graysmoke

Thursday, March 27, 2008

JUST THE FACTS, MA'AM

Tell me, why the blankety-blank we tolerate pussy footing about calling a lie a lie?

They misspeak, they hype, they mis-inform, they embellish, they rationalize, they get sleep deprived!!!!

Excuses, excuses ------ let's call a spade a spade, there are small lies sometimes called "WHITE" lies, imagine that! so racist! (LOL), there are medium lies, there are whoppers!

Let's just call them lies.

I like the WP Pinocchio label that comes close at least without using the actual, seemingly forbidden "LIES".

Is it because of the ones told by "W" that have been fatal to so many?

?GUILT?

Just thoughts.



graysmoke

Wednesday, March 26, 2008

"SHAME ON YOU" Hillary

Hillary is crying again, figuratively anyway. Her NAFTA support or non/support spinning and her Bosnia trip repeated fairytale should be the events that pull the rug out from under her candidacy.


And her attempt to refocus the media back to Rev. Wright is pretty smelly too. She seems to have only decided to do it to deflect the media from emphasizing her lies about NAFTA and Bosnia.

Her First Lady travels were more perks than necessary diplomatic contacts, there was a good State Department to handle those. Albright being a Clinton loyalist cut HC a lot of slack there.

I suggest she get busy writing a gracious withdrawal speech.

Right now I am going to watch Obama speak on Greensboro, North Carolina.

Have you noticed that the two major cable channels are now carrying the candidates on the trail speeches, McCain was just on speaking on foreign relations in California appearance.

graysmoke

Friday, March 21, 2008

Payoff for Restless Night

No longer do I get many solid nights of sleep, restless leg syndrome and heart palpitations. And last night was typical, could doze off for an hour or so then semi- awake for two or three. Sometimes I just give up about trying to catch the sandman again and turn on the tube, which I did around three a.m. - and behold, my restless night was made!

CNN announced that Bill Richardson was going to endorse Obama. Yeeeow!! Richardson was my candidate of choice when he was running. Right now I am waiting for his scheduled appearance in Portland, Oregon which was to be at 9:30 our time, but all the channels are covering the State Department news conference. I hope they cut it off and get the coverage promised of Richardson's appearance.

I hope this means he will be offered the VP spot on the ticket when Obama becomes the nominee.


How good can it get for sleepless night?



graysmoke

Labels: , ,

Equal Opportunity Snooping

Right now I am listening but not believing, Sean McCormack as spokesman for the State Department. Yesterday it was leaked to the Washington Times, which is a right wing rag, that Barack Obama's passport file had been accessed three times by contract workers that did not have authority for this.

And just in time for their scheduled news conference, they decide to check back and see if other candidates files had also been violated. Guess what? Both McCain's and Hillary's were also breached!

Do you smell a rotting rat? or a transparent CYA maneuver? Why do they think we have any trust in believeing that Condi Rice knows anything at all about running the State Department or the National Security position she previously held.

The reporters are expressing a high amount of skepticism in the questioning. Little wonder.

This administration has let "contracting" run amok.

Time to change.


graysmoke

Thursday, March 20, 2008

Pay Attention Everybody

I may not have posted in over a week but I have been closely following the campaigns. On a forum where I participate (CGCS) a member posted this op-ed that I think should be required reading.

It seems many Americans wish to forget the past history that has left scars that are sensitive still and others still maintain a solid denial of the fallout from slavery.





--------------------------------------------------------------------------------http://www.nytimes.com/2008/03/20/opinion/20cohen.html?_r=1&hp=&pagewanted=print&oref=slogin


March 20, 2008Op-Ed Columnist

Beyond America’s Original Sin By ROGER COHEN

There are things you come to believe and things you carry in your blood. In my case, having spent part of my childhood in apartheid South Africa, I bear my measure of shame.

As a child, experience is wordless but no less powerful for that. How vast, how shimmering, was Muizenberg beach, near Cape Town, with all that glistening white skin spread across the golden sand!

The scrawny blacks were elsewhere, swimming off the rocks in a filthy harbor, and I watched from my grandfather’s house and I wondered.

Once, a black nanny took me out across the road to a parapet above a rail track beside that harbor. “You wouldn’t want me to drop you,” she said.
The fear I felt lingered. I returned recently to measure how far I would have fallen. In memory, the abyss plunged 100 feet. Reality revealed a drop of 10. That discrepancy measures a child’s panic.

A “For Sale” sign was up on what had been the family house. I inquired if I might visit and received a surly rebuff. But not before I glimpsed the mountain behind where my father hiked and where I feared the snakes among the thorn bushes.

Fear, shadowy as the sharks beyond the nets at Muizenberg, was never quite absent from our sunlit African sojourns. My own was formed of disorientation: I was not quite of the system because my parents had emigrated from Johannesburg to London. So, on return visits, I wandered into blacks-only public toilet or sat on a blacks-only bench.

