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Does CBK Really Have An Interest In Politics?

By Janet Evans
Friday, Dec 19 2008, 10:50 PM


This past couple weeks, like many other people, I've been pondering the talk of appointing Caroline Kennedy to the Senate seat of Hillary Clinton.  As I've said, I believe whether she likes it or not, she's been targeted as the chosen Kennedy to continue the legacy.  She's the best choice to put the next Kennedy in the White House.

The more you find out about Caroline Kennedy though, you have to wonder what's driving her.  I just don't see it.  Now we find out she isn't the most regular voter in elections.  Here she comes from a politically driven family, and she has a spotty voting record. 

Caroline Kennedy may become a Senator.  She may be re-elected.  She may go much further up the political ladder.  But Caroline Kennedy will always be a puppet...she will always have another member of her family pulling her strings.  I have no doubt about that. 


 
Caroline Kennedy, who is seeking to fill Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton's Senate seat, has not voted in a number of elections, including at least one race for the very job she is seeking.

According to city Board of Elections records, she missed several Democratic mayoral primaries -- typically important contests in left-leaning New York City -- in 1989, 1993, 1997 and 2005. Republicans went on to win three out of four of those races in the general election.

She also missed the 2002 gubernatorial primary and general election, when Democrat H. Carl McCall faced Republican incumbent George Pataki and lost.

And she skipped the 1994 general election, when Sen. Daniel Patrick Moynihan was running for re-election. It is the same seat she hopes to take over if Clinton is confirmed as secretary of state in President-elect Barack Obama's administration.

Click to Continue







 


 

If The Shoe Fits, You've Probably Put Your Foot In Your Mouth

By Janet Evans
Tuesday, Dec 16 2008, 09:55 PM



It's come to this now....but I'm not surprised. 

No respect whatsoever for President Bush.

I suppose I'm more offended by the mocking by Americans of the actual shoe throwing than I am by the games. 

But what will really irk me is if parents encourage the game playing or mockery with their children.  There's no excuse for that.

The Iraqi journalist who tossed his shoes at President George W. Bush missed the commander in chief, but he scored a direct hit on the web zeitgeist.

The incident, in which reporter Muntadar al-Zeidi flung his footwear at Bush during a Baghdad press conference Sunday, has turned into a fast-moving internet meme, spawning dozens of games and video mashups.

Continued at Wired






 

Open Carefully...This Is Regarding An Administration Official

By Janet Evans
Saturday, Dec 6 2008, 08:42 AM








The incoming Obama administration director of speechwriting Jon Favreau (L) and a friend are photographed standing next to a cardboard cutout of incoming Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton at a party. (Obtained by The Washington Post)

Do you think Hillary will be comfortable with Faveau on the staff?


"Asked about the photos, Favreau, who was recently appointed director of speechwriting for the White House, declined comment. A transition official said that Favreau had "reached out to Senator Clinton to offer an apology."

Click to go to article





 


 

Senator Chris Matthews?

By Janet Evans
Friday, Dec 5 2008, 06:05 PM



Oh, wow, this is worrisome.  Is it possible msnbc Hardball host, Chris Matthews, is going to run for Senator of Pennsylvania?

That's the buzz.

And we thought Sonny Bono in politics was scary.



(The Politico) Chris Matthews is dead serious about running for the Senate in Pennsylvania - and shopping for a house in the state and privately discussing quitting MSNBC as proof of his intense interest, according to NBC colleagues, political operatives, and friends. 

The garrulous host of the show "Hardball with Chris Matthews" has already picked out a home in Philadelphia to establish residency in the state, according to a Democratic operative in discussions with him about a potential candidacy. Over Thanksgiving weekend, at his vacation house in Nantucket, Matthews’ family gave him their full backing.

As speculation surrounding his potential candidacy heats up, Matthews has also been asking advisers whether to step down from his MSNBC post well before his contract expires in June. At one recent meeting, he was advised that if he truly intends to run, he should resign from the network as soon as possible."


