Posted: June 22, 2011 | Author: bostonboomer | Filed under: Politics as Usual, Psychopaths in charge, Republican politics, U.S. Politics | Tags: Anthony Weiner, bribery, CREW, David Vitter, ethics, karma, Melanie Sloan, sex scandals |

David "Diapers" Vitter
It’s a little late but still well deserved. Louisiana Senator David Vitter suddenly has a higher profile because of the way Anthony Weiner was unceremoniously hustled out of the House of Representatives. Now a conservative Christian Group is calling on Vitter to resign, and an ethics group has accused him of bribery.
The president of the Christian conservative Family Policy Network sent Sen. David Vitter, R-La., a letter Monday (June 20) calling on him to follow the lead of former Rep. Anthony Weiner, D-N.Y., and resign rather than leave Republicans and conservatives open to charges of hypocrisy.
Vitter admitted to a “serious sin” in 2007 after his phone number was found in the 2001 client records of a D.C. madam, when he was a member of the House.
Weiner resigned after first lying about and then admitting to “inappropriate” online communication with various women.
“There are a lot of people that I think are committing outright hypocrisy and are forced to do so as long as he (Vitter) remains in office,” said Joe Glover, the president of the Family Policy Network, based in Forest, Va. “I don’t think the senator should put those folks in the untenable position of having to pragmatically defend his presence in the Senate.”
In addition, Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington (CREW) has filed a complaint with the Senate Ethics Committee, alleging that Vitter tried to “bribe” Ken Salazar, Obama’s Interior Secretary.
The complaint, filed by Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington (CREW), cites a letter that Vitter wrote to Salazar last month. In the letter Vitter said he would continue to oppose increasing Salazar’s paycheck by $19,600 until the secretary issued permits for new exploratory deepwater wells in the Gulf of Mexico.
In a five-page letter to committee Chairwoman Sen. Barbara Boxer (D-Calif.) and Vice Chairman Sen. Johnny Isakson (R-Ga.), CREW’s executive director Melanie Sloan detailed the allegation of Vitter’s “quid pro quo” and recommended that the committee refer matters to the Justice Department if they found the senator guilty of wrongdoing.
“Our country’s criminal laws apply to everyone, including senators,” said Sloan in the letter. “There is no exception to the bribery law allowing a senator to influence a department secretary’s official acts by withholding compensation.”
I believe that, and I know you believe that too. I guess we’ll have to wait and see if the Senates agrees with us.
Karma works in mysterious ways.
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Posted: June 16, 2011 | Author: bostonboomer | Filed under: Barack Obama, House of Representatives, Media, U.S. Politics | Tags: Anthony Weiner, Barack Obama, House of Representatives, sex scandals |

I'm too cool for school
After being mercilessly hounded by the media and his Democratic colleagues for what feels like a month, Anthony Weiner finally resigned from the House of Representatives today. After the recent remarks President Obama made suggesting Weiner should resign, you’d think he would have had the decency to just stay silent after the resignation. But no, Obama felt the need to deliver a patronizing and humiliating lecture to the already shamed former Congressman:
“I wish Rep. Weiner and his lovely wife well,” Obama said in a brief clip from an interview with ABC News that aired Thursday night on “World News.”
“Obviously, it’s been a tough incident for him. But I’m confident that they’ll refocus, he’ll refocus, and and he’ll end up being able to bounce back,” Obama said
What a nasty, condescending a-hole our President is! Nothing like rubbing salt in someone’s wounds. It seems President Obama never cared much for Weiner anyway:
Weiner and Obama did not always have a cordial relationship. As Obama’s health care bill was working its way through Congress, Weiner was critical of the president’s role in negotiations. “We started out from the place that the White House said, ‘We’ll accept anything. If you get 60 votes, we’ll take anything,’” Weiner said early last year. “There was a basic decision made to let the Senate write this bill in any way they thought they could to get 60 votes without any true, muscular leadership on the part of the White House.”
Kick ’em when they’re down: it must be the Chicago Way.