Blacks only — and I was white. Apartheid entered my consciousness as a kind of self-humiliation. The black women who bathed me as an infant touched my skin, but their world was untouchable.

Only later did a cruel system come into focus. I see white men, gin and tonics on their breath, red meat on their plates, beneath the jacarandas of Johannesburg, sneering at the impossibility of desiring a black woman.

A racial divide, once lived, dwells in the deepest parts of the psyche. This is what was captured by Barack Obama’s pitch-perfect speech on race. Slavery was indeed America’s “original sin.” Of course, “the brutal legacy of slavery and Jim Crow” lives on in forms of African-American humiliation and anger that smolder in ways incommunicable to whites.

Segregation placed American blacks in the U.S. equivalent of that filthy African harbor.

It takes bravery, and perhaps an unusual black-white vantage point, to navigate these places where hurt is profound, incomprehension the rule, just as it takes courage to say, as Obama did, that black “anger is real; it is powerful; and to simply wish it away, to condemn it without understanding its roots, only serves to widen the chasm of misunderstanding that exists between the races.”

Progress, since the Civil Rights Movement, or since apartheid, has assuaged the wounds of race but not closed them. To carry my part of shame is also to carry a clue to the vortexes of rancor for which Obama has uncovered words.

I understand the rage of his former pastor, the Rev. Jeremiah Wright, however abhorrent its expression at times. I admire Obama for saying: “I can no more disown him than I can disown the black community.”

Honesty feels heady right now. For seven years, we have lived with the arid, us-against-them formulas of Bush’s menial mind, with the result that the nuanced exploration of America’s hardest subject is almost giddying. Can it be that a human being, like Wright, or like Obama’s grandmother, is actually inhabited by ambiguities? Can an inquiring mind actually explore the half-shades of truth?

Yes. It. Can.

The unimaginable South African transition that Nelson Mandela made possible is a reminder that leadership matters. Words matter. The clamoring now in the United States for a presidency that uplifts rather than demeans is a reflection of the intellectual desert of the Bush years.

Hillary Clinton said in January that: “You campaign in poetry, but you govern in prose.” Wrong. America’s had its fill of the prosaic
.
The unthinkable can come to pass. When I was a teenager, my relatives advised me to enjoy the swimming pools of Johannesburg because “next year they will be red with blood.”
But the inevitable bloodbath never came. Mandela walked out of prison and sought reconciliation, not revenge. Later Mandela would say: “It always seems impossible until it’s done.”

Like countless others, I came to America because possibility is broader here than in Europe’s narrower confines. Perhaps it’s my African “original sin,” but when Obama says he “will never forget that in no other country on earth is my story even possible,” I feel fear slipping away, like a shadow receding before the still riveting idea that “out of many we are truly one.”

Blog: www.iht.com/passages

##############

Note: I added color emphasis on sentences I wish to stress.



graysmoke

Monday, March 10, 2008

Hillary's Hypocrisy

Hill/Bill declarations that Obama is not ready to be C-I-C or POTUS smacks of telling him to go to the back of the bus!

How phony they are.

But they superciliously comment he might be acceptable in the second place, VEEP, their contrivance underlines just how self-serving this political spinning in fact is, only those competent to be president and take over if circumstances would require should be vice president.

That shows their abnormal, pathological ambitions. They will stop at nothing.

Let's hope Obama continues to find creative responses as he did today in his speech in Mississippi.


graysmoke

Saturday, March 08, 2008

The 3 a.m. call

Have you created your own version of a probable answer?

Here is my script for answering the red phone.

Bill--Bill -- would you get that? I'm still looking for our tax returns.





(grin)
graysmoke

Thursday, March 06, 2008

Matter of FACT

I found my voice!!


Performing the extracurricular activites as First Lady should not count as "experience" in the way it is alleged in the Clinton campaign.

Has she taught Constitutional law? I'll take that experience over her First Lady duties and perks.

Has she served multiple terms in a state legislature? I will take that over her First Lady activities.

Has she ever worked as a community organizer in an urban city for the minority residents? I'll take that over her hostess duties at WH events.Close to the president? ---

- wasn't she the last to know about a certain intern with the initials of M.L ?

Sorry Hill, I don't buy the line.

And as I have stated before - if she hadn't wanted to glorify herself she could have attained some improvement in health care but no, she wanted to be the "star". The "politikinista" was more important than getting an acceptable proposal that would pass Congress. Both she and McCain have some responsibility for where we now are, and I see no reason to believe that the status quo will change with either.

Being First Lady is not a legally sanctioned representative of the country. She was not elected or sworn in. Funny what she is resorting to, must be she knows Obama is the better candidate so the strategy from now on will be to destroy the target.

Let's make it backfire.


graysmoke