Click to continue HERE



Hear some of his view on politics ...


Chris Matthews On The Daily Show





 

Out With The Old and In With The...Old

By Janet Evans
Wednesday, Nov 19 2008, 11:44 AM

With the long, long, long-winded Sen. Robert Byrd (D-W.Va.) stepping down as the chairman of the Senate Appropriations Committee, due to poor health, the position had to be filled.  And it has, by a much younger Sen. Daniel Inouye (D-Hawaii). 

Senator Inouye is all of 84 years young.  It's been told that he has a much different style than Senator Byrd...a quiet style.






"Rather than give big speeches on the Senate floor or in committee hearings like his predecessor, the senior Hawaiian senator will strike a lot more deals in the backrooms.

The first Japanese-American elected to Congress is, at 84, only slightly younger than Byrd and a decorated war hero who lost an arm in World War II.

Many insiders regard him as a team player, often doing what the Democratic leadership wants but not shying away from telling his superiors to do what he thinks is right.

Byrd, who has been a chairman with a strong personality, has been seen as more independent, always fighting to uphold the institutional and constitutional prerogatives of Congress.

Inouye, on the other hand, likes the politics of the upper chamber, working the members and making phone calls to persuade lawmakers from the cloakroom rather than the floor, according to a source familiar with both Inouye and Byrd. "

Continue article HERE



Filibusters won't know what hit 'em....






 

Rudy Hasn't Disappeared

By Janet Evans
Sunday, Nov 16 2008, 09:33 PM

President George W. Bush greets, from second from left, former New
York city Mayor Rudy Giuliani, his wife Judith, and New York Police
Commissioner Ray Kelly, after making remarks on the financial markets
and the World economy,Thursday, Nov. 13,2008, at Federal Hall in New York.
(AP Photo/Gerald Herbert)





Rudy Giuliani may have been down and out in 2008, but that doesn’t mean he isn’t leaving his options open for the future.




"Rudy Giuliani told CNN Sunday the failure of his presidential bid this year didn’t mark the end of his political career — and that his future could include another White House run.

The former New York City mayor said that the economic environment this year may have presented too big an obstacle for any Republican presidential hopeful to overcome."



2010 holds open the option of a run for Governor of New York...will he run?

Read the story from CNN HERE






 

Biden's Best Friend? What A Hoot!

By Janet Evans
Sunday, Nov 16 2008, 10:00 AM




I came across a good read in Christian Science Monitor that you just have to see…but before I take you there I have to give my pick. 

You see, the writer, Jeffrey Schaffer, is right on.  He’s telling Joe Biden, well, I’ll let you read it yourself…


Joe Biden, can you hear me? This is your moment, pal. Animal-wise, I mean.

While pundits and the public are swept up in speculation about what kind of dog the Obama family should bring into the White House, you now have a golden opportunity to make your own pet selection away from the media glare.It’s a chance to showcase your famous freewheeling approach. The right choice can crystallize your presence in the administration as being distinct from the boss and fascinating to the American people.

Show us something different, Joe. Let Obama’s daughters, Sasha and Malia, have the dog experience. You need to establish your own persona as a pet owner and you can do it by taking ownership of a young...


Okay, Okay…before I take you to complete his fine article…and it’s genius, don’t you think?

I have to put in my pick.

I say a young owl…doesn’t matter what type..snow owl, screech owl, barn owl…

Their heads turn all around…they can watch your back.  They are perceived as wise…always pictured with a graduation cap on their heads.  They are thought to be inquisitive…who, who, who?  An owl would make you, Joe Biden always look wise next to President Obama.

Now on to the article…

Joe Biden, Time For You To Choose A Pet




 

Truth or Fiction? Martin Eisenstadt "Anonymous" Sarah Palin Attacker? Updated

By Janet Evans
Monday, Nov 10 2008, 09:16 PM




Is the supposed McCain Campaign Advisor, Martin Eisenstadt, of the Eisenstadt Group, the "Anonymous" person who leaked trash about Sarah Palin during her brief campaign with John McCain? 