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Posted: June 16, 2011 | Author: JJ Lopez aka Minkoff Minx | Filed under: 2012 presidential campaign, Economy, Main Stream Media, Media, SDB Evening News Reads, unemployment | Tags: al Qaeda, Anthony Weiner, Mitt Romney |

Vintage Ad...Man, that is one happy masochistic pig!
Today Anthony Weiner resigned from Congress…Ayman al Zawahri officially announced his move to the top position in Al Qaeda…and millionaire Mitt Romney stated he is “also unemployed” to a group of real unemployed people at a Tampa coffee shop.
During the press conference in Brooklyn, Anthony Weiner announced his resignation. Unfortunately, he was heckled by such a loud reporter, many had difficulty hearing his resignation. Yes, the professionalism of the “Press” throughout this scandal has been impeccable. /snark
Indignities Plague Anthony Weiner Resignation Press Conference! | VF Daily | Vanity Fair
Just moments ago, at a senior-citizen center in Sheepshead Bay, Brooklyn, Anthony Weiner offered his resignation from Congress. What happened to the seniors while their recreation room was besieged? It was our first question, too. Anyway, Weiner: it was hard to hear what he had to say over all the reporters shouting. “I’d hoped to be able to continue the work that the citizens of my district elected me to do,” he said stoically. “Unfortunately the distraction that I have created has made this impossible.”
Then, a frenzied male voice called out, “Were you fooling around? Were you fooling around?” And later, “Are you more than seven inches?” According to Maggie Haberman of Politico, “[t]he horrible guy who screamed and drowned out the press conference last time is at it again.” That horrible guy is one Benjy Bronk, Howard Stern Show congressional bureau chief.
So damn tacky and my question to Benjy would be, why was there no heckling during Larry Craig’s press conference? Why no question about penis size was hollered out to John Ensign when he resigned? During John Edwards recent press statement, nothing inappropriate was yelled towards him while he spoke. The circus like atmosphere during this politician’s resignation just added to the pathetic nature of the scandal that brought on the resignation in the first place.
As for Weiner’s seat…the clowns are all lining up to take his place. NationalJournal.com – Who Might Replace Weiner? – Thursday, June 16, 2011
A resignation by Rep. Anthony Weiner, D-N.Y., means there will be a special election to replace him this fall. Candidates already are lining up.
New York’s 9th District, which Weiner has represented since 1998, comprises heavily white, ethnic neighborhoods in Queens and Brooklyn. It has elected the congressman with comfortable margins but has been trending Republican: In 2000 the Democratic presidential nominee, Al Gore, got 67 percent of the vote, but the margin dropped to 56 percent for the party’s 2004 nominee, Sen. John Kerry, D-Mass. In 2008, Barack Obama won the district with 55 percent of the vote.
The most buzzed-about Republican contender is New York City Councilman Eric Ulrich, an up-and-comer who reportedly has the blessing of former Mayor Rudy Giuliani. Other Republicans mentioned as possible candidates: Bob Turner, the party’s 2010 nominee, and New York State Judge Noach Dear, who ran against Weiner as a Democrat in 1998 and later switched parties to oppose him (again unsuccessfully) in the general election.
Democrats have been less forward about their ambitions, awaiting an announcement by Weiner. Names that have been floated include City Councilman Mark Weprin, and two ex-City Council members, Melinda Katz and Eric Gioia. A potential kingmaker could be Rep. Joseph Crowley, D-N.Y. Elected to the House the same year as Weiner from the neighboring 7th District, Crowley heads the Queens Democratic Party.
On to Mitt Romney…and his quest to portray himself as one of the little people. Today at a Tampa coffee shop, Mitt held a photo-op/public relations 2012 Presidential Campaign stop to connect to possible voters. During the visit men and woman expressed to Romney the hardships involved with being unemployed, looking for work and trying to get by in this tough economy. And what was Mitten’s response? ‘I’m Also Unemployed’
Mitt Romney sat at the head of the table at a coffee shop here on Thursday, listening to a group of unemployed Floridians explain the challenges of looking for work. When they finished, he weighed in with a predicament of his own.
