President….

Can’t bring myself to say it…I do pray for “that one” though because he will be Commander In Chief of the UNITED STATES OF AMERICA. God help us!

William Shatner’s a PUMA!

Kinda cool ain’t it?

blah blah blah

As Powell endorses obama this is what I hear.

Does he really have any impact on anybody anymore?

He was the one that stood up and held files that supposedly were EVIDENCE that we should invade Iraq. What the average person doesn’t know is that Powell was told to ABORT because it was FALSE evidence…however Powell didn’t abort. He pressed on. THEN he didn’t support the surge – that’s real Americans right? NOPE!

Live coverage in Denver – webcams

CLICKING AWAY

List of SuperDelegates

All the super delegates that turned their back on HILLARY!

Alabama (1) | All Alabama Super Delegates »

Superdelegate Name Title
Artur Davis U.S. Representative
Alaska (3) | All Alaska Super Delegates »
Superdelegate Name Title
Cindy Spanyers
Blake Johnson
John Davies
American Samoa (2) | All American Samoa Super Delegates »
Superdelegate Name Title
Therese L. Hunkin
Eni Faleomavaega Delegate
Arizona (3) | All Arizona Super Delegates »
Superdelegate Name Title
Harry E. Mitchell U.S. Representative
Janet Napolitano Governor
Rual Grijalva U.S. Representative
California (26) | All California Super Delegates »
Superdelegate Name Title
Susan Davis U.S. Representative
Robert Rankin
Garry S. Shay
Nancy Pelosi U.S. Representative
Barbara Boxer U.S. Senator
Lois Capps U.S. Representative
Pete Stark U.S. Representative
Howard Berman U.S. Representative
Henry Waxman U.S. Representative
Inola Henry
Crystal Strait
Edward Espinoza
Vernon R. Watkins
Steven K. Alari
Alexandra Gallardo-Rooker
Eric Garcetti
Norma J. Torres
Mary Ellen Early
Jeremy Bernard
Linda Sanchez U.S. Representative
George Miller U.S. Representative
Zoe Lofgren U.S. Representative
Barbara Lee U.S. Representative
Anna Eshoo U.S. Representative
Adam Schiff U.S. Representative
Xavier Becerra U.S. Representative
Colorado (9) | All Colorado Super Delegates »
Superdelegate Name Title
Mark Udall U.S. Representative
John Salazar U.S. Representative
Diana DeGette U.S. Representative
Ken Salazar U.S. Senator
Roy Romer
Jonathan W. Postal
Debbie Marquez
Ed Perlmutter U.S. Representative
Dan Slater
Connecticut (8) | All Connecticut Super Delegates »
Superdelegate Name Title
Don Williams Delegate (add on)
Anthony Avallone
Christopher J. Dodd U.S. Senator
John Larson U.S. Representative
Martin Dunleavy
Christopher S. Murphy U.S. Representative
Stephen Fontana
Rosa DeLauro U.S. Representative
Delaware (2) | All Delaware Super Delegates »
Superdelegate Name Title
Thomas Carper U.S. Senator
Rob Carver Delegate (add on)
District of Columbia (13) | All District of Columbia Super Delegates »
Superdelegate Name Title
Yolanda Caraway
Yvette Alexander Delegate (add on)
Harry Thomas Delegate (add on)
Larry Cohen
Anita Bonds
James J. Zogby
Arrington Dixon
Anna Burger
Jeffrey Richardson
Paul Strauss
Michael Brown
Adrian Fenty Mayor
Eleanor Holmes Norton U.S. Representative
Florida (9) | All Florida Super Delegates »
Superdelegate Name Title
Alcee Hastings U.S. Representative
Debbie Wasserman Schultz U.S. Representative
Kendrick Meek U.S. Representative
Corrine Brown U.S. Representative
Dan Gelber Delegate (add on)
Kathy Castor U.S. Representative
Allan Katz
Joyce Cusack
Robert Wexler U.S. Representative