He says he's "the source for the Sarah Palin Africa leak...and proud of it."

That's what he says on his very own blog.

Is it truth or fiction?

Read what he has to say on



Martin Eisenstadt's Blog

With well over 200 comments on the topic there, also.



Personally, I think it's a bunch of crap.



~~~~~~~~~~~~~

 11/13/08 - Update

Bingo!  Like I said above...a bunch of CRAP! 

MSNBC retracts false Palin story; others duped





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I Am Not Hopeful...I Am Afraid

By Janet Evans
Monday, Nov 10 2008, 11:54 AM
 

I have trouble sleeping…it's my problem and I've had it for a while.  I stay up late.  When I finally am trying to fall asleep things run through my mind. 

Last night, after hearing about what President-elect Obama has in store so far for America....of course I was thinking.  And I have to say, it was the first time since 9-11 that I was afraid.  I can truly say that.  It was the first time in my adult life since 9-11 that I have been afraid for our country.  And I am counting since my teen years as being an adult...not since President Nixon, President Ford, all the way up the line. 

During the election I was mainly afraid for our country regarding terrorist threats if Barack Obama would be elected.  Now I just feel uneasy in general about our country.  I don't feel inspired or feel hope.  And no, I didn't feel that on election day.  Or the following day.  I felt it yesterday. 

Left or Right, I am a citizen of the United States, and I want to support my President and never do what was done to George Bush.  Disagreeing with your president's policies is one thing, but I think you have to remember you are an American and show that to other countries.

I hope the feeling I have goes away, and I hope I am wrong.

I hope Barack Obama proves me wrong.


~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Obama Meets With Bush





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Here's Some Change I Can Handle...A Little Pocket Change

By Janet Evans
Friday, Nov 7 2008, 05:09 PM



Well, I guess I really don't call it "change," because If I recall, I think our GWB was talking about implementing yet another stimulus package before he left office.

But, I guess it's going all be better now since BHO (President-elect Barack H. Obama)  wants to put one in place "immediately after taking office."  Well, President Bush really wouldn't have had time to do that anyway, so maybe advice is being passed along.

Either way...I'd like a little more "change" in my pocket.

And while President-elect Obama said a "major issue" for him is deciding what dog to choose for his daughters (I love his daughters...maybe they can each have a dog...they look like daddy's girls and I don't think he's going to have a whole lot of time for them anymore  : (  my major issue is a bit more than that.

I'm a little concerned about all of the foreign issues popping up.  He's really being bombarded with them.  As Biden said during one of the interviews, "Every president is tested."  Well President Obama is going to be tested right off the bat...quite differently than President Bush was with 9-11, thankfully. But he's going to be tested.  I do not envy him.


 "President-elect Barack Obama vowed to push an economic stimulus package through Congress ``immediately after'' taking office in January if lawmakers and the Bush administration can't agree on one before then.

``This morning we woke up to more sobering news about the state of our economy,'' Obama said in Chicago today at his first news conference since winning the Nov. 4 presidential election.

A government report that the U.S. unemployment rate rose to 6.5 percent in October, the highest level since 1994, is ``an urgent reminder that we are facing the greatest economic challenge of our lifetime,'' Obama said. "

Read the article HERE





 


 

An Historic Election: "At Last The People Rule"

By Janet Evans
Thursday, Nov 6 2008, 06:54 PM


November 6, 1860: Lincoln becomes first Republican U.S. President

"Abraham Lincoln was elected to the U.S. presidency today. By defeating Stephen A. Douglas, Lincoln became the first Republican president.

On November 7, 1860, the Dawsons Fort Wayne Daily Times reported election results along with the headline, "Republicans be Glad!" The paper continued: "But let wisdom and urbanity be the governing principle in your gladness. The victory is ours. Now let us merit it; and by wisdom and patriotism continue that policy, for without both, the change will not be to the people a reform, but a barren result."