“I should tell my story,” Mr. Romney said. “I’m also unemployed.”
Oh yeah? Wow, talk about out of touch with the people he is trying to connect to. The thing that gets me out of all this was the desperation shown in the reaction from these people to Romney’s ridiculous “unemployed” statement.
“I’m not mad at him,” Mr. Yarranton said in an interview after the session ended. “It’s amazing in politics. They’re all into pointing fingers at each other. The Republicans right now are so mad at the Democrats, but nobody is doing anything.”
People don’t give a shit what the politicians from both sides are saying to each other, they just want action from somebody…anybody.
Earlier today, the former No. 2 man in the terrorist group al Qaeda made an official announcement to the world…he is no longer No. 2, he is now No. 1.
Bin Laden’s No. 2, Zawahri, Takes Control of Al Qaeda – NYTimes.com
More than six weeks after American commandos found and killed Osama bin Laden in a Pakistan hideout, his second-in-command in Al Qaeda is officially replacing him, according to a statement it posted online Thursday.
Ayman al-Zawahri, an Egyptian who long served as No. 2 to Bin Laden, had been expected to inherit leadership of Al Qaeda, though the delay in announcing his succession led some counterterrorism analysts to see signs of a power struggle at the top following Bin Laden’s death in Abbottabad, Pakistan, on May 2.
I think it is funny that he uses the web as his “platform” to broadcast his announcement…just like many of the 2012 Presidential contenders.
This next link is a follow-up to a school for teenage mothers in Detroit that Rachel Maddow has taken a real interest in. I have discussed the Catherine Ferguson Academy before in a few of my evening news post in the past. Well, Maddow has reported some good news…
The Maddow Blog – Update: Catherine Ferguson Academy to stay open, continue as charter school
Just one hour before a planned noon rally to save Catherine Ferguson Academy from closure, Detroit Public Schools announced that the school will stay open and operate as a charter school. G. Asenath Andrews, the principal of the school and recent guest of The Rachel Maddow Show, told the Detroit Free Press, “I am relieved, excited and pleased.”
Isn’t this a relief? I am very happy for all those students who are able to continue their schooling now that this school is going to stay open.
And lastly, I wanted to link to a real cool website that always has beautiful and interesting pictures and prints. BibliOdyssey: Persian Poetics has some lovely images up today, if you have some time please check it out.
This manuscript of Persian poems was written in a small professional nastaliq* script in black ink in two columns laid into the pages. The text is framed within multiple coloured lines (red, green, gold, black and blue).
The page-borders are patterns of birds and animals in colours (pink, orange, blue, etc…) outlined in gold. There are numerous aniconic* headpieces in colours and gold, and three miniatures from the Isfahan school. All of the pages are decorated.
The manuscript was produced in 1604 by Shāh Qāsim and is a copy of the original collection of poetry by Khāqānī, Afz̤al al-Dīn Shirvānī from the end of the 12th century. The poems are classified bibliographically as travel anecdotes.
That’s it for me! What are you all reading about this evening? (And btw, did you get the symbolism of the pig picture up top? It’s a pig that is doing himself in…slicing himself with a rather sharp knife…while looking pleased about it. )
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Posted: June 16, 2011 | Author: bostonboomer | Filed under: Democratic Politics, House of Representatives, Uncategorized | Tags: Anthony Weiner, Barack Obama, cowardly Democrats, cybersex, Facebook, House of Representatives, Huma Abedin, Twitter |

Rep. Anthony Weiner (D-NY)
From The New York Times:
Representative Anthony D. Weiner has told friends that he plans to resign his seat after coming under growing pressure from his Democratic colleagues to leave the House, said a person told of Mr. Weiner’s plans….
The news comes as Democratic leaders prepared to hold a meeting on Thursday to discuss whether to strip the 46-year-old Congressman of his committee assignments, a blow which would severely damage his effectiveness.