Georgia (8) | All Georgia Super Delegates »
Superdelegate Name Title
Richard Ray
Jane V. Kidd
Mary Long
John Barrow U.S. Representative
John Lewis U.S. Representative
David Scott U.S. Representative
Henry C. “Hank” Johnson U.S. Representative
Sanford Bishop U.S. Representative
Guam (1) | All Guam Super Delegates »
Superdelegate Name Title
Madeleine Bordallo
Hawaii (4) | All Hawaii Super Delegates »
Superdelegate Name Title
Marie Dolly Strazar
Mazie K. Hirono U.S. Representative
Daniel Akaka U.S. Senator
Neil Abercrombie U.S. Representative
Idaho (4) | All Idaho Super Delegates »
Superdelegate Name Title
Keith Roark
Jeanne Buell
Gail Bray
Grant Burgoyne
Illinois (28) | All Illinois Super Delegates »
Superdelegate Name Title
Rahm Emanuel U.S. Representative
Richard Daley Delegate (add on)
Todd Stroger Delegate (add on)
Barbara Flynn Currie Delegate (add on)
Constance Howard
Emil Jones Jr.
Daniel Lipinski U.S. Representative
Darlena Williams-Burnett
Margaret Blackshere
Iris Y. Martinez
Thomas C. Hynes
Willie Barrow
Michael Madigan
Carol Ronen
Bill Foster U.S. Representative
Margie Woods
John Rednour Mayor
Richard J. Durbin U.S. Senator
Rod Blagojevich Governor
Melissa Bean U.S. Representative
Jerry Costello U.S. Representative
Danny Davis U.S. Representative
Luis Gutierrez U.S. Representative
Phil Hare U.S. Representative
Bobby Rush U.S. Representative
Janice Schakowsky U.S. Representative
Jesse Jackson Jr. U.S. Representative
Barack Obama U.S. Senator
Indiana (7) | All Indiana Super Delegates »
Superdelegate Name Title
Joe Donnelly U.S. Representative
Peter Visclosky U.S. Representative
Joe Andrew
Barron P. Hill U.S. Representative
Andre Carson U.S. Representative
Connie Thurman
Cordelia Lewis Burks
Iowa (8) | All Iowa Super Delegates »
Superdelegate Name Title
Tom Harkin U.S. Senator
Scott Brennan
Bruce L. Braley U.S. Representative
Richard Machacek
Michael L. Fitzgerald
Sarah Swisher
Chet Culver Governor
David Loebsack U.S. Representative
Kansas (4) | All Kansas Super Delegates »
Superdelegate Name Title
Lawrence Gates
Randy Roy
E. Lee Kinch
Kathleen Sebelius Governor
Kentucky (3) | All Kentucky Super Delegates »
Superdelegate Name Title
Steve Beshear Governor
Ben Chandler U.S. Representative
John A. Yarmuth U.S. Representative
Louisiana (4) | All Louisiana Super Delegates »
Superdelegate Name Title
Claude “Buddy” Leach
Mary Landrieu U.S. Senator
Ray Nagin Delegate (add on)
Ben L. Jeffers
Maine (4) | All Maine Super Delegates »
Superdelegate Name Title
Mike Michaud U.S. Representative
Jennifer DeChant
Thomas Allen U.S. Representative
John Knutson
Maryland (10) | All Maryland Super Delegates »
Superdelegate Name Title
Chris Van Hollen U.S. Representative
Benjamin L. Cardin U.S. Senator
Gregory Pecoraro
Parris N Glendening Delegate (add on)
Elijah Cummings U.S. Representative
John Gage
Janice Griffin
Karren Pope-Onwukwe
Mary Jo Neville
Albert Wynn U.S. Representative
Massachusetts (14) | All Massachusetts Super Delegates »
Superdelegate Name Title
Niki Tsongas U.S. Representative
Debra Kozikowski
Paul G. Kirk Jr.
James McGovern U.S. Representative
Raymond Jordan
David M. O’Brien
Margaret D. Xifaras
William Delahunt U.S. Representative
Michael Capuano U.S. Representative
Edward M. Kennedy U.S. Senator
John Kerry U.S. Senator
Deval Patrick Governor
John Walsh
Alan Solomont
Michigan (6) | All Michigan Super Delegates »