“Abraham Lincoln and Hannibal Hamlin are elected President and Vice President of the United States. We need add nothing to the world of meaning conveyed in these words,” reported The Berkshire County Eagle on November 8, 1860. “In that glorious fact are foreshadowed equal rights to every section and every class of freemen in the Union. The rights and interests of free labor are not to be sacrificed to an oligarchy of slaveholders; States are not to be excluded from the Union for establishing a free constitution; commerce, manufacturing, art, commercial intercourse, and internal improvements are no longer to be governed by sectional prejudice. Majorities are to rule, and the interests of many are not to be sacrificed to the prejudices of the few. At last the people rule.” 






    Click for larger image



Election Day 1860 Was One of Long Suspense
The Ada Evening News, November 6, 1960



 

Now This Electronic Voting

By Janet Evans
Tuesday, Nov 4 2008, 05:08 PM

      Greg Chamitoff        Edward Michael Fincke





Well, you may have cast an absentee vote by mail, or voted early at City Hall, or voted today, but two American citizens cast their votes electronically from very far away....

NASA Astronauts Greg Chamitoff and Edward Michael Fincke digitally beamed their votes in from space and sent along a message to the rest of their fellow citizens to get out and vote.


“In a televised message, they urged voters to get to the polls and fulfill their civic duty, saying, "If we can do it, so can you."



Read about it HERE




 

I Know You May Have Seen It...

By Janet Evans
Tuesday, Nov 4 2008, 04:35 PM



But, I'm not sure...so it's worth repeating, in my opinion.

You see, this is why some citizens voted for Barack Obama today.






Well, I'll just keep working my job.

Because no one is going to pay my mortgage and my gas...or anything else for that matter.

I don't care who is elected president.

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I Bet You Will Have A Few Free Minutes Tonight

By Janet Evans
Tuesday, Nov 4 2008, 03:00 PM


Tonight while you are waiting for the election returns to roll in…there may be nothing better to sooth the nerves than chocolate!

Now, anyone…male or female can make this.  It's too easy!

Then pull up in front of the T.V. and wait…and hope you don’t need something stronger for a chaser in your mug after you’ve finished!




CHOCOLATE MUG CAKE


 1  Coffee Mug (microwave safe)
 4  tablespoons flour (that's plain flour, not self-rising)
 4 tablespoons sugar
 2 tablespoons baking cocoa
 1 egg
 3 tablespoons milk
 3 tablespoons oil
 3 tablespoons chocolate chips (optional)
 Small splash of vanilla

 Add dry ingredients to mug, and mix well. Add the egg and mix thoroughly.
 Pour in the milk and oil and mix well. Add the chocolate chips (if using)
 and vanilla, and mix again. Put your mug in the microwave and cook for
 3 minutes at 1000 watts. The cake will rise over the top of the mug, but
 don't be alarmed! Allow to cool a little, and tip out onto a plate if
 desired. EAT! (this can serve 2 if you want to share!)

And why is this the most dangerous cake recipe in the world?

Because now you are all only 5 minutes away from chocolate cake at any time of the day or night!




You know, I’ve heard Nader may have his best election year ever!  Have you talked to anyone who actually voted for Nader?  I have. 

One who said he would vote for Obama…but changed his mind…he just couldn’t do it in the end and decided to go with Nader.  Another who just can’t vote for either of the two and “settled” for Nader…and a die-hard Nader fan.  Wasted votes all (in my opinion, of course).

Will Nader make a significant dent in this election that will hurt either of the candidates?








 

How Will You Carry On?

By Janet Evans
Tuesday, Nov 4 2008, 08:16 AM



The morning after the election, if your candidate isn't the winner?

Will you survive?

Well of course you will, right?

If your candidate is not elected, it won't be the end of the world, will it?

Some are indicating that it will.

That we will be nothing but divided.


"On Wednesday, roughly half of Americans will awaken to find that the horse they backed disappointed them. That presumes we even have an immediate result; don't forget 2000, when America had to wait more than a month.

Yet there is, in the national conversation, surprisingly little talk about not accepting the winner if things don't go your way. Sure, some Democrats joke about moving to Canada, but gauging the severity of responses on the day after is a gauzy exercise in tarot-card reading that even television's loudest mouths rarely discuss.

