

The rest of you? Keep clicking . . .

NO PARTICULAR ORDER:

China Digital Times: 'Experience the Censored Chinese Internet at Home!'

Washington Post: 'Early Voters Breaking Records: Poll Shows 59 Percent of Ballots Already Cast Are for Obama'

Slate: 'The Liberal Media and How To Stop It: You can't. But these days, how much does it matter?' (Jack Shafer)

N.Y. Post: 'REV. ELVIS LOVED ME TENDER: CONFESSIONAL A SEDUCTION CHAMBER -- SUIT'

Scoop (New Zealand): 'Campaign Rhetoric As An Invitation To Violence'

N.Y. Post: 'FDNY WIFE "TOO BLITZED" '
"A Staten Island mom accused of killing her fire-marshal husband was so drunk after the shooting that statements she made to a EMS captain should be thrown out, her lawyer told a judge yesterday."

Guardian (U.K.): 'Chancellor demands cheaper petrol as Shell posts record profits'

Washington Post: 'Treasury, FDIC Near Deal on Mortgage Aid'

McClatchy: 'Private sector loans, not Fannie or Freddie, triggered crisis'

N.Y. Times: 'Government Said to Be Discussing Plan to Aid Homeowners'

Guardian (U.K.): 'The Triumph of Ignorance: Why morons succeed in US politics'

N.Y. Times: 'Aggressive Fed Cuts Key Interest Rate by a Half-Point'

McClatchy: 'Fed slashes rate again, nearing uncharted waters'

N.Y. Post: 'SNOOPY DIDN'T HAVE TO DIE: DRUNK HUBBY KILLS WIFE'S BEAGLE -- COPS'

IRIN: 'Israel tries to block Gaza health conference'

N.Y. Post: 'MIKE BENCHES STEPH IN OPENER'

Hurriyet (Turkey): 'U.S. embassy in Syria shut over demo threat'
"The U.S. embassy in Damascus said it will be closed on Thursday due to the threat of demonstrations over a deadly American helicopter raid on a village near the Iraqi border."

New Yorker: 'Red Sex, Blue Sex: Why do so many evangelical teen-agers become pregnant?'

N.Y. Times: 'A Question for A.I.G.: Where Did the Cash Go?'

N.Y. Post: 'BEN'S BOOMERANG: MARTS GO DOWN, THEN UP, THEN DOWN ON FED RATE CUT'
"Ben Bernanke's wild-pitch rate cut bounced off Wall Street with a thud."

New Yorker: 'Odd Man Out: Chuck Hagel’s Republican exile'

New York: 'Time Inc. to Restructure, Lay Off 600 Workers'

Guardian (U.K.): 'Hedge funds contemplate safer climate in US'
"A new front is opening up in the battle between London and New York to be the world's dominant financial centre.

"Hedge funds, and the thorny question of where they decide to do business over the coming months, could mark a turning point in the delicate balance of power between the two market capitals.

"Despite widespread fears that hundreds of funds are poised to collapse, any shake-out in the industry will still leave hundreds of healthy firms with billions to invest."

Financial Times (U.K.): 'Outlook is bleak, say US chief finance chiefs'

Times of London (U.K.): 'Hedge funds fear bankruptcy after Porsche squeeze'

Financial Times (U.K.): 'Shock: Drudge loses his grip on US media!'

N.Y. Times: 'Army and Agency Will Study Rising Suicide Rate Among Soldiers'

BBC: 'Blind S Korea masseurs win case'
"A South Korean law which states that only the visually impaired can be licensed masseurs has been upheld in the country's Constitutional Court."

Times of London (U.K.): 'US presidential rankings -- numbers 32 to 22'

BBC: 'China toxic egg scandal spreads'

BBC: 'Second Gaza activist voyage docks'

'Dr. Evil' takes on ACORN

Beneath the "voter fraud" campaign lies Rick Berman.

Rick Berman is notorious for fighting against the minimum wage and on behalf of those who make and sell high-fat, sugary foods. The only dangerous food in his eyes is ACORN, which he and his operatives call "rotten" and "a bad seed."

Secondhand smoke is a non-issue to Berman. He's too busy blowing smoke. Berman is one of the main forces pushing the issue of "voter fraud" by portraying ACORN as the biggest threat to democracy since Communism.

