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Obama Audio proves his Income redistribution intentions!


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iivL4c_3pck


"Obama Bombshell Redistribution of Wealth Audio Uncovered" is the title of a video recently posted on youtube.  I have the above link, check it out.  In it Obama frankly discusses his views on wealth redistribution on a left leaning Chicago public radio station.  He wants to radically reinterpret the Constitution to redistribute wealth, specifically to African Americans.  It seems as if this is some form of reparations he is advocating, but he clearly supports the idea of income redistribution all around.

Karl Marx said "From those according to their abilities, to those according to their needs."  A quote Joe Biden scoffed at when a Florida TV reporter, Barbara West of WFTV, mentioned it in an interview.  Biden asked if "she was joking..." and her answer was that she was not.  Well apparently, neither is Obama.

This is right from the horse's mouth and much more in depth than what some excused as a throw away line Obama said to "Joe the Plumber" not too long ago.  He is uncharacteristically frank in his support of this policy, says clearly that since the courts are unlikely to pursue such a policy, the legislature must.  No typical Obama nuance here, he is preaching to the choir on this radio station, but now hopefully the rest of America will get to hear how he truly feels about this issue.
 
8 days to go until the election, who knows if this will catch on.  Too long to put into a short ad effectively but hopefully, maybe this time, the Mainstream Media will do their job for once and challenge their favorite candidate on his own words.
 
Below is the transcript for the Interview:
 

TRANSCRIPT:

MODERATOR: Good morning and welcome to Odyssey on WBEZ Chicago 91.5 FM and we’re joined by Barack Obama who is Illinois State Senator from the 13th district and senior lecturer in the law school at the University of Chicago.

OBAMA: If you look at the victories and failures of the civil rights movement and its litigation strategy in the court, I think where it succeeded was to vest formal rights in previously dispossessed peoples. So that I would now have the right to vote, I would now be able to sit at the lunch counter and order and as long as I could pay for it I’d be okay.

But the Supreme Court never ventured into the issues of redistribution of wealth and sort of more basic issues of political and economic justice in this society. And to that extent as radical as people tried to characterize the Warren court, it wasn’t that radical. It didn’t break free from the essential constraints that were placed by the founding fathers in the Constitution, at least as it’s been interpreted, and the Warren court interpreted it in the same way that generally the Constitution is a charter of negative liberties. It says what the states can’t do to you, it says what the federal government can’t do to you, but it doesn’t say what the federal government or the state government must do on your behalf. And that hasn’t shifted. One of the I think tragedies of the civil rights movement was because the civil rights movement became so court focused, I think that there was a tendency to lose track of the political and community organizing and activities on the ground that are able to put together the actual coalitions of power through which you bring about redistributed change and in some ways we still suffer from that.

MODERATOR: Let’s talk with Karen. Good morning, Karen, you’re on Chicago Public Radio.

KAREN: Hi. The gentleman made the point that the Warren court wasn’t terribly radical with economic changes. My question is, is it too late for that kind of reparative work economically and is that that the appropriate place for reparative economic work to take place – the court – or would it be legislation at this point?

OBAMA: Maybe I’m showing my bias here as a legislator as well as a law professor, but I’m not optimistic about bringing about major redistributive change through the courts. The institution just isn’t structured that way.

You just look at very rare examples during the desegregation era the court was willing to for example order changes that cost money to a local school district. The court was very uncomfortable with it. It was very hard to manage, it was hard to figure out. You start getting into all sorts of separation of powers issues in terms of the court monitoring or engaging in a process that essentially is administrative and takes a lot of time.

The court’s just not very good at it and politically it’s very hard to legitimize opinions from the court in that regard. So I think that although you can craft theoretical justifications for it legally. Any three of us sitting here could come up with a rational for bringing about economic change through the courts.

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Obama's "Quayle Moments"

Alot of attention has been paid to Sarah Palin's gaffes and mis-statements, and the media have jumped all over McCain for his "100 years in Iraq" line, completely taking it out of context.  SNL is poking more fun at Bush and Palin tomorrow, and I noticed a poster going by the alias of "HarleyDavidson" list some of Obama's stupid moments which would make for great comedy if poking fun at the Obamessiah wasn't blasphemy.
 
