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Jason's Page of Love and HateJune 30 Props...Obama stepped upPer my last blog entry...Senator Obama followed through.
"For those like John McCain who have endured physical torment in service to our country—no further proof of such sacrifice is necessary," Obama said. "And let me also add that no one should ever devalue that service, especially for the sake of a political campaign, and that goes for supporters on both sides." Separately, in a statement, Obama spokesman Bill Burton said, "As he's said many times before, Senator Obama honors and respects Senator McCain's service, and of course he rejects yesterday's statement by General Clark." We knew it was comingHere come the attacks on Johnny Mac's military record.
Personally...I think John McCain is a true living American Hero. I think if he weren't running for President, the rest of the country would agree with me. He's a man who fought and suffered for his country. He has served it loyally in both the military and in Public office.
But, apparently, now that he's running for President, he's not the hero we all thought he was.
I would first like to point out Wesley Clark's statement. Pre-politics, I liked Wesley Clark. Honestly...if he had won the Democratic nomination in 2004, I probably would have noted for him. Recently, when asked about McCain's leadership of the largest fighter squadron in the Navy, he says, ""He hasn't been there and ordered the bombs to fall" as a wartime commander.
So, wait...McCain hasn't ordered bombs to fall, so he's not qualified to be President. Obama has 3 years of Federal Service and No military record and he is qualified to be President? There is a logic problem here.
McCain + No bomb orders = Not President Obama + No bomb orders = President
Fuzzy math.
However, this is political speak. Annoying, but obvious to anyone that pays attention. It's the job of a man trying to be Vice President to make the opponent seem less qualified.
More annoying, however...downright irreverent and despicable is crap like this: http://www.americablog.com/2008/06/honestly-besides-being-tortured-what.html and this: http://vietnamveteransagainstmccain.com/ and others.
Jayne Lyn Stahl over at the Huffington Post is calling this the Swift Boating of John McCain.
I was not a fan of John Kerry, thought he was a horrible candidate and thought he would be a horrible President. But, even during the 2004 campaign, I was saying the so called "Swift Boating" was reprehensible. The man is a decorated war veteran and hero. Criticize his politics, criticize his voting record, criticize his horrible hair-do and that stupid wind-surfing picture. Leave his war record alone. Especially since it was a million times stronger than Bush's.
Can you remember which Republican came to the defense of John Kerry when this was happening? I'll give you a hint. His name rhymes with Ron McBain.
I hate this side of politics. I am expecting to see John Kerry step up, now, to defend his friend. I am also expecting Obama to say something as Johnny Mac has publicly denounced the Rev. Wright ads as well as the Hussein Obama cracks. June 27 Something to pass the timeSo, during my neglectful blogging time (please, oh please hurry, FY09), here is something to keep you entertained. I've seen some of these before, and you may have gotten them in your e-mail, like I did...but, they are funny. There are more, but these are my favs.
PS: I am using the Xbox that we take with us to conferences. Apparently, mine is still covered under warrenty (YAY!) so I am going to ship it off for repair and use the borrowed one until it gets back.
June 22 OMG, this is HORRIBLE!June 21 Passing the Obama BuckThe Tribes and Gregoire, sitting in a TreeOkay, okay...so I'm a little behind. I've been focusing on earning my paycheck, lately. It was a tough call this morning between Mr. "I know I said I would take Public Financing for my campaign, but I changed my mind," Obama, and Mrs, "I like to Crawl into Bed with Special Interests" Gregoire.
Gregoire wins because her issue came first. And...you all know I am on the McCain Train, so it's time to tout my other main man, Rossi for a bit.
I had trouble locating the original PI article. However, here is an Op-Ed from the News Tribune that pretty much sums it up.
The jist of it is...in order to "curb gambling in the state," Queen Christine signed a pact with the Washington tribes that allowed them only 10,000 new machines instead of 20+ thousand. In exchange, the State would take none of the gambling profits from the casinos. This is potentially hundreds of thousands of tax dollars that could go to improving roads and education and anything else that is important to both Washington State residents and Tribal members.
Oh...but, something else was received for this agreement. Gregoire's re-election campaign has received $49,000 directly from the Tribes. And the WA Democrats, who contribute to the Gregoire campaign, have received over $600,000 from the Tribes.
While it's true that there are no laws prohibiting the Tribes to give to the party (the amount they can give to a campaign itself it capped through McCain/Feingold), this stinks of corruption. The news papers, including the Tribune article, all cut her some slack by saying she's probably not "on the take." But, I am not willing to give her this slack. I think there have been way too many sketchy things going on in Washington since (before) she took office. Let's start with the mess of an election in 2004. Recently, we can look at the grant to schools that was rejected by the governor because the WEA didn't support the award scale as it wreaked too much of "merit pay." Now, we've got this thing with the Tribes.
The state GOP came up with an ad that I think is brilliant. It targets all the Obama Zombies that keep spouting the word Change like it's going to improve everything. The ad is pasted below, but you can find it here as Spaces doesn't run videos very well. It's brilliant because, while Obama is spouting his Change mantra, there sits Christine, right behind him, nodding and clapping while he talks about how government needs a new direction. Then, the GOP reminds us in a caption that she was been in Olympia for 39 years. Another term is hardly change. June 19 Heads are a'rollingThe Mariners fire John McLaren.