Superdelegate Name Title
Jim Hoffa Delegate (add on)
Debbie Dingell
Carolyn Cheeks-Kilpatrick U.S. Representative
Robert Ficano
Lauren Wolfe
John Conyers U.S. Representative
Minnesota (11) | All Minnesota Super Delegates »
Superdelegate Name Title
Walter Mondale Former Vice President
Nancy Larson
Amy Klobuchar U.S. Senator
Donna Cassutt
Brian Melendez
Keith Ellison U.S. Representative
Mee Moua
Ken Foxworth
Tim Walz U.S. Representative
Betty McCollum U.S. Representative
James Oberstar U.S. Representative
Mississippi (3) | All Mississippi Super Delegates »
Superdelegate Name Title
Everett Sanders
Johnnie Patton
Bennie Thompson U.S. Representative
Missouri (5) | All Missouri Super Delegates »
Superdelegate Name Title
Susan Montee Delegate (add on)
Mark Bryant
Claire McCaskill U.S. Senator
Russ Carnahan U.S. Representative
William Clay U.S. Representative
Montana (3) | All Montana Super Delegates »
Superdelegate Name Title
Jean Lemire Dahlman
John Melcher
Ed Tinsley
Nebraska (6) | All Nebraska Super Delegates »
Superdelegate Name Title
Audra Ostergard
Steven Achelpohl
Vince Powers
Kathleen Fahey
Frank LaMere
Ben Nelson U.S. Senator
Nevada (3) | All Nevada Super Delegates »
Superdelegate Name Title
Harry Reid U.S. Senator
Teresa Benitez-Thompson
Steven Horsford
New Hampshire (3) | All New Hampshire Super Delegates »
Superdelegate Name Title
Martha Fuller Clark
Paul W. Hodes U.S. Representative
Carol Shea-Porter U.S. Representative
New Jersey (6) | All New Jersey Super Delegates »
Superdelegate Name Title
Frank R. Lautenberg U.S. Senator
Donald Payne U.S. Representative
Dana Redd
Donald Norcross
Christine “Roz” Samuels
Steven Rothman U.S. Representative
New Mexico (5) | All New Mexico Super Delegates »
Superdelegate Name Title
Tom Udall U.S. Representative
Laurie Weahkee Delegate (add on)
Jeff Bingaman U.S. Senator
Bill Richardson Governor
Fred R. Harris
New York (3) | All New York Super Delegates »
Superdelegate Name Title
Edolphus Towns U.S. Representative
Gregory Meeks U.S. Representative
Marianne C. Spraggins
North Carolina (11) | All North Carolina Super Delegates »
Superdelegate Name Title
Bob Etheridge U.S. Representative
Mike McIntyre U.S. Representative
Jerry Meek
Brad Miller U.S. Representative
Jeanette Council
David Price U.S. Representative
Melvin Watt U.S. Representative
Joyce Brayboy
Dannie Montgomery
Everett Ward
G.K. Butterfield U.S. Representative
North Dakota (8) | All North Dakota Super Delegates »
Superdelegate Name Title
David Strauss
Dan Hannaher Delegate (add on)
Jim Maxson
Mary Wakefield
Renee Pfenning
Byron L. Dorgan U.S. Senator
Kent Conrad U.S. Senator
Earl Pomeroy U.S. Representative
Ohio (13) | All Ohio Super Delegates »
Superdelegate Name Title
Tim Ryan U.S. Representative
Betty Sutton U.S. Representative
Sherrod Brown U.S. Senator
Chris Redfern
Zachary T. Space U.S. Representative
Ted Strickland Governor
Joyce Beatty
Dave Regan Delegate (add on)
Enid Goubeaux
David Wilhelm
Rhine L. McLin Mayor
Mark Mallory Mayor
Sonny Nardi
Oklahoma (7) | All Oklahoma Super Delegates »
Superdelegate Name Title
Ivan Holmes
Kalyn Free
Reggi Whitten Delegate (add on)
Mike Morgan
David Boren U.S. Representative
Brad Henry Governor
Kitti Ashberry
Oregon (4) | All Oregon Super Delegates »
Superdelegate Name Title
Ron Wyden U.S. Senator
Peter DeFazio U.S. Representative
David Wu U.S. Representative
Earl Blumenauer U.S. Representative