Obama:
 
- Obama said he campaigned in 57 states.

- Obama said Kentucky is closer to Arkansas than his home state of Illinois. Kentucky borders Illinois, but not Arkansas.

- Obama asked the UN Security Council to condemn Russia. Russia has veto power over the UN Security Council.

- Obama said we have too few interpreters in Afghanistan, because they are all in Iraq. In Iraq and Afghanistan the citizens speak different languages.

- Obama said Kennedy talked to Khrushchev to get missiles out of Cuba. They talked in 1961. The missiles went there in 1962.

- Obama said his uncle in the American military liberated Auschwitz. The Russians liberated Auschwitz.

- Obama blamed Bush for the rise of Hugo Chavez. Chavez was elected 2 years before Bush.

- Obama said the treatment for child asthma is: Give them a Breathalyzer.

- Obama claimed 10,000 people died in a Kansas hurricane. The real number was 12.

- Obama said our nation honors “fallen heroes, and I see many of them standing here today.” Fallen heroes are dead so he must have seen ghosts.

- Obama referred to the town of “Sunrise” as “Sunshine” and Sioux Falls as “Sioux City.”
 
- and I will add, "uhhh, ehh, ummm, ohhh, ahh, durrr..." whenever he is without a teleprompter or script.
 
I remember all of these Obama moments clearly now that they were brought up again, but they faded from memory because both the news and entertainment media never pick up on them.  Intentionally of course.  Then there is...
 
Joe Biden:
 
- "Look, John's last-minute economic plan does nothing to tackle the number-one job facing the middle class, and it happens to be, as Barack says, a three-letter word: jobs. J-O-B-S, jobs."

- "A man I'm proud to call my friend. A man who will be the next President of the United States — Barack America!"

- "When the stock market crashed, Franklin D. Roosevelt got on the television and didn't just talk about the, you know, the princes of greed. He said, 'Look, here's what happened." ( Television in 1929?  Herbert Hoover wasn't President in 1929? )

- "Hillary Clinton is as qualified or more qualified than I am to be vice president of the United States of America. Quite frankly, it might have been a better pick than me."

- "Stand up, Chuck, let 'em see ya." ( Chuck is wheelchair bound)
 
- "Mark my words. It will not be six months before the world tests Barack Obama.  The world is looking.  We’re going to have an international crisis … to test the mettle of this guy.  I guarantee you it’s gonna happen."  ( How comforting )
 
- He said he would be honored to be John McCain's running mate
 
- He complimented Obama for essentially being an "articiulate" black man (as opposed to what?)
 
 
This is comedic gold, right?  Some of it should be politically devastating even, right?
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Powell finally endorses Obama, smears McCain

After an intense amount of speculating, which really picked up around the start of the Democratic convention, Colin Powell has endorsed Barak Obama.  I respect Colin Powell, I feel that had Bush listened to him over Rumsfeld, Iraq would have gone alot more smoothly and there would be no Barak Obama today about to sneak into the Presidency thanks to soaring but empty and vapid rhetoric.  I still think Colin Powell would make an excellent Secrtary of Defense in a McCain campaign, despite this endorsement.
 
I just heard Powell explain his endorsement of Obama however and if I were McCain I would be pretty steamed.  Powell was burned by Bush and is now being bamboozled by Obama.  His reasons for the Obama endorsement seem to be more based on emotion than on rationalization and he took some unfair jabs at McCain.  For one, Colin Powell just endorsed a man who launched his campaign on an anti-war platform.  His entire primary success was on this one issue, that he was against the war from the beginning while Hillary was for it.  The only evidence of this was a speech he gave in 2002 but he ran with it anyway because Hillary was weak on this issue.  Colin Powell was one of the architects of this war.  He believed, as did George W Bush, that the Intelligence proved Hussein's Iraq to be an imminent threat and that he must be taken out.  He put his credibility on the line and swayed many moderates to support the war, he spoke in front of the U.N. pointing to radar pictures and holding vials of harmful substances he claimed Hussein could use against us.  He helped Bush sell this war and he just said not too long ago that he still supports his original stance given the information he had.  He said he "...never didn't support a position to go to war."  and that he "never blinked from that decision."  He supported going into Iraq then and still supports going in today, from his own words just a few minutes ago.  According to Barak Obama, Colin Powell lacks good judgement.  Powell just endorsed that sentiment.
 
