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Letters
Thursday, September 4, 2008 12:00 AM

The GOP's cheerful viciousness

Yet again, the GOP launches brutal personality and cultural attacks on the Democratic candidate. Yet again, Democrats seem determined to allow it to do so.

The letters thread is now closed.

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Thursday, September 4, 2008 11:35 AM

@ T. Suarez

The problem with you partisans is you play a part you did not right for yourself. The part you play was written by people who don't care about you, they only care about using you to disseminate their ideas and beliefs. To be a partisan is to limit oneself, to only be able to read from a script, to only be able to think in someone else's voice.

Thursday, September 4, 2008 11:35 AM

why don't they get it?

The Democrats have this terrible need to misoverestimate their fellow American voters. Why don't these guys get, really get, that at least half of America sees this contest as nothing but sport, and the most brutal player wins?

Most depressing GG post ever. Between our brainy politeness and a few Diebold rigs here, a few Diebold rigs there, America is looking at at least four more years.

Thursday, September 4, 2008 11:38 AM

Palin the feminist

Yeah, that'll work. Cuz that's why she supports women controlling their own bodies, and being paid equally for equal work, and having access to information about birth control. That's why she supports affordable day care and health care. That's why she funded teen-pregnancy support centers.

Oh, wait....

Thursday, September 4, 2008 11:41 AM

ArthurDental, did you miss this part of the Rasmussen site....

The Rasmussen Reports daily Presidential Tracking Poll for Thursday shows Barack Obama attracting 47% of the vote while John McCain earns 43%. When "leaners" are included, it’s Obama 50%, McCain 45%. (see recent daily results).

Also...

The poll also found that "54% say the [news] stories have no impact on their votes."

This isn't American Idol dude. Its McCain running for prez, not Palin. Maybe you guys should change the order on the ticket.

Thursday, September 4, 2008 11:42 AM

You mean by reading...

Sarah Palin, a woman, obviously doesn't let others define who she is. She demonstrated that last night.

Were she not a Republican, she'd be considered a strong feminist.

...The salonistas snarling in the corner.

-- NotOrbitBoy

a speech pre-written for someone else? Yeah, that really shows how she defines herself. Maybe you buy that foolishness, but it doesn't seem like many others do, including the focus groups of independents who thought she was pretty bad. Enjoy your typical GOP slime-fest for the ever shrinking base you still cling to.

Thursday, September 4, 2008 11:42 AM

How is it possible...

That the GOP candidates can spew lie after lie, and distortion after distortion on live TV (see Guiliani's and Palin's speeches just to name the two worst)? Does no one in the MSM have the balls to call bullshit and make them defend their own pathetic records?

Thursday, September 4, 2008 11:47 AM

T. Suarez your eaconomic laws are ideologically, not reality based

the economy...for people of all economic categories...grows considerably faster under Democratic Presidents than Republican Presidents. Inequality increases under Republicans like Bush, but this doesn't benefit the very wealthy quite so much as it damages the really poor.

To present your ideological thesis that conservatism works for ordinary Americans, bring empirical evidence that is not from a conservative idea factory....

Thursday, September 4, 2008 11:47 AM

Sarah Palin and the RNC

weary me. Let them be gone.

Thursday, September 4, 2008 11:47 AM

And then there's this...

My god, can the news get any worse for Sarah Palin. Um, yeah.

Palin's national guard faces a crisis in personnel

By RICHARD LARDNER – 2 hours ago

WASHINGTON (AP) — The Alaska National Guard, which Republicans are pointing to as an important national-security credential for vice presidential choice Sarah Palin, has personnel shortages that make its aviation units the most poorly staffed in the nation.

Just six months ago, Air Force Maj. Gen. Craig Campbell, the Alaska Guard's top officer, warned in an internal memo that "missions are at risk." The lack of qualified airmen, Campbell said, "has reached a crisis level."

The situation has improved since the March 1 memo was written, Campbell said Wednesday in a telephone interview with The Associated Press — but not enough to eliminate his concern that shortages will result in the "burnout" of troops the Guard already has. That could result in missions and equipment being moved out of Alaska.

Campbell installed a new policy that could stop officers from advancing unless they show success at bringing in new members and retaining existing troops.

Campbell is due to receive a third star on Sunday — a promotion approved by Palin, who has authority over the Alaska National Guard. He described Palin as very supportive of the Guard, but said she gives him latitude to manage the force. Governors typically do not have a direct role in day-to-day operations.

In a Wednesday interview with ABC News, Republican presidential candidate John McCain said Palin "has been in charge and she has had national security as one of her primary responsibilities."

Overall, the Alaska National Guard has about 3,800 troopsin its air and ground units.

The Air Guard's problems, while important in Alaska, aren't a major national defense issue. The Alaska Air Guard's 176th Wing is about 300 members short of the 1,598 airmen it is authorized to have, according to Campbell's office. Its other primary wing, the 168th, has 641 airmen, about 70 fewer than it needs.

Yet the relatively small numbers are also reminders that Republicans may be stretching their claims that Palin is qualified to be a heartbeat away from running the world's most powerful military. Indeed, Palin's lack of stature in national and international circles is sure to be a recurring theme for Democrats as the presidential campaigns move forward.

Members of the Alaska Army and Air Guard have been sent to Iraq, Afghanistan, the Horn of Africa and other overseas locations before and since Palin was sworn in as governor in December 2006. They've handled duties ranging from training the Afghan National Army to communications support. When on these federal missions, National Guard troops are under the command of the Defense Department and not their