Pennsylvania (8) | All Pennsylvania Super Delegates »
Superdelegate Name Title
Michael Doyle U.S. Representative
Jason Altmire U.S. Representative
Robert Brady U.S. Representative
Leon Lynch
Robert P. Casey Jr. U.S. Senator
Carol Ann Campbell
Patrick J. Murphy U.S. Representative
Chaka Fattah U.S. Representative
Puerto Rico (1) | All Puerto Rico Super Delegates »
Superdelegate Name Title
Anibal Acevedo Vila Governor
Rhode Island (3) | All Rhode Island Super Delegates »
Superdelegate Name Title
Jack Reed U.S. Senator
Patrick Lynch
Patrick Kennedy U.S. Representative
South Carolina (6) | All South Carolina Super Delegates »
Superdelegate Name Title
James Clyburn U.S. Representative
John Spratt U.S. Representative
Inez Tenenbaum Delegate (add on)
Wilber Lee Jeffcoat
Carol Khare Fowler
Waring Howe Jr.
South Dakota (6) | All South Dakota Super Delegates »
Superdelegate Name Title
Jack Billion
Nick Nemec
Sharon Stroschein
Stephanie Herseth Sandlin U.S. Representative
Tom A. Daschle
Tim Johnson U.S. Senator
Tennessee (7) | All Tennessee Super Delegates »
Superdelegate Name Title
Gray Sasser
Phil Bredesen Governor
Inez Crutchfield
Lois M. DeBerry
Will Cheek
Steve Cohen U.S. Representative
Jim Cooper U.S. Representative
Texas (11) | All Texas Super Delegates »
Superdelegate Name Title
John Patrick
Roy LaVerne Brooks
Al Edwards
Moses Mercado
Yvonne Davis
Senfronia Thompson
Charles Gonzalez U.S. Representative
Lloyd Doggett U.S. Representative
Chet Edwards U.S. Representative
Eddie Bernice Johnson U.S. Representative
Al Green U.S. Representative
U.S. Virgin Islands (4) | All U.S. Virgin Islands Super Delegates »
Superdelegate Name Title
Carol Burke
Kevin Rodriguez
Cecil R. Benjamin
John de Jongh Governor
Utah (6) | All Utah Super Delegates »
Superdelegate Name Title
Karen Hale
Jim Matheson U.S. Representative
Helen Langan
Krist Cumming Delegate (add on)
Wayne Holland Jr.
Bill Orton
Vermont (7) | All Vermont Super Delegates »
Superdelegate Name Title
Billi Gosh
Howard Dean
Ian Carleton
Peter Welch U.S. Representative
Patrick J. Leahy U.S. Senator
Chuck Ross Jr.
Judy Bevans
Virginia (7) | All Virginia Super Delegates »
Superdelegate Name Title
C. Richard Cranwell
Jim Webb U.S. Senator
Joe Johnson
Tim Kaine Governor
James Moran U.S. Representative
Rick Boucher U.S. Representative
Robert Scott U.S. Representative
Washington (12) | All Washington Super Delegates »
Superdelegate Name Title
Sharon Mast
Ed Cote
Thomas Foley
Norman Dicks U.S. Representative
Jay Inslee U.S. Representative
Dwight Pelz
Jim McDermott U.S. Representative
Rick Larsen U.S. Representative
Pat Notter
Christine Gregoire Governor
Brian Baird U.S. Representative
Adam Smith U.S. Representative
West Virginia (5) | All West Virginia Super Delegates »
Superdelegate Name Title
Joe Manchin,III Governor
G. Nick Casey Jr.
Robert C. Byrd U.S. Senator
Nick Rahall U.S. Representative
John D. Rockefeller U.S. Senator
Wisconsin (13) | All Wisconsin Super Delegates »
Superdelegate Name Title
Paula Zellner
Herb Kohl U.S. Senator
Awais Khaleel
Lena Taylor
Melissa Schroeder
Joe Wineke
Steve Kagen U.S. Representative
Jason Rae
Ron Kind U.S. Representative
Jim Doyle Governor
Gwen Moore U.S. Representative
Stan Gruszynski
David Obey U.S. Representative
Wyoming (3) | All Wyoming Super Delegates »
Superdelegate Name Title
Dave Freudenthal Governor
Peter Jorgensen
Dr. John A. Millin