Powell then went on to say that the war looked great but then things started to go "south."  Fair enough, but then he says that now things are turning around thanks to "the work of General Petreaus and the troops, through the work of the Iraqi government, through our diplomatic efforts."  He then went on to say that he looks forward to this war coming to an end and the Iraqis taking care of their own defense and government, which I suppose is where he is supposed to be in agreement with Obama since he has used similar wording on the stump.  It is pretty amazing, and insulting, that Powell can mention how the war has turned around and give credit to all but the Surge, which Obama was against and said would never work and Senator McCain who was much more openly critical of Bush's Iraq policy than Powell ever was and showed much more public support of the Surge than Powell ever did.  Powell completely ignored that McCain was right and Obama was wrong when it came to fixing Iraq.  While McCain was out there railing against Bush and Rumsfeld in public, making enemies in his own party and enraging many conservatives, all Powell did was quietly resign and go into hiding.  He and Obama disagree, to this day apparently, on whether we should have gone to war in the first place and they seem to disagree on the surge, yet Powell endorses Obama.
 
Instead of challenging him on this, the reporter who got to ask the next question instead asks Powell how much of an impact McCain's negativity played in his decision to endorse Obama.  This is the part where Powell really seems confused.  He starts going into what seems like an upcoming stump speech for Obama's campaign.  He says the negativity "troubled" him and that we have other problems with infrastructure, economy, health, education and diplomatic.  He says these are the problems people want to hear about, not William Ayers.  Sounds like David Axelrod gave Powell some quick talking points before he formally announced his endorsement.  He might as well talk about these other issues instead of the war, considering he and Obama completely disagree on that issue.  What he says next however is a direct slap in the face to McCain.  If he has a problem with bringing up Ayers, then that is fine and it is his opinion, I personally think Ayers is a valid issue but many don't.  What I had a problem with was when Powell suggested that McCain has engaged in the "he's a muslim" smears.  This accusation is completely false.  If anything, they originated from Clinton supporters and McCain has publicly denounced such statements over and over again.  He lambasted a conservative talk radio host in Ohio for using Obama's middle name at one of his rallies and he grabbed the microphone from a woman recently at one of his town hall meetings when she called Obama a muslim and corrected her that he was not a Muslim and was "a good family man".  He also said that people don't need to "be scared" of Obama becoming President which drew gasps from the crowd.  Yet Powell ignores all of this, and smears McCain.  John McCain has never played the Muslim card with Obama, he has done the exact opposite.
 
After some irrelevant rhetoric about some Minnesota congressman wanting to go after who is un-American in congress Powell goes back to Ayers and calls it a trivial issue and claims bringing his name up is to suggest "terrorist inclinations" on Obama's part which is "over the top" according to Powell.  I agree that bringing up Ayers to suggest terrorist inclinations would be wrong to do, but that is not why Ayers is being brought up.  Ayers is not a trivial issue and the reason he is being brought up is because he is a radical leftist figure from Obama's past.  We do not know much about Obama, he still hasn't been properly vetted by the media but there are people from his past, who helped form his frame of thought and launch his political career, who are out of the mainstream when it coems to American values and thinking.  Ayers, Wright and others are leftist idealogues while Acorn and Mayor Daley are a product of a corrupt political machine which in no way represents change or reform.  None of these men represent the theme and rhetoric of "change we can believe in", so why is Obama surrounded with people like this?  Why does he tolerate such left wing extremism and what does he really believe?  He is the most liberal Senator in Washington and was one of the most liberal state senators in Illinois who has connections to leftist radicals.  This is a perfectly legitimate issue which he should be challenged on.  Obama also lied about his relationship with Ayers when first asked about it in a debate with Clinton saying he was "just a guy from the neighborhood."  This has proven to be untrue as evidence has surfaced that their connections dates back to a working relationship in the 1990's and he even wrote a blurb on a book Ayers wrote.  His connection to Ayers is not about terrorism, it is about his liberalism, and his judgement.  His past relationships also lend credence to the very real possibility that he is a Socialist.
 
