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Posted on 03.31.08 by dancurry @ 8:57 pm
Opening day of the baseball season is a de facto national holiday. On a rainy day, Wrigley Field was filled with 41,000 fans anxious to see the Cubs march toward the NL Central crown. I was glad to be there, too, but for different reasons—a break from politics and a way to keep my eye on the Cardinals’ rival while silently rooting against them. It worked, the Cubs lost 4-3. A great pitching duel between Carlos Zambrano and Ben Sheets came apart at the end when both teams’ closers allowed three runs. In the 10th, Milwaukee scored a run for the winner. A great day in the cold March rain of Chicago. |
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Posted on 03.27.08 by dancurry @ 8:00 pm
Barack Obama gave another economic address today and then submitted to a rare interview to a non-fawning reporter. His answers on taxes should frighten America even more than the rantings of his racist pastor. As we’ve pointed out before, Obama is a George McGovern liberal, not a JFK Democrat. He believes that we should permanently stifle the economy by dramatically increasing taxes on many Americans and thus limiting the growth potential of our economy.
And then Barack, who had the most dogmatic liberal voting record in the U.S. Senate, proclaimed his tired redistribution ideology is not based on ideology or dogma.
Read the whole interview and be scared. Very scared. Technorati Tags: |
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Posted on 03.27.08 by dancurry @ 7:48 pm
Illinois Governor Rod Blagojevich is pushing hard for public funding of Wrigley Field renovation. It may be his most brazen hustle yet. As we all know, Blagojevich is on Disneyworld boat ride toward a corruption indictment—he can’t get off and we all know where the boat lands. His once vaunted (and illegal) campaign money raising operation is finally starting to sputter and his legal bills are rising. In the last six months of reporting available, 39.7 cents of every dollar he raised went to Winston & Strawn, the downtown law firm headed by former Governor Jim Thompson. Big Jim happens to head the public agency putting together the Wrigley plan. If the trends continue, Rod will be out of money to pay his legal bills as the feds close in on him. What is the one thing that kept his campaign treasury flush over the years? Promises of high returns for investors. What does the Wrigley Field public financing plan include? About $350 million in bonding and plenty of legal work. In other words, lots of no-bid contracts to hand out to “investors.”
So Rod and Big Jim are pushing a plan that will put taxpayers on the hook for a Wrigley Field renovation that will happen anyway. And they are pushing for an outcome that will help Rod raise campaign cash to pay Big Jim’s law firm. Even by Illinois standards, the brazen-meter needle is traveling to new territory. Technorati Tags: |
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Posted on 03.25.08 by dancurry @ 7:44 am
The blogger Patterico has been on top of correcting the Left and the MSM for consistently trying to rewrite history by stating the Bush administration was claiming Iraq was responsible for 9-11. Just a few days ago, he corrected the L.A. Times.
Patterico and others have complained that the Administration doesn’t more aggressively defend itself against such unwarranted attacks. The Bush inner circle must believe arguing these fine points is a losing proposition against the anti-war MSM, but I think they are wrong. You can’t allow a damaging lie to be created and then cemented without interruption. Technorati Tags: |
Posted on 03.21.08 by dancurry @ 5:04 am
Columnists in town are trying to find meaning in the massive corruption trial of Tony Rezko and the Rod Blagojevich administration. Some want to focus on bi-partisan participation and others the drug habits of key witness Stuart Levine. They are all missing the point. The real meaning of the corruption trial can be found in the chart above. There has never been anything like the Blagojevich money operation in Illinois. They made any other pay-to-play apparatus look like a lemonade stand. Blagojevich’s two top fundraising captains, Rezko and the similarly indicted Chris Kelly, opened the spigots fully and used all governmental powers they could think of to reward big donors. Giving the Blagojevich administration a big campaign contribution thus became one of the best investment opportunities in America because of the guaranteed exponential return.
There have always been insiders lurking around the halls of government, waiting to pounce on the spoils if they are allowed. It takes an honest and attentive chief executive to stop the graft. The chart above shows that Illinois has had no such chief executive the last five years. Technorati Tags: |
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Posted on 03.20.08 by dancurry @ 8:08 pm
I would like to know from our great racial healer, Barack Obama, what exactly is a “typical white person.” Perhaps he can ramp up for another “major” speech to tell us. Technorati Tags: |
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Posted on 03.20.08 by dancurry @ 10:12 am
I have praised Daily Southtown columnist Kristen McQueary before for her against-the-grain commentary. Today, her column, “Media coddles Obama” is a gem. She unflinchingly takes on the editors of her own news organization (Chicago Sun-Times) and the Chicago Tribune in a column that probably ends any chance the Trib would hire her in the future, if that interested her. But she did her readers a service by dissecting the strange flood of praise the papers gave Barack Obama for his long on style, short on substance appearances before their editorial boards last week.