Republicans stick together.

McCain’s meeting with black GOPers

Posted: Tuesday, July 08, 2008 5:53 PM by Domenico Montanaro
Filed Under: , <!– Domenico Montanaro –>

From NBC/NJ’s Matthew E. Berger
PITTSBURGH, Pa. — African-American Republicans told McCain Tuesday not to abandon efforts to court black voters, despite the uphill battle in facing a prominent African-American Democratic challenger, meeting participants told NBC/National Journal.

A small group of black Republican current and former elected officials met with McCain at his Virginia headquarters, carrying a message that McCain and the Republican Party should reach out to black voters through “conversation and engagement” on issues like economic policy and healthcare.

“It’s important, especially with an African American running on the Democratic side, that the party reawaken its relationship (with black voters), no matter how tattered and torn it has been over the years,” Michael Steele, the former Maryland lieutenant governor, said in an interview.

Included in the group were Texas Railroad Commissioner Michael Williams, former Ohio Secretary of State Ken Blackwell — who ran lost to Ted Strickland in 2006 for Ohio governor — and former Rep. J.C. Watts, according to the campaign. Lynn Swann, the pro football Hall of Famer who ran for Pennsylvania governor in 2006, participated by conference call.

Steele said the group pressed McCain to speak before the NAACP and Urban League later this month. He said the presumptive Republican nominee promised to open dialogue with African-American leaders throughout the summer.

“When you make the fatal flawed assumption, ‘They won’t vote for us; why bother?’ you get what that assumption gives you,” said Steele, who ran for the U.S. Senate in 2006.

President Bush garnered 11 percent of the African American vote in 2004, according to exit polls, a two percent increase from 2000. The Republican Party has courted black voters in recent years, specifically by seeking minority candidates for state and federal office.

But Steele said he did not believe McCain could garner 10 percent against Obama. He acknowledged that many black voters will flock to Obama, including some who have not voted in the past.

But that does not mean the party should concede the group, Steele said, adding McCain has a unique story to tell black voters and can “show his heart,” specifically citing the family’s adoption of daughter Bridget, who was born in Bangladesh with a cleft palate.

Credits

Message from Missionaries in Kenya about Obama

Celeste and Loren Davis are Missionaries in Africa and can shed some light on one of our Presidential candidates.Thanks for sending out an alert about Obama. We are living and working in Kenya for almost twelve years now and know his family (tribe) well. They are the ones who were behind the recent Presidential election chaos here.

Thousands of people have been displaced by election violence (over 350,000) and I don’t know the last count of the dead.  Obama under “friends of Obama” gave almost a million dollars to the opposition campaign who just happened to be his cousin, Raila Odinga, who is a socialist trained in east Germany. He has been trying to bring Kenya down for years and the last president threw him in prison for trying to subvert this country! December 27th elections brought cries from ODM (Odinga Camp) of a rigged election. Obama and Raila speak daily. As we watch Obama rise in the US we are sure that whatever happens, he will use the same tactic, crying rigged election if he doesn’t win and possibly cause a race war in America.What we would like you to know is what the American press has been keeping a dirty little secret. Obama IS a Muslim and he IS a racist and this is a fulfillment of the 911 threat that was just the beginning. Jihad is the only true Muslim way. We have been working with them for 20 years this July! He is not an American as we know it. Please encourage your friends and associates not to be taken in by those that are promoting him. It is world wide jihad. All our friends in Europe are very disturbed by the Muslim infiltration into their countries. By the way, his true name is Barack Hussein Muhammed Obama. Won’t that sound sweet to our enemies as they swear him in on the Koran!

God Bless you. Pray for us here in Kenya. We are still fighting for our nation to withstand the same kind of assault that every nation, including America, is fighting. Takeover from the outside to fit the new world order. As believers, this means we will be the first targets. Here in Kenya, not one  mosque was burned down, but hundreds of churches were burned down, some with people in them, burned alive.

Jesus Christ is our peace but the new world order of Globalism has infiltrated the church and confused believers into thinking that they can compromise and survive. It won’t be so. I will send you a newsletter we sent out in February documenting in a more cohesive manner what I’ve tried to say in a few paragraphs.

Disclaimer: The views in this post are not necessarily views shared by myself. It is posted as a point of view held by some about a Presidential candidate.

Give credit where credit is due.

Voting McCain!

Well if you are here then that means you are searching for HELP.

OR

You might be here to try and intimidate me from voting for McCain, or talking about how Obama is totally wrong for POTUS, or some other idiotic reason that I care less about.

Anyway,

You are here..so look around and leave a comment if you like.

Now once again, I will be voting for McCain this Nov. simply because Hillary isn’t an option. I don’t trust Obama and will not support Obama in ANY way.

10 Reasons Obama is WRONG!

10 Concerns about Barack Obama
It’s policy.

By William J. Bennett & Seth Leibsohn

1. Barack Obama’s foreign policy is dangerous, naïve, and betrays a profound misreading of history. For at least the past five years, Democrats and liberals have said our standing in the international community has suffered from a “cowboy” or “go-it-alone” foreign policy. While politicians with favorable views of our president have been elected in Germany, Italy, France, and elsewhere, Barack Obama is giving cause to make our allies even more nervous. This past Sunday’s Washington Post reported, “European officials are increasingly concerned that Sen. Barack Obama’s campaign pledge to begin direct talks with Iran on its nuclear program without preconditions could potentially rupture U.S. relations with key European allies early in a potential Obama administration.”