While the spectrum of possible morning-after reactions runs from water-cooler grousing to partisan lawyering to violence, the depth of sentiment this year - more impassioned, many say, than even the last two elections - could make for a bumpy ride, particularly if the results are close."

 Read about it  HERE




 

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Even Fast Food Joins In

By Janet Evans
Monday, Nov 3 2008, 06:18 PM



 

I guess it's not good enough that you learn the issues, get off your ass and go cast your vote. 

I guess it's not good enough that you are now allowed to vote ahead of time so you don't have to stand in line on election day. 

No, now fast food restaurants and chains need to join in and give incentives to vote. 

Cast your vote and get a free cup of coffee, a free donut, a free cocktail.  

Oh, I'm sure there will be many other "freebies."  Anything to get your vote.

Just vote!


Read about it HERE   and    HERE


Update:



Free Starbucks On Election Day After Illegal Ad


~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Yeah...I'm back.



As I am sitting In Baltimore airport and checking in on what’s going on in Franklin, I’ve decided to take over my In The Race blog again…so I want to thank Greg Kowalski for filling in for me while I was away…and especially for sticking to our agreement and not mentioning his support for Obama/Biden on my blog, as he had two other blogs to do that.  No, he didn’t mention them at all…not at all.   I did get a kick out of your Halloween presentation though.

Thanks again, Greg

Janet

who supports....

McCain/Palin

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Watch Out For Moose And Shot Gun Toting Locals

By Janet Evans
Saturday, Nov 1 2008, 11:53 AM






Hey, Greg...wake up!

Before you post, I just wanted to let everyone know something I saw that was interesting.



Well, it's moose hunt'n time in northern Vermont.  It's done by lottery.  But there aren't any moose down in the center of town 20 miles from the border of Canada...at least there weren't yesterday.  While walking in town (without my camera : (    I spotted a guy dressed in olive clothes just walking along with his shot gun slung across his back.  My sister said that's allowed down town, or anywhere else in  town for that matter.  She said you'll find guns in cars, unattended with ammunition next to them and the windows open, too.

I asked her if there was a gun shop down town.  She said no gun shop was there...it's just allowed.  Then she went through a list of archaic rules still on the books than some people still abide by.

These are basically people who will vote for Obama Tuesday...but this is also a 'gimme" state.  High unemployment, many on welfare.

Last I saw of the man, he was in his car picking through bullets.

Interesting.






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"W"...The Good, The Bad and the Ugly

By Janet Evans
Wednesday, Oct 29 2008, 06:40 AM



President George W. Bush entered the White House after one of the closest elections in U.S. history. His Presidency began with the worst terrorist attack ever on US. soil. 

Like or dislike the man, love or hate his presidency...there's no denying that each of us have had mixed emotions about the last eight years.

Msnbc has a slideshow of images from pivotal moments in George Bush's presidency...the good and the bad.



Click on the image to view the photos.



George W. Bush          2000
Getty image




 

Yes, There Are Young McCain Supporters

By Janet Evans
Tuesday, Oct 28 2008, 07:04 AM







Although you wouldn’t know it.  We really haven’t heard about them as they’ve been overshadowed by the many young Obama supporters.  But they are there.  And, it’s nothing new for conservatives to be in the minority on college campuses, even in non election years, anyway.


"Tanya [Renicker] has been smitten with politics ever since her first real lesson in American history, in sixth grade. She can’t explain why, but the story of how the United States was founded, how the Constitution was written, fascinated her. That evolved into a passion for politics, since “it all comes together there.”

“Back then,” she recalls, “all my friends’ families were liberals except one, my friend Kinsey, and me. We used to say, ‘We love George Bush’ when we really didn’t know that much about politics yet. My interest has just grown since then.”