Click for 60 Minutes segment on BermanWhy most of the press isn't dragging out his behind-the-scenes connections to the anti-ACORN "voter-fraud" campaign is beyond me — a 60 Minutes segment on him last year by Morley Safer pointed out that Berman is known even among fellow flacks as "Dr. Evil" (video, transcript). How fitting that CBS's photo of Berman (left) shows him in the pose that Mike Meyers's "Dr. Evil" made famous in the Austin Powers movies.

Berman's Dr. Evil isn't as zany. Safer noted that Berman's proud of his self-described duty to "shoot the messenger."

Berman usually stays behind the scenes, but just yesterday he snookered the Oregonian, a major Northwest paper, into running his "guest opinion." Why newspapers just blithely run pieces written by P.R. people is beyond me. Anyway, under the headline "Rotten ACORN: A sordid history of more than voter registration fraud," Berman (or one of his staff) writes:

ACORN, a group with a checkered past is finally getting the bad name it deserves. ACORN, the Association of Community Organizers for Reform Now, is a behemoth in the voter registration world that masquerades as a non-partisan community organizing group.

Its practice of registering phony names for voting purposes has just begun to attract national headlines and FBI investigators this fall, but ACORN's sordid history of fraud and partisan electioneering dates back to its founding in Arkansas in the 1970s.

Also, keep in mind that if you run across the slick site RottenAcorn.com, it's operated by Berman — a fact you can discover only if you peel back a few layers. From the site:

ACORN Is A Bad Seed
Something’s rotten in the state of New Mexico, and Ohio, and Michigan, and Pennsylvania, and Florida . . .
ACORN says it is a community group, but it is really a multi-million-dollar, multinational conglomerate.

Berman's name isn't openly attached to RottenAcorn.com. The site's sponsor is the Employment Policies Institute. Neither Berman's name nor that of his firm, Berman & Company, appears on the website of the "institute."

But according to IRS records, the "institute" is a non-profit that operates from Berman's office and produces a profit of a million bucks a year for Berman and his company.

More on that in a minute. First, here's what others have said about Berman's work as a high-paid lobbyist for big-ticket industries and businesses:

SourceWatch's rundown:

Berman & Co., a Washington, DC public affairs firm owned by lobbyist Rick Berman, represents the tobacco industry as well as hotels, beer distributors, taverns, and restaurant chains. Berman & Co. lobbies for companies such as Cracker Barrel, Hooters, International House of Pancakes, Olive Garden, Outback Steakhouse, Red Lobster, Steak & Ale, TGI Friday's, Uno's Restaurants, and Wendy's. It also operates a network of several front groups, web sites, and think tanks that work to keep wages low for restaurants and to block legislation on food safety, secondhand cigarette smoke, and drunk driving.

Berman told a trade magazine for restaurant chains: "In effect, our work is restricted to and focused on issues that affect shareholder value. These big issues include labor costs as they relate to health insurance and the minimum wage. . . . Our offensive strategy is to shoot the messenger. Given the activists' plans to alarm beyond all reason, we've got to attack their credibility as spokespersons. . . . We always have a knife in our teeth."

60 Minutes 2007 segment "Meet Rick Berman, A.K.A. 'Dr. Evil' ":

"In the end, Berman says it's all about 'shooting the messenger.'

" 'Shooting the messenger means getting people to understand that this messenger is not as credible as their name would suggest,' Berman says.

While those tactics have made him rich and powerful, they have also made him mightily unpopular. Even in a mudslinging city like Washington, it’s difficult to find someone who provokes as much venom as Rick Berman.

" 'He’s a one-man goon squad for any company that’s willing to hire him,' says Dr. Michael Jacobson, who heads the Center for Science in the Public Interest, a healthy food advocacy group. Jacobson has been the point man in the 'food wars' for decades."

Berman is accomplished at "creating a political action group that tries to mislead voters, in part by pretending to be an aggrieved grass-roots movement" (Willamette Week, May 28, 2008):

Last Thursday, May 22, a roguish outfit calling itself the Employee Freedom Action Committee ran full-page ads . . . in the Oregonian and Eugene Register-Guard to begin the post-election assault on Jeff Merkley, who two days earlier won the Democratic contest to challenge U.S. Sen. Gordon Smith (R-Ore.). . . .