I don't blame McLaren for the crappy performance we're seeing by the Mariners. I point the finger more at Bavasi for being a bad GM. And, I point the other finger (the middle one) at the players for being awful.
Still...I can't say McLaren has done anything to help the situation. And, the fact that he's being replaced by Riggleman only tells me the Mariners have acknowledged that the season is in the crapper. I mean, the guys minor league managerial record is 50%. Why not just hire Buddy Bell? He's just as terrible.
I'm glad these moves are happening. Even if they are a year late. 2 years in the case of Bavasi. Now, we need to start seeing some players held accountable. Cut Sexson, cut Vidro, move Raul to DH, trade Bedard, and shoot Washburn.
This season is over. It was over a month and a half ago. How depressing is it that Tampa Bay has a win % of 59% while Seattle's is 35%?
Alcoholism sounds pretty good right now.
(Editor's note: The author of Jason's Page of Love and Hate realizes that alcoholism is no laughing matter. However, the pain caused to him by unworthy, crappy millionaires can only be eased through about 4 shots of Patron).
More politics, soon. I promise. I've been wrapped in crappy baseball land, lately. June 16 About Effing Time! and a HaikuMariners FIRE Bill Bavasi!!
About time. They should have done this 2 years ago.
Now, they need to start cutting some players. Time to start holding these rich losers accountable.
Finally, it's done!
The Moose is an improvement.
You're up next, Richie. BoooooooooAfter the end of the Fiscal year, I am hoping things slow down enough for me to blog more, again. Although, there was a beauty article in the PI on Friday about our dear Governor being in bed with Washington State Tribes. Look it up.
For now, here is another great article from the PI that pretty much sums up how I feel about the Mariners, right now.
'We should be booed'
Mariners get swept by worst team in National LeagueBy JOHN HICKEY The sky was blue and the sun was bright, yet things couldn't have been gloomier for the Mariners on Sunday at Safeco Field. The Washington Nationals, who began the weekend as the worst team in the National League, beat up on the worst team in baseball by completing a three-game sweep with a 6-2 victory. Mariners fans have had almost nothing to cheer about this season, and they've had plenty to boo. For the most part, the booing has been muted, but Sunday it could be heard in a volume approximating that of a 737 landing at SeaTac. "When we've played like this," pitcher Jarrod Washburn said, "we should be booed." When the booing started Sunday, it wasn't directed at the Mariners. It was hurled instead at first-base umpire D. J. Reyburn after he signaled that Kory Casto's eighth-inning fly ball to right field was a home run. It didn't matter that Reyburn was correct -- Casto's drive grazed the outside of the foul pole, making it a fair ball. The three-run homer broke a tie and gave the Nationals a 5-2 lead. Mariners manager John McLaren said he couldn't see fair or foul from his spot in the dugout, but when all the other umpires agreed with Reyburn, McLaren returned to the dugout, the home run stood, and the boos rained down on Reyburn. Games and series like this can cost managers their jobs. McLaren is aware of this, but to this point he has the backing of his general manager, Bill Bavasi, and the club's higher-ups. How long that will last is open to conjecture. Mariners fans have spent the better part of a decade, starting in 1995, cheering teams that were fun to watch. That's gone the way of the dodo recently, and while the 2007 season seemed to signal a return to contention in the AL West, the 2008 season has been a boo-bird's paradise. The booing got to the point that in the ninth inning, on a foul popup by the Nationals' Lastings Milledge that landed about 30 rows foul, about half of the fans in the lower right-field seats stuck their right arms out in a sardonic "fair ball" call. After that, the boos shifted to the hometown squad, which did its very best to deserve them. The Mariners lost games Friday and Saturday to Nationals pitchers who hadn't won this season, and then lost Sunday when Casto hit the first homer of his big league career. It doesn't seem to matter who the opponent is or what qualifications he might have. As long as the Mariners are on the other side, everybody has a chance to be a star. "Fans are coming to see us play and perform," center fielder Ichiro Suzuki said, "and we're not. It's not that tough to get booed. "For us it's about the kind of performance (the fans) are expecting." After winning 88 games last season, the Mariners strengthened their rotation with Erik Bedard and Carlos Silva, but starting pitching is still a problem. But it's not nearly the kind of problem the offense has been. The Mariners won two of three in Toronto last week while scoring just six runs. They scored just 10 runs in three games against the Nationals and lost all three. "We're having a very tough time scoring runs," McLaren said. The Mariners fired hitting coach Jeff Pentland last Monday, replacing him with veteran Lee Elia. But as if to accentuate that the problems weren't of Pentland's making, the offense has imploded. A team that ranked 13th in the league in batting average and 13th in runs scored when Pentland was fired hasn't shown any signs that things have changed. It's not likely that a week is going to change much, but it would be something if one of the hitters would step up and take some rips. None has. All of which means that if any other part of their game goes kaput, the Mariners are finished for the day. On Sunday it was Mark Lowe leaving a fastball up where Casto could get it. The left-hander yanked the ball down the line and caught enough of the foul pole to count, and little enough of it to send the fans into howls of protest. "I thought it was foul," Lowe said, "but I heard that it hit the foul pole. The thing is I can't leave a pitch over the plate like I did. I can't let the hitter get a fastball up like that." Not if the Mariners are going to turn this around. "We're not playing good baseball," said Washburn, who left after six innings with a 2-1 lead but failed to get a win. "And we're not showing signs of turning it around." June 11 Seattle in June
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