Barack Obama’s stance toward Iran is as troubling as it is dangerous. By stating and maintaining that he would negotiate with Iran, “without preconditions,” and within his first year of office, he will give credibility to, and reward for his intransigence, the head of state of the world’s chief sponsor of terrorism. Such a meeting will also undermine and send the exact wrong signal to Iranian dissidents. And, he will lower the prestige of the office of the president: In his own words he stated, “If we think that meeting with the president is a privilege that has to be earned, I think that reinforces the sense that we stand above the rest of the world at this point in time.” Not only has his stance toward Iran caused concern among our allies in Europe, U.S. Sen. Hillary Clinton called it, “Irresponsible and frankly naïve.”

Barack Obama’s position on negotiating with U.S. enemies betrays a profound misreading of history. In justifying his position that he would meet with Iran without precondition and in his first year of office, Barack Obama has said, “That is what Kennedy did with Khrushchev; that’s what Nixon did with Mao; what Reagan did with Gorbachev.”

In reverse order, Ronald Reagan met with no Soviet leader during the entirety of his first term in office, not (ever) with Brezhnev, not (ever) with Andropov, not (ever) with Chernenko. He met only with Gorbachev, and after he was assured Gorbachev was a different kind of Soviet leader — and after Perestroika, not before.

If Barack Obama wants to affiliate with Richard Nixon, that’s certainly his call. But one question: Was Taiwan’s expulsion from the U.N. worth “Nixon to China”? That was the price of that meeting.

As for the Kennedy-Khrushchev summit of 1961, Kennedy himself said “He beat the hell out of me.” As two experts recently wrote in the New York Times: “Paul Nitze, the assistant secretary of defense, said the meeting was ‘just a disaster.’ Khrushchev’s aide, after the first day, said the American president seemed ‘very inexperienced, even immature.’ Khrushchev agreed, noting that the youthful Kennedy was ‘too intelligent and too weak.’ The Soviet leader left Vienna elated — and with a very low opinion of the leader of the free world.”

So successful was the summit that the Berlin Wall was erected later that year and the Cuban Missile Crisis, with Soviets deploying nuclear missiles in Cuba, commenced the following year.

2. Barack Obama’s Iraq policy will hand al-Qaeda a victory and undercut our entire position in the Middle East, while at the same time put a huge source of oil in the hands of terrorists. Barack Obama brags on his website that “In January 2007, he introduced legislation in the Senate to remove all of our combat troops from Iraq by March 2008.” His website further states that “Obama will immediately begin to remove our troops from Iraq. He will remove one to two combat brigades each month, and have all of our combat brigades out of Iraq within 16 months.” This, at the very time our greatest successes in Iraq have taken place. And yet, as Gen. David Petraeus has stated (along with other military experts from Michael O’Hanlon at the Brookings Institution to members of the U.S. military), our progress in Iraq is “fragile and reversible.”

Obama’s post-invasion analysis of Iraq is anything but credible or consistent, leading one to even greater doubt about his strategy as commander-in-chief. When President Bush announced the surge strategy in January 2007, Barack Obama opposed it, saying it “would not prove to be one that changes the dynamics significantly,” and that “the President’s strategy will not work.” Of course, the surge is one of the greatest achievements in Iraq since the initial months of the invasion, and is has reversed much of the loss suffered since the invasion.

Beyond these miscalculations and poor judgment on Iraq strategy, Obama has been anything but consistent on Iraq. For example, the same year (2007) he stated it would be a good idea to bring home the U.S. troops from Iraq within March of 2008, three months later he stated, we should bring them home “immediately…. Not in six months or one year — now.”

3. Barack Obama has sent mixed, confusing, and inconsistent messages on his policy toward Israel. Earlier this month, Barack Obama told an audience at the American Israel Public Affairs Committee, “Jerusalem will remain the capital of Israel, and it must remain undivided.” The next day, Obama backtracked, stating: “Obviously, it’s [Jerusalem] going to be up to the parties to negotiate a range of these issues…And Jerusalem will be part of the negotiations.” Later, Obama’s Middle East adviser tried to explain the flipping of positions on Jerusalem by stating Obama did not understand what he was saying to AIPAC: “[h]e used a word to represent what he did not want to see again, and then realized afterwards that that word is a code word in the Middle East.”

Such quick switches of policy may stem from mere inexperience or they may stem from a general tone-deafness on the meaning of words and policy when it comes to the Middle East. After all, earlier this year, a leading Hamas official endorsed Barack Obama stating, “I do believe [Obama] is like John Kennedy, a great man with a great principle. And he has a vision to change America to make it in a position to lead the world community, but not with humiliation and arrogance.” Rather than immediately renouncing such an endorsement, Obama’s chief political strategist, David Axelrod, embraced the endorsement, saying “We all agree that John Kennedy was a great president, and it’s flattering when anybody says that Barack Obama would follow in his footsteps.” Given Barack Obama’s long-standing ties to Palestinian activists in the U.S., one has good cause to wonder.