Read the whole column. It’s excellent. Technorati Tags: |
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Posted on 03.18.08 by dancurry @ 6:09 pm
There. I just matched MSNBC’s Chris Matthews in hyperbole. He was calling Barack Obama’s speech today one of the most important of our time and comparing Obama to Abraham Lincoln. Well, to put it charitably, Matthews is so fixated on race that he wants whatever the bi-racial Obama says to be historic because it fits into a template that Matthew embraces. The speech wasn’t even close to being historic. It was well-written. However, it had very little poetic bounce and was flatly read and delivered. It also was not much different than what Obama has said in his books and other speeches. The difference that he was tactically trying to put closure on a media firestorm that was seriously harming his candidacy. It had very little that spoke to me, a suburban white Republican. He poked a little at black culture and white culture and wove into a narrative that excused his own failure to speak out against Rev. Jeremiah Wright when it counted instead of when he was under the gun from the media. A white Republican politician in the reverse position would never get the same easy absolution. He cheapened the “major” speech by saying our racial divide needs to be healed so we can address Democratic talking points. He also backtracked on his answer Friday by admitting he has heard Rev. Wright’s tirades. If that was President Bush making that backtrack, the leftwing internet sites that Obama panders to would be screaming: Bush lied! Instead, leftwing commentators praised the speech’s “nuance.” Whenever I hear someone praising a speech’s nuance, I know that it was jumbled and not communicated clearly. Again, it was not a bad speech. As a political move, it was well done, allowing Obama to temporarily escape the pounding pressure of the Wright imbroglio. Yet the bad Wright tape still exists and will be played throughout the campaign, if Obama is nominated. There’s nothing in today’s speech that compares to the power of that video. It’s the difference between action and words. Technorati Tags: |
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Posted on 03.18.08 by dancurry @ 9:02 am
Enveloped between some towering prose, Barack Obama today made a plea to the news media: Stop playing the damaging Rev. Jeremiah Wright video because it is hurting my candidacy.
He wants to be the blank slate that America loves, not be exposed as a left-wing Democrat. Don’t be deceived by the pleasant demeanor or the words that few could disagree with. If Obama is truly identified, he loses. Technorati Tags: |
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Posted on 03.15.08 by dancurry @ 10:28 am
Barack Obama met the editorial boards of the Chicago Tribune and Sun-Times on Friday and finally answered in detail questions surrounding his same-day real estate purchase with indicted influence peddler Tony Rezko. On what I consider the key question in the entire matter, Obama’s answer was evasive. I’m glad the Tribune finally asked the question but disappointed nobody pressed him further on his non-answer. He said that Rezko intended to develop his part of the sale—Obama’s side yard—and that Barack and Michelle welcomed that. He said a house right next to his would serve as a buffer to traffic. And he said before the Secret Service came along, people peered into his house from the street. He would rather have a house butting up against his rather than trees, bushes and open space? Sorry, I’m not buying it.
This is not an insignificant point. As Hugh Hewitt pointed out recently, if Barack and Tony agreed that Tony would buy the vacant lot and hold it that way until the Obamas could buy it later, it very well might be considered an illegal gift under U.S. Senate rules. I’ve made the same point several times in recent months. So, let’s all consider this question. If you wanted more privacy would you rather have a house or apartment building close to your house, or green space, trees and whatever landscaping buffer you could afford? I don’t find Barack’s answer in the mainstream of logic, common sense, or perhaps, truthfulness. UPDATE: In the audio of the Sun-Times visit, as the meeting was breaking up, a reporter asked Obama point-blank whether he and Tony discussed keeping the land vacant. Barack said “no.” This interchange is not captured on the Sun-Times transcript. This is mind-boggling. The self-described friends, who socialized four or five times a year and who conducted a walk-through of the house, never discussed keeping property vacant that Tony was buying next door? So Tony just said he was developing the lot and that was that? His good friend Tony never asked Barack what his preference was for the adjacent lot? Barack’s answer is difficult to believe. Technorati Tags: |
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