Powell then preaches on about how he is not only troubled by the negativity surrounding the Ayers issue but with McCain calling Obama a Socialist.  Nevermind that Obama brought this upon hismelf by giving an honest answer to a regular guy referred to as "Joe the Plumber" (who by the way is being smeared himself, for simply asking Obama a question.  no mention of that by Powell).  In his answer to "Joe", Obama said that redistributing wealth is a good thing.  McCain, Joe, myself and many Americans see it as socialism.  Powell on the otherhand, not known for his domestic policy, goes into a sermon about how all taxes are about redistributing wealth or money.  He says most of the money goes to roads, schools and hospitals.  Yeah that's all well and good, but that is not what Obama is talking about.  Obama is talking about income redistribution where you take from one person and give to another person.  You want to build a hospital?  Fine, if it's needed.  But when you give that money to people who pay no Federal income taxes to begin with, as Obama will do, then it is socialism.  Powell says "he deosn't want anyone's taxes raised..." but he also wants to see our "infrastructure fixed" and wants to take care of the national debt and deficits.  This is confusing, if he doesn't want anyone's taxes raised then he wouldn't have endorsed Obama.  If he is so worried about infrastructure then he should question why Obama, under his tax plan, plans to give money to people who don't even pay taxes instead of using that extra tax revenue to fix the infrastructure he so cares about.  If Powell is so worried about the national debt and deficits then he would question why Obama is proposing a trillion dollars in new entitlement programs which will add further to the national debt and our deficits.  He would question why Obama has requested so much in earmarks considering he hasn't been in the Senate very long and why he opposes McCain's spending freeze and complete halt of all earmarks to try and get our budget under control.  On every single issue Powell stated, he falls in line with McCain, yet he endorses Obama.
 
Obama's empty but soaring rhetoric has fooled alot of smart people.  But I'm not sure if Powell is all that fooled, I just think this is his way at getting back at Bush for listening to Rumsfeld over him.  Powell has never been a conservative so he actually cares about his tarnished image in the media and world community and endorsing Obama could help mend that image.  Also, and some may find this observation offensive but it has to be said, both men are black.  Obama is running a historic campaign which has a meaning to black americans I could never fully understand.  Powell more than likely wants to be part of this history but throwing mud at McCain through completely unfounded accusations is not the way to go.  The media will not question Powell's unfair accusations or inconsistencies because he just endorsed their candidate and they will spin it as positively as possible.
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Mac Blew it

I just finished watching the debate on my DVR (had to finish some work first).  I am disappointed in McCain.  Very disappointed.  I thought he blew it.  Palin set him up real well with her aggressive words blasting Obama for accusing our troops of air raiding civilians in Afghanistan, his shady relationship with Ayers and his willingness to meet with dictators who hate America without preconditions.  McCain was also gaining some steam it seemed with his Palin-esque speech the other day where he laid into Obama and the Democrats over Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac and seemed to effectively tap into the anger many felt over the Bailout.  He had a new and promising theme, "who is the real obama" he could have worked with, but ignored it completely. 

This debate was dull, boring and a repeat of the first.  He did not go after Obama, let alot of attacks against his record go unanswered, did not link Obama to the unpopular Democratic congress and the bailout debacle effectively, ignored the Ayers connection, did not defend the Free Market and our capitalist system and worst of all, dropped some insane bombshell about having the Feds (The Taxpayers) buy out all of the bad mortgages.  What the hell was that?  Nationalization?  The only part of the debate that woke me up made me wish I was sleeping.  McCain is talking about how important it is to cut spending and how government is not the answer, yet he completely contradicts himself with this socialist policy.

Tom Brokaw should retire as well, that was no Town Hall meeting, it was the same old structured crap we always see, but with an audience.  Tom Brokaw's ego wouldn't allow him to sit this one out and just let regular people ask regular questions, instead it sounded like another boring network news interview.  I have not bothered watching or reading the debate impressions yet, but my guess is everyone is saying the debate was dull, nobody scored any knockout punches and as a result, Obama wins by default.  I was excited for this debate, I thought Mac was going to let him have it, instead he proposes nationalizing bad mortgages and endorsed Warren Buffet as a potential Treasury Secretary and snubbed Mitt Romney.  Nice Job.
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