Washington, D.C.-based Employee Freedom is a 501(c)(4) nonprofit, which means it does not need to disclose its funding sources. The group is headquartered in the office of D.C. lobbyist Richard Berman, who has a history of setting up groups for the tobacco and booze industries, as well as anti-union employers.

Now, back to the Berman's Employment Policies Institute. The 2006 tax return for its foundation shows that Berman, as executive director, worked an average of 14 hours a week and was paid $5,000.

Pretty damn selfless. And Berman & Company, of which he owns 100 percent, spent one hour a week as the institute's management company. Berman's company, however, got paid. It took home almost $700,000 in compensation and more than $300,000 in health benefits and deferred compensation, according to tax records.

The institute itself works 24/7. The 2006 tax records show that it spent hundreds of thousands of dollars in advertisements with circulation leaders Wall Street Journal, USA Today, Washington Post, and Metro Networks (which buys broadcast time). Those are just the top four media outlets on which Berman's outfit spent money.

And what were the accomplishments of his nonprofit "institute"? The tax records say:

"Published information in approximately 77 media outreach campaigns (including 39 press releases and 10 opinion editorials) on issues that affect entry-level employment. Also distributed 28 letters to the editor regarding the same. Media outreach also resulted in 18 television appearances and 20 radio programs."

Berman's empire, according to IRS records, also includes the FirstJobs Institute, which produces "public-service" ads and more than a million coasters a year. From the tax records:

berman-firstjobs-400.jpg

While Sarah Palin sneers at Barack Obama's links to evil community activists like ACORN, Rick Berman puts business money where her mouth is.

Daily Flog: Tally woe! Fears on voting machinery, machinations

In the final countdown to the presidential election, many Americans may actually hit zero, thanks to predicted failures of new voting machinery and rules.

This just leaves the curtain of the voting booth open for the machinations of GOP operative Hans von Spakovsky and his ilk.

Not only anti-Democratic but also anti-democratic, Von Spakovsky used to be on the Federal Election Commission, but he kept pissing in the voter pool and was finally forced out.

That doesn't mean he's not actively practicing voter fraud while railing against it. See Rolling Stone's new piece by Bobby Kennedy Jr. and Greg Palast, "Block the Vote."

For more Hans brinkmanship, see my late 2007 stories "The GOP's Hounding of Voters" and "Hans Off Our Elections!"

And don't forget fixer Karl Rove, who's now larval in the Fox News cocoon. Tell me he's not about to weave some webs to trap voters.

Even without those two goniffs, big problems loom for the quadrennial attempt at democracy. It's so scary that even the British are on the side of the colonists. They're running around our countryside with warnings of none if by land, zero if by sea. Today's Guardian (U.K.) plays it up big, in "Ballot debacle predicted for November 4":

A "perfect storm" could be building for US election day on November 4 because of a combination of sky-high voter interest, new ballot machines and a shortage of poll staff, the independent Pew group warned yesterday.

The Washington-based group set out a long series of problems still facing the US despite reforms aimed at avoiding a repeat of the 2000 and 2004 debacles.

Extracted from the report (PDF) at Pew's electionline.org, here's a lengthy passage — lengthy because it's important:

[Voters] will encounter an election system that, while significantly changed since 2000, is in many respects no less settled after nearly eight years of debate and change.

Many of the old machines, laws and procedures that were blamed for the problems in 2000 are gone. But new machines, laws and procedures have themselves raised questions that continue to fuel controversy and concern as November approaches. Yet the biggest challenge in 2008 may not be changes to the system but the potentially record number of voters prepared to use it.

For nearly eight years, policymakers, election officials, and advocates have upgraded the plumbing of the nation’s election system — replacing some sections while patching and plugging others — all in the hope of keeping Americans and their votes flowing smoothly.

In two weeks, however, voters will crank the pressure sky high.

An open seat for the White House, fueled by deep partisan, geographic, race and class divisions on issues at home and abroad, is about to result in a likely record number of voters turning out to vote on (and increasingly before) Election Day.

The question is no longer exclusively "will the system work?" Rather, it is "can the system handle the load?"