Mr. Weiner, a Democrat, came to the conclusion that he could no longer serve after having long discussions with his wife, Huma Abedin, when she returned home on Tuesday after traveling abroad with her boss, Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton.
I still don’t understand why he should resign if David Vitter, Larry Craig, and Charlie Rangel weren’t forced to quit. The only way I can explain it is that Democrats are wimps and they are afraid of anyone who is willing to stand up to President Barack Obama (R-Wall Street).
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Posted: June 14, 2011 | Author: bostonboomer | Filed under: 2012 presidential campaign, Barack Obama, fetus fetishists, morning reads, Republican presidential politics, Surreality, U.S. Politics, We are so F'd | Tags: 2012 presidential election, Anthony Weiner, Barack Obama, Boston Bruins, CNN Republican Debate, Grover Norquist, Jefferson County Alabama, John King, JP Morgan, Vancouver Canucks |

Yikes! We're in big trouble.
Good Morning!!
Last night several of the Republican presidential candidates participated in a debate in New Hampshire, hosted by CNN. John King was the moderator. I have never heard anyone talk that fast before. I could barely understand what he was saying. He also talked over much of what the candidates said, telling them they were going too long. For some reason, CNN only allowed 30 second answers. Here are some media reactions to what the candidates said.
The NYT Caucus blog: Fact Checking the Republican Debate
On economic policy:
Mitt Romney, the former Massachusetts governor, said that while President Obama didn’t start the recession, “he made it worse, and longer.” Newt Gingrich, the former speaker of the House of Representatives, called President Obama “anti-jobs.”
While it is true that unemployment is far worse today than Mr. Obama’s advisers initially predicted, it would be even worse without the stimulus bill that many Republican candidates derided, according to the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office.
On Michelle Bachmann’s inconsistencies:
“I don’t see that it’s the role of a president to go into states and interfere with their state laws,’’ said Ms. Bachmann, a favorite of Tea Party members who believe in states’ rights.
But then, after some other candidates said that they supported a constitutional amendment defining marriage as between a man and a woman, she amended her answer.
“John, I do support a constitutional amendment on marriage between a man and a woman,’’ she told the moderator, John King of CNN, “but I would not be going into the states to overturn their state law.”
ABC News: Michele Bachmann Steals Show at GOP Debate to Announce Presidential Run
The Minnesota congresswoman was invited to the debate as an undeclared candidate, despite ample evidence that she was planning a White House bid, and she used the first question posed to her to announce she had officially filed to run.
[….]
“Our country needs a leader who understands the hardships that people across America have been facing over the past few years, and who will do what it takes to renew the American dream,” Bachmann said. “We must become a strong and proud America again, and I see clearly a better path to a brighter future.
“For these reasons, earlier this evening I instructed my team to file the necessary paperwork to allow me to seek the office of President of the United States.”
From The Fix: New Hampshire Republican debate: Winners and losers Chris Cilizza says the big winners are Michelle Bachmann and Mitt Romney, big losers – Tim Pawlenty and Herman Cain. Cilizza also liked John King (ugh!) and the “this or that” choices at the breaks (stupid!!).
Juli Weiner at Vanity Fair: Bachmann a Big Winner and Romney Is Bulletproof at CNN’s Republican Debate Here’s what Weiner had to say about Newt:
Most Obviously Disinterested
Former House Speaker Newt Gingrich appeared sullen, and his answers were notably terse. He seemed most excited about two things: talking about NASA—Gingrich is a longtime admirer of outer space—and when King asked him to choose between Dancing With the Stars and American Idol. For the record, he choose the latter—although how long until divorces it in favor of its younger, flashier update, The Voice?
We were wondering if Gingrich’s disgruntled former staff organized a watching party tonight? And if so, what was the drinking game like?
She loved Romney’s facial expression when Herman Cain was talking abut his muslim phobia.