4. While his Mideast policy may have been the quickest turnaround or flip-flop on a major issue, it is not the only one. In the primary campaign, Barack Obama consistently campaigned against NAFTA, but has now changed his tune, as he has with other issues. During the primary, Obama sent out a campaign flier that said “Only Barack Obama consistently opposed NAFTA,” and called it a “bad trade deal.” He also said NAFTA was “devastating,” “a big mistake,” and in what the Washington Post labeled as a unilateral threat to withdraw from NAFTA, Obama said “I think we should use the hammer of a potential opt-out as leverage.”

No longer. Recently, Barack Obama backtracked on NAFTA and said, “I’m not a big believer in doing things unilaterally.” “I’m a big believer in opening up a dialogue and figuring out how we can make this work for all people.” He explained his primary campaign opposition this way: “Sometimes during campaigns the rhetoric gets overheated and amplified.”

This is of a piece with his further change of position on public campaign financing. As a primary candidate, he touted his support for the public financing of presidential campaigns, but then witnessing his own fundraising prowess, as a general election candidate he has gone the unique route of forswearing the system. As David Brooks put it in the New York Times:

Barack Obama has worked on political reform more than any other issue. He aspires to be to political reform what Bono is to fighting disease in Africa. He’s spent much of his career talking about how much he believes in public financing. In January 2007, he told Larry King that the public-financing system works. In February 2007, he challenged Republicans to limit their spending and vowed to do so along with them if he were the nominee. In February 2008, he said he would aggressively pursue spending limits. He answered a Midwest Democracy Network questionnaire by reminding everyone that he has been a longtime advocate of the public-financing system. But Thursday, at the first breath of political inconvenience, Fast Eddie Obama threw public financing under the truck.

5. Barack Obama’s judgment about personal and professional affiliations is more than troubling. On March 18, after several clips of sermons by his longtime friend and pastor Jeremiah Wright surfaced (showing Wright condemning the United States with vitriolic comparisons and denunciations), Obama defended his friend stating: “I can no more disown him than I can disown the black community. I can no more disown him than I can my white grandmother.” After Rev. Wright delivered two more talks along the same lines as the clips that led to the March 18 speech, Sen. Obama finally denounced Wright the following month, stating: “His comments were not only divisive and destructive, but I believe that they end up giving comfort to those who prey on hate, and I believe that they do not portray accurately the perspective of the black church.” “They certainly don’t portray accurately my values and beliefs,” he said.

It strained credulity to believe Obama was unaware of Wright’s previous rants — especially after a 20-year membership in Wright’s church, especially when in February of last year Obama asked Wright not to attend his campaign announcement because he “could get kind of rough in sermons,” and especially when his church’s magazine honored on its front cover such a man as Louis Farrakhan. Nonetheless, once he ceased being a political asset and turned into a political liability, Obama dumped him.

Jeremiah Wright is, of course, not the only person close to Barack Obama who holds vitriolic anti-American views. Bill Ayers was a founding member of the Weather Underground. According to his own memoir, Ayers participated in the bombings of New York City Police Headquarters in 1970, of the Capitol building in 1971, the Pentagon in 1972. As recently as 2001, Ayers said “I don’t regret setting bombs….I feel we didn’t do enough.’’ When asked if he would engage in such terrorism again, Ayers responded: “I don’t want to discount the possibility.” When confronted with his friendship with Bill Ayers, Barack Obama dismissed the negative connections saying he is also friendly with abortion opponent U.S. Senator Tom Coburn. While Obama has never, himself, discussed his relationship with Ayers, what we do know is that Ayers hosted a fundraiser for Obama in his home and, according to the Los Angeles Times:

Obama and Ayers moved in some of the same political and social circles in the leafy liberal enclave of Hyde Park, where they lived several blocks apart. In the mid-1990s, when Obama was running for the Illinois Senate, Ayers introduced Obama during a political event at his home, according to Obama’s aides….

Obama and Ayers met a dozen times as members of the board of the Woods Fund of Chicago, a local grant-making foundation, according to the group’s president. They appeared together to discuss juvenile justice on a 1997 panel sponsored by the University of Chicago, records show. They appeared again in 2002 at an academic panel co-sponsored by the Chicago Public Library.