Nevertheless, vote early and vote often. And all you college grads out there: You might as well go to the polls because the job of democracy may be the only one available. From this morning's Wall Street Journal:

"For '09 Grads, Job Prospects Take a Dive"

College seniors may have more trouble landing a job next spring than recent graduates, as employers trim their hiring outlooks in response to the slowing economy and financial-sector turmoil.

Employers plan to hire just 1.3% more graduates in 2009 than they hired this year, according to a survey by the National Association of Colleges and Employers.

That's the weakest outlook in six years and reflects a sharp recent downturn. Just two months ago, a survey by the same group projected a 6.1% increase in hiring.

Wi-Fi it. Go ahead and order another triple-shot frappucino, go back to your table, and see if anything clicks . . .

NO PARTICULAR ORDER:

AP: 'US airstrike kills 9 Afghan soldiers at checkpoint'

N.Y. Daily News: 'RNC spends thousands on dresses, make-up for Sarah Palin & family'

N.Y. Post: 'GOP'S SHOCK "TERROR" ATTACK: MAILING TARGETS OBAMA'

Guardian (U.K.): 'Pound tumbles as Bank head cries recession'

Wall Street Journal: 'Joe the Plumber and GOP "Authenticity": It's hard to reach out to workers while cracking down on unions' (Thomas Frank)

N.Y. Times: 'Some Cut Back on Prescription Drugs in Sour Economy'

Guardian (U.K.): 'Cyber-attack theory as al-Qaida websites close'

Wall Street Journal: 'Gay Marriage in Peril in California'

Wall Street Journal: 'U.S. to Ask Analysts if Lehman Misled'

Wall Street Journal: 'Recession Fears Pummel Futures'

Wall Street Journal: 'Obama Opens Double-Digit Lead: New Poll Shows McCain Ceding Ground on Taxes, Values; Palin Loses Shine'

Wall Street Journal: 'Iran, Qatar, Russia Form Gas Alliance'

Wall Street Journal: 'McClatchy's Advertising Woes Mount'

Wall Street Journal: 'Network Audience Keeps Eroding: Upswing in Delayed Viewing on DVRs Isn't Likely to Offset Prime-Time Declines'

Bush prepares to step into it

We can't wait for the president's special speech to the nation tonight on the bailout.

Jacob Weisberg, start typing. George W. Bush is going to talk to the nation tonight about the financial crisis.

Yes, John McCain earlier today began trying to cancel his own TV appearance Friday with Barack Obama. There goes some good TV, but McCain's strategy can be appreciated on two levels: as a desperation move so Obama can't hammer him into the ground during the current anti-GOP groundswell and as a way for McCain to scurry back to Capitol Hill for some photo-ops with the moderate Republicans in Congress who are now trying to look like critics of Wall Street. (Some of them really have been, but McCain's never been one of them.)

But now we can tune in at 9 tonight for some great TV.

Where does Jacob Weisberg fit into this? The editor-in-chief of the Slate Group has doggedly compiled Bushisms for several years now. He'll probably get writer's cramp tonight when Bush aims to bail out the bailout plan.

The president wants to convince us to support his administration's plan to hand over millions to Wall Street's financiers — or at least to those who haven't already made a killing by gambling that the Street would turn into a sinkhole. (See my item on short-seller John Paulson.)

Holy Cicero! Can't wait to hear Bush explain to us just what happened on Wall Street. But it's unlikely that Bush could top his August 5, 2004, oratorio when he was handing a check to the Pentagon for $417 billion — small change compared with the $700 billion he's seeking tonight.

Here's what I wrote at the time, in "Bush Gone Wild":

Let's hope the recent video of George W. Bush signing a massive defense bill is also saved for posterity. It may be the best piece of video this year.

You may have read about it. On August 5, in front of a gaggle of generals and defense contractors creaming their jeans over the $417 billion check that you taxpayers are so graciously picking up, Bush said:

"Our enemies are innovative and resourceful, and so are we. They never stop thinking about new ways to harm our country and our people, and neither do we."

Don't misunderestimate the guy. Turns out he was right.

Daily Flog: In NYC, the end of the houses that Ruth and ruthlessness built

History was unmade this weekend in New York City: In the Bronx, the closing of the House That Ruth Built, and in lower Manhattan, the closing of the houses that ruthlessness built.

A double dose of tears for those Wall Street investment bankers in their skyboxes at Yankee Stadium.

A double dose of publicly subsidized bailouts for both the Yankees and the investment banks.

But first . . .

NO PARTICULAR ORDER:

MarketWatch: 'End of capitalism as we know it'

Telegraph (U.K.): 'Islamabad hotel blast 'was Pakistan's 9/11'

N.Y. Post: 'COPS: JEW GUYS NEED TO TALK!'

The Register (U.K.): 'Sockpuppeting civil servant Wikifiddles himself'

McClatchy: 'Congress' fiscal conservatives declare free market "dead" '

Jurist: 'Former Special Forces officer wins transgender discrimination lawsuit'

Financial Times (U.K.): 'Taxpayers shoulder trillion-dollar deficit'

N.Y. Times: 'Foreign Banks Hope Bailout Will Be Global'

Wall Street Journal: 'Goldman, Morgan Scrap Wall Street Model, Become Banks in Bid to Ride Out Crisis'

Financial Times (U.K.): 'Obama Targets Wall Street Greed'


Running down the press:

The closing of Yankee Stadium prompted a bevy of retired baseball players to hitch up their belts over their big bellies and weigh in, but the best quote in the past few days came from former Detroit Tigers pitcher Jim Bunning:

"The free market for all intents and purposes is dead in America."

McClatchy's James Rosen, in his Friday story "Congress' fiscal conservatives declare free market 'dead,' " called that offering from the flame-throwing right-hander-turned-right-winger-Kentucky-senator a "knockdown pitch."

And that was before the monumental news over the weekend that Wall Street's investment bankers committed harakiri.

How did the press cover the news that Goldman sacks itself?

Sufferin' seppuku! Pretty darn well! And with surprisingly large doses of reality, like this piece from the Financial Times (U.K.): "Taxpayers shoulder trillion-dollar deficit." And this one from the Washington Post: "A Sense of Resentment Amid the 'For Sale' Signs."

If Barack Obama weren't black, he'd now be a shoo-in. After all, John McCain had pushed the GOP's scheme (hare-brained even before Wall Street's meltdown) to privatize Social Security. And the GOP (McCain included) has always preached deregulation. See this Wall Street Journal story for details: "Crisis Draws Attention to McCain Social Security Plan." And then look at this one from the Financial Times (U.K.): "Obama targets Wall Street greed."

If we had a parliamentary democracy, McCain and Obama would be duking it out on the floor of Congress, and not only would the fur fly but there would actually be meat on the killing floor. Instead, we'll have to put up with the lame-ass, tame-ass TV "debates" moderated, massaged, and manipulated by the mainstream media. But the first debate, Friday, ought to be more interesting in light of Wall Street's collapse.

In any case, New York's days as the world's financial capital may be numbered, but ruthlessness hasn't disappeared. Wall Street's self-destruction heralds the true end of U.S. domination of the financial world. That's probably true, but the private-equity folks who control billions of dollars will find other ways to pick at our carcasses.

Last week at least, the private-equity types were licking their chops. In Friday's edition of Private Equity Online, a handmaiden to the vultures smugly wrote:

'Cleaning up the carnage'

Buyout titans have said publicly the situation is unlike anything they've ever seen. However, there's also a certain amount of calm present in the private equity industry, where nerves are less frazzled than in other corners of the financial world.

This is to do largely, of course, with private equity's core principle: long-term investment horizons are less susceptible to public market volatility and periods of short-term distress.

But it's also to do with the opportunities available to cash-flush firms, considering the more than $60 billion (€42 billion) in pure private equity assets that are now in play as a result of the meltdown.

"Core principle," my dying ass. Drool and slobber are their principles. The newsletter's anonymous author gets down to it:

The collapse of Lehman Brothers makes the sale (or spin-out) of all or parts of its investment management division even more imminent. The sale of Merrill Lynch to Bank of America has suddenly put a question mark over its private equity division. And AIG's new US government owner could indeed decide to unwind the firm's sizable alternative platform, which is sure to include attractive assets despite the prospect of cumbersome government-run auctions.

Secondaries firms are already rubbing their hands in anticipation – one secondaries specialist told PEO his recent meetings in New York made him feel like “a kid in a candy shop”. And many big buyout shops are reportedly interested in buying the franchises outright.