Tanya and her younger sister were raised on a family farm, the same one where their mother grew up, in the rolling hills of eastern Ohio. The family grows Christmas trees on some of their 300 acres. Her father is a sheet metal worker, a union man. Her mother stayed home and raised the girls. Conversation at the dinner table occasionally touched on politics. Tanya would go to the polls with her mother when she voted, but most of her life revolved around dance, theater, cheerleading, and the everyday activities of school and church. “I definitely don’t fit the Republican stereotype – I was really artsy in high school,” she says.

* * *

The events of 9/11 in 2001 galvanized Tanya, transforming an interest in politics into a genuine, daily concern.

“I was in my fourth-period reading literature class when I found out,” she says. “At that moment I didn’t really realize what had happened. We had a football game that night and they canceled it, and I thought, ‘I don’t understand why they did that.’ ”

At home later that day, the full implication of the attack hit her. “That made me that much more interested in politics and national defense and all of the other countries in the world that aren’t like America,” she says."


from the Christian Science Monitor Continued HERE

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Talk About Love-Hate Relationships...Elections! Phooey!

By Janet Evans
Monday, Oct 27 2008, 07:37 PM



It’s got to be happening all over the country. Love-hate relationships over this darned election.

And I’m not talking about love or hate over McCain or Obama.

And I’m not talking about love-hate between spouses over who is voting for McCain or Obama.

And I’m not talking about love-hate between girlfriend and boyfriend over who is voting for which candidate.

But I am talking about mom’s and daughter’s or dad’s and sons.  Or dad’s and daughter’s or mom’s and son’s.

Those can be some pretty bad love-hate relationships when it comes to politics…let me tell you.  I should know.  I’m involved in one between my father and myself.  It’s despicable, I tell you.  We don’t live near each other, so maybe if we did and saw each other on a regular basis we wouldn’t tend to talk politics.  But the way it is, it seems within five minutes of every phone conversation starting, there it goes again.  Something political comes up and I find myself clenching my teeth or wanting to reach my arm through the phone line (except that I’m on a cell phone most of the time) and pull my dad through to this side of the fence and explain some things to him.

You see, he’s been brainwashed I tell you, brainwashed up there in northern, liberal Vermont.  There’s no other way to explain it. Not unless some Canadians have sneaked 20 miles over the border and whispered French sweet-nothings in his ear each night .

Well, it seems there is a lot of parent/adult child election-itis going around (although mine is forever).
 




Generational divides are evident in certain election polls. Young voters favor Barack Obama over John McCain 59 percent to 38 percent, according to the latest Gallup data. Voters 65 and older are more evenly divided, with 45 percent for Obama and 43 percent for McCain. Among women overall, there's a big gap between the 54 percent who support Obama and the 39 percent who choose McCain.
Within those numbers are likely countless mother-daughter duos polarized by political preference — and surprised at the impact on their connection.

“Women tend to be more intense about relationships, they tend to prioritize relationships more,” says Nadine Kaslow, an Emory University psychologist.

“Even if you think of female relationships in elementary school or the professional world, the women are often more intense about it than the guys are.”

That intensity and closeness also often means moms and daughters know exactly how to push each other’s buttons

.
"It's kind of depressing, because she says things that zing," mother Karen Ingraham says.

“She says, ‘Every time I look at (McCain), all I see is old. He's just old, mom.’ I go, well, I'm getting old!’

"
It’s arguments like that that make her 26-year-old daughter want to scream. “It's almost like, you know, she's being tricked!” says Kristen Ingraham, who lives in Boston. “And you want to point it out to her — you want to shake her and say, 'You're falling for it!' — but you can't say that, 'cause it's your mother!"


Read the complete article HERE



 
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