6. Obama is simply out of step with how terrorists should be handled; he would turn back the clock on how we fight terrorism, using the failed strategy of the 1990s as opposed to the post-9/11 strategy that has kept us safe. The most recent example is his support for the Supreme Court decision granting habeas-corpus rights to terrorists, including — theoretically — Osama bin Laden. When the 5-4 Supreme Court decision was delivered, Obama said, “I think the Supreme Court was right.” His campaign advisers held a conference call where they claimed the Supreme Court decision was “no big deal” according to ABC News, even if applied to Osama bin Laden, because a judge would find that the U.S. has “ample grounds to hold him.”

In a recent interview, Obama stated: “What we know is that, in previous terrorist attacks — for example, the first attack against the World Trade Center, we were able to arrest those responsible, put them on trial. They are currently in U.S. prisons, incapacitated. And the fact that the administration has not tried to do that has created a situation where not only have we never actually put many of these folks on trial, but we have destroyed our credibility when it comes to rule of law all around the world, and given a huge boost to terrorist recruitment in countries that say, ‘Look, this is how the United States treats Muslims.’”

Ask the legal officials during the 1990s just how cowed terrorists were by our continued indictments against them. Or, witness the bombings at the African embassies, the attack on the USS Cole, or the attacks on Sept. 11, 2001. Now, ask yourself why we have not been attacked since 9/11, and, even more specifically, why there have been no successful attacks against American civilian interests abroad since 2004.

7. Barack Obama’s economic policies would hurt the economy. As Kimberly Strassel recently put it in the Wall Street Journal: “Mr. Obama is hawking a tax policy that would take the nation back to the effective marginal tax rates of the Carter days. He wants to further tax income, payroll, capital gains, dividends and death. His philosophy is pure redistribution.”

When Barack Obama speaks of taxing only the wealthy, keep in mind this could have a devastating effect on new small businesses. As Irwin Stelzer has written: “Taxes change behavior. By raising rates on upper income payers, Obama is reducing their incentive to work and take risks. The income tax increase is not all that he has in mind for them. He plans to increase their payroll taxes, the taxes they pay on dividends received and capital gains earned, and on any transfers they might have in mind to their kith and kin when they shuffle off this mortal coil. If the aggregate of these additional taxes substantially diminishes incentives to set up a small business of the sort that has created most of the new jobs in recent decades, the $1,000 tax rebate will be more than offset by the consequences of reduced growth and new business formation.”

8. Barack Obama opposes drilling on and offshore to reduce gas and oil prices. While Barack Obama has opposed off-shore drilling and a gas-tax holiday (as supported by John McCain or Hillary Clinton), his solution to our energy crisis does include additional tax burdens on oil company profits, taxes we can only imagine will be passed on to the consumer, thus causing an even more expensive trip to the gas station. As the New York Times recently detailed, ethanol subsidies are a major plank in Barack Obama’s view of energy independence and national security; the “Obama Camp is Closely Linked with Ethanol,” and “Mr. Obama…favors [ethanol] subsidies, some of which end up in the hands of the same oil companies he says should be subjected to a windfall profits tax.”

9. Barack Obama is to the left of Hillary Clinton and NARAL on the issue of life. As a state senator in Illinois, Barack Obama voted against the Induced Infant Liability Act, a law that would have protected babies if they survived an attempted abortion and were delivered alive. When a similar bill was proposed in the United States Senate, it passed unanimously and even the National Abortion Rights Action League issued a statement saying they did not oppose the law.

10. Barack Obama is actually to the left of every member of the U.S. Senate. According to the National Journal, “Sen. Barack Obama…was the most liberal senator in 2007.” As the magazine reported: “The ratings system — devised in 1981 under the direction of William Schneider, a political analyst and commentator, and a contributing editor to National Journal — also assigns composite scores, an average of the members’ issue-based scores. In 2007, Obama’s composite liberal score of 95.5 was the highest in the Senate. Rounding out the top five most liberal senators last year were Sens. Sheldon Whitehouse (D., R.I.), with a composite liberal score of 94.3; Joseph Biden (D., Del.), with a 94.2; Bernie Sanders (I., Vt.), with a 93.7; and Robert Menendez (D., N.J.), with a 92.8.”

Whom will a man this far left appoint to the Supreme Court?

— William J. Bennett is the host of the nationally syndicated radio show Bill Bennett’s Morning in America. Seth Leibsohn is the show’s producer.

Next Page »