Some of the private-equity scumbags (my word, not theirs) have already started infiltrating the "normal world" — at the request (insert shudder here) of Hank Paulson's rescue team:

David Zweiner, who joined The Carlyle Group little over a year ago to co-head its nascent financial services group, was selected last week as chief financial officer for struggling US bank Wachovia.

This week, the US government asked Clayton Dubilier & Rice operating partner Edward Liddy to take the helm at AIG. It also selected American Capital director John Koskinen for the board chairman role at troubled mortgage giant Freddie Mac, after having earlier in the month asked Carlyle senior advisor David Moffett to become chief executive.

And who knows where the lobbying for further corporate welfare will lead? Check out this morning's Times harbinger, "Big Financiers Start Lobbying for Wider Aid":

Even as policy makers worked on details of a $700 billion bailout of the financial industry, Wall Street began looking for ways to profit from it.

Financial firms were lobbying to have all manner of troubled investments covered, not just those related to mortgages.

At the same time, investment firms were jockeying to oversee all the assets that Treasury plans to take off the books of financial institutions, a role that could earn them hundreds of millions of dollars a year in fees.

Nobody wants to be left out of Treasury's proposal to buy up bad assets of financial institutions.

So don't start singing "The Internationale" just yet.

Go ahead, though, and download the global lefty anthem here, in any of 80 or so languages, including Billy Bragg's and Pete Seeger's versions. Or Maxx Klaxon's version.

If you can find it, you can even hum along to Tuli Kupferberg's "The New Internationale," which encourages we "prisoners of stagnation" to arise.

Daily Blog: Shock and awe; you just lost at Monopoly; Al Jazeera talks to a Jewish banker

Running down the press:

Post: 'New York Shock Exchange'

Years ago in Phoenix, a huge, top-heavy, out-of-control cement-pumping truck crushed four lanes of cars at a stoplight on a busy street.

Not only awful but an awesome sight.

The same kind of feeling you get watching the out-of-control Wall Street schnooks flattening us.

Shock and awe, and we gave Wall Street its weapons of mass destruction.

Naturally, the Wall Street Journal has extensive coverage, but try the "Crisis on Wall Street" collection of stories at London's Financial Times.

That said, Eric Lenkowitz's lede in this morning's Post is a suitable on-the-scene report:

The epic collapse of Wall Street titan Lehman Brothers, combined with the virtual demise of Merrill Lynch and fears for the world's largest insurance company, sent stocks into a frenzied freefall yesterday as Wall Street grappled with financial chaos not seen since the Great Depression.

And what injuries did we onlookers suffer? Another Post story, this posted at 4 a.m., provides some answers: "NY WILL TAKE $1B HIT: GOV."

Yeah, but what about us? What about, for instance, the state and city pension funds? Further down, the story notes:

City Comptroller William Thompson assured current and former city workers that their pensions are in good standing because only a "minuscule percentage" of the money is invested in Lehman stock.

We'll see about that, because the fallout from Wall Street's greed will be long-lasting. The numbers are scary:

On Sept. 2, the first day of trading this month, shares of Lehman stock held by the city were valued at $32.2 million. They were worth $420,000 yesterday, when the stock closed at 21 cents.

The state's $154 billion pension fund owns about 5 million shares of Lehman common stock.

Jim Fuchs, a spokesman for State Comptroller Tom DiNapoli, said losses from Lehman could total about $400 million.

Lehman shares held by the state were worth about $80.6 million at the start of September and were valued at $1.05 million yesterday.

The New York State Teachers $100 billion pension also held an estimated 2.2 million Lehman shares. Officials didn't return repeated calls about the fund's potential losses.

The teachers' pension shares were worth about $36 million at the start of this month and about $462,000 yesterday.

Set aside those worries for a minute so you can read an excellent story that helps explain why this happened: David Lightman's "Wall Street crisis is culmination of 28 years of deregulation." The McClatchy piece is stark from the start:

No one cog in the federal government's machine of financial regulation let down the country by failing to prevent the latest shakeout on Wall Street. The entire system did.

After a "shit happens" explanation from the Milken Institute (an org set up by former Wall Street junk-bond goniff Michael Milken) — "They just haven't done a particularly good job" — Lightman extracts a great quote from someone who brings this crisis down to our level:

Kathleen Day, a spokeswoman for the Center for Responsible Lending, a consumer-oriented research group, explained the regulatory lapses more starkly: "The job of regulators is that when the party's in full swing, make sure the partygoers drink responsibly," she said. "Instead, they let everyone drink as much as they wanted and then handed them the car keys."

Sardonic, and then Lightman gets right to it. Not trusting that people will read down into his story, I hand you this long backgrounder passage:

Analysts and politicians are raising serious questions about the nation's financial regulatory system, which dates to the New Deal era.

On Monday, one Wall Street bank, Lehman Brothers, filed for bankruptcy protection and another, Merrill Lynch, sought comfort by selling itself to Bank of America for $50 billion. Earlier this year, the government helped enable the sale of faltering investment bank Bear Stearns to J.P. Morgan Chase, and more recently took over mortgage giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.

Such troubles were supposed to have been prevented, or at least mitigated, by regulatory systems that the nation began to put in place after the banking system collapsed at the start of the Great Depression.

Many banks at the time were badly wounded by their personal and financial ties to securities trading. The 1933 Glass-Steagall Act, and later the 1956 Bank Holding Company Act, mandated the separation of banks, insurance companies and securities firms.

Those and many other federal laws stabilized the banking and securities markets, but by the 1970s, a stumbling U.S. economy led to a change in America's political-economic values. Ronald Reagan led a movement that came to power in 1980 proclaiming faith in free markets and mistrust of government. That conservative philosophy has dominated America for the past 28 years.

Even after taxpayers had to rescue deregulated savings and loans, or S&Ls, with a $200 billion bailout in the late 1980s, the push to loosen regulation paused only briefly.

In 1999, President Clinton signed the Financial Services Modernization Act, which tore down Glass-Steagall's reforms by removing the walls separating banks, securities firms and insurers.

Under President Clinton and his successor, the government became eager to promote home ownership. Interest rates were low, the market grew for loans to borrowers with weak credit and private-sector mortgage bonds boomed. About 38 percent of those bonds were backed by subprime loans. They are at the root of today's financial crisis.

Just this past July 25, the Wall Street Journal laid out some of that history:

'Amid Turmoil, U.S. Turns Away From Decades of Deregulation'

The housing and financial crisis convulsing the U.S. is powering a new wave of government regulation of business and the economy.

Federal and state governments alike are increasingly hands-on in their effort to deal with failing businesses, plunging house prices, worthless mortgages and soaring energy prices. The steps add up to a major challenge to the movement toward deregulation that has defined American governance for much of the past quarter-century since the "Reagan Revolution" of the early 1980s. In fact, some proponents today of a bigger oversight role for government are Republican heirs to the legacy of President Reagan.

Too late, of course.

I mentioned Glass-Steagall in a February 2005 item, but stupidly I buried it in a general rant about Bush and the war. Here's the relevant passage:

I'll get back to Iraq in a minute, but don't tell me about Bill Clinton: He not only promoted NAFTA globalization without insisting on protection of workers and union rights, but he also helped re-create monopolies by embracing the 1999 repeal of the Glass-Steagall Act (the FDR Era law that had prohibited banks from merging with securities firms), and by signing the Telecommunications Act of 1996, which further deregulated phone companies and allowed even more mergers. It's their monopoly game, and they're the ones on Park Place. You're stuck on Baltic Avenue, at best, and your children will be renting, not buying.

Back to the present: There's much more meat in Lightman's McClatchy piece today, so check it out.


Al Jazeera: 'Markets devastated in Lehman's wake'

By the way, don't assume that this major Muslim medium is knee-jerk anti-Jewish. Or, maybe you can assume that.

Its coverage this morning includes a humane perspective about "the average American" that many U.S. outlets don't match. And the perspective is from a guy who's obviously Jewish:

Israel Adelman, a Fordham Financials trader on Wall Street, told Al Jazeera that "people in upper government don't understand what the average American is going through".

"The customer is very squeezed right now, houses are worth nothing, people are up to their ears with credit cards debt," he said, describing the situation as a "confidence crisis".

"We've been making a lot of money from cheap money . . . we are the pinnacle of greed . . . we're going to pay for it all the way through next year. The bleeding is going to haemorrhage."

Of course, the other way to look at this quote is that Al Jazeera's millions of anti-Jewish readers in Arab countries get to have their prejudices confirmed by hearing a Jewish banker say, "We are the pinnacle of greed."

Wonder if Adelman realized how his observation about greed — accurate but applicable also to Wall Street's non-Jews — would be used.

Wonder if Al Jazeera called an obviously Jewish banker just for that purpose.

Wonder if Adelman will tell Al Jazeera the next time it calls, "No comment."


Daily News: 'Presidential race heads into final 50 days with Obama, McCain even'

At the other end of the scale of sophisticated agitprop this morning, Thomas DeFrank's lede:

John McCain has the mo, Barack Obama doesn't, Sarah Palin is a hotter commodity than they or Joe Biden combined — and no sane expert knows the winner.

Really. No insane expert knows, either. And no sane expert would brainlessly declare who's a "hotter commodity."


If you want something of substance about Palin — and also a good read — check out Steve Coll's piece in the latest New Yorker. In "The Get," Coll (a former Washington Post managing editor who penned the scintillating Afghan War book Ghost Wars and kicked ass on the Pat Tillman story four years ago), notes:

Palin's answers to [Charlie] Gibson's questions made it clear that all the briefings and all the cramming that she could absorb in two weeks were not enough to endow her with what her résumé so plainly indicated that she lacked: sufficient exposure to national-security issues to serve as President, should she be required to do so.

She confirmed that she has never been abroad, apart from visits to Canada and Mexico, and a recent trip "that changed my life" to Kuwait and Germany, where she met American soldiers. She also said that she has never had occasion to meet a foreign head of state. She added, a little defensively, "If you go back in history and if you ask that question of many Vice-Presidents, they may have the same answer."

Perhaps she was thinking of the antebellum period. Since the dawn of the atomic age, of the thirty-one other Vice-Presidential candidates nominated by both major political parties, perhaps only Spiro Agnew, a governor of Maryland, had comparably scant exposure to the world beyond the United States at the time of his selection. However, Agnew did earn a Bronze Star during military service in France and Germany during the Second World War. (His Vice-Presidency ended with his resignation, in 1973—something to do with bribery payments, handed over in brown paper bags.)

Coll does give the Ashley Banfield lookalike her due, though Palin's positive attributes still don't justify her being a veep nominee — let alone the fact that she's not as smart as Banfield:

Palin is a natural orator, and in television interviews granted before she became a nominee for national office she came across as relaxed, funny, and self-possessed. In the ABC sessions, she told Gibson that when McCain invited her to join his ticket, "I didn't hesitate. . . . You can't blink. . . . I didn't blink." Palin leaned forward, radiating nervous energy. Gibson, with his large frame, sonorous voice, and reading glasses perched low on his nose, loomed over his subject, presenting an unfortunate image of male professorial condescension as he ticked through foreign-policy issues that he clearly knew better than Palin did. Even so, the Governor's anxious-sounding answers to his questions produced more than enough awkward moments to justify McCain's decision to hold her back for study hall.


Daily News: 'Bronx man hacks up ex, hides remains'

Speaking of cement and death . . .

A Bronx man confessed Sunday to hacking his ex-girlfriend into pieces and entombing her remains under layers of cement in New Jersey, police sources said.

Julio Flores, 32, even called the family of Jaritza Calderone, 28, to tell them they'd never see her again.


Daily News: 'The Milkman and His Wife'

Wish David Krajicek were writing today's crime stories. In the paper's continuing "The Justice Story" series on archival events, here's his lede on an 1886 case:

Elizabeth Singer jostled her 14-year-old son awake with awful news.

"Johnny, get up," she said. "Your father is killed."

She guided the boy into her bedroom so he could have a look.


New York: 'If McCain and Obama Can't Tap Into the Economy Message Today, They'll Never Do It'

Chris Rovzar's Daily Intel post yesterday is still well worth reading, in part because of the many links he provides to statements and stances by Obama and McCain.

Over at the Washington Post this morning ("Economy Becomes New Proving Ground For McCain, Obama"), Dan Balz and Robert Barnes provide a play-by-play of the candidates' latest reactions.

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