Most Comically Skeptical Face
For a fleeting, glorious moment during Cain’s exposition about “peaceful” Muslims versus Muslims “who are trying to kill us,” the split-screen showed Romney making a face not dissimilar to the one your blogger was making—a face one might make after eating a lemon-soaked pickle, or a slice of Godfather’s Pizza. “Romney’s face during Herman Cain’s answer might just have won my vote,” Ezra Klein of The Washington Post tweeted. Romney’s rejoinder to Cain’s response was measured: “Of course Sharia Law isn’t going to be applied in our courts,” he said. “Our country was founded on a principle of religious tolerance.”
This isn’t a reaction to the debate, but is very relevant to the Republican candidates and their so-called economic policies: American Chronicle: Grover pulls GOP strings
Today’s Republicans love to point out that President John F. Kennedy saw the wisdom of tax cuts when he reduced the top income tax rate. However, congressional Republicans at the time were worried that this would cause a budget deficit. President Dwight Eisenhower supported the continuation of high wartime taxes to reduce the nation’s debt. President Richard Nixon defended the continuation of a surtax to pay for the Vietnam War. Fearing deficits, President Gerald Ford opposed a permanent tax cut.
All of these leaders would be RINOs (Republicans in Name Only) today, because they put balanced budgets ahead of cutting taxes. President Ronald Reagan remains a hero, but that’s because his rhetoric on taxes and smaller government is beloved. Never mind that he agreed to several tax increases (including a huge hike in the payroll tax that rescued Social Security for decades to come), never once proposed a balanced budget and oversaw an expansion of the federal government. The Reagan tax hikes were a responsible response to growing imbalances, but they would be shot down today.
The bipartisan national debt commission and the Gang of Six (now down to five senators) are looking at a simpler tax code that would widen the tax base, lower rates and eliminate many deductions as part of a debt and deficit solution, which includes significant spending cuts. But because this would increase revenue overall, the grand poo-bah of anti-tax purity has declared that this must be opposed by any politician who has signed a pledge to never raise taxes. He Who Must Be Obeyed is Grover Norquist, who invented the tax pledge and is the head of Americans for Tax Reform.
In other news, President Obama opened his big mouth and said that Anthony Weiner should resign.
In an interview that will air on the Today show on Tuesday morning, Obama said that Weiner’s online exchanges with women were “highly inappropriate” and that he “embarrassed himself.” And while Obama said the decision about leaving Congress would ultimately be up to him and his constituents, he made his own preference clear.
“When you get to the point where, because of various personal distractions, you can’t serve as effectively as you need to, at the time when people are worrying about jobs, and their mortgages, and paying the bills—then you should probably step back,’’ Obama said.
Frankly, I think a President who hasn’t done diddly-squat about jobs or foreclosures should step back. Maybe he’s distracted by all those White House parties and so many vacations. If I had failed as badly as Obama has, I’d resign.
This is a horrifying story from Think Progress: JP Morgan Records Largest Profit Ever, While Community Devastated By Its Predatory Lending Sheds 1,000 Workers
One of the many tragic stories of the Great Recession involves Jefferson County, Alabama. As Matt Taibbi explained in an article in Rolling Stone last year, mega bank JP Morgan Chase used a predatory refinancing deal on sewer bonds to reap billions while the local area was financially devastated.
Now, Jefferson County, still reeling from the effects of JP Morgan’s dirty deals, is moving to place nearly 1,000 public workers on administrative leave without pay, as the state Legislature failed last week to come to the municipality’s aid with any fiscal support. In doing so, the county hopes to save “just over $12 million.”
Yet while the public workers of Jefferson County will soon face the prospect of losing their wages and livelihoods through no fault of their own, JP Morgan Chase continues to rake in lavish profits. In 2010, the mega bank posted a profit of a whopping $17.4 billion; during this past quarter, the bank “reported the biggest quarterly profit in its history,” with a 67 percent rise in net income.
I’ll end with some provincialism: Bruins dominate the Canucks, force Game 7
The Boston Bruins beat the Vancouver Canucks 5-2 in Game 6 of the Stanley Cup Finals at the Boston Garden. That makes the two teams tied 3-3. Game 7 should be a doozey. The last time the Bruins won the Stanley Cup was in 1972.
So what are you reading and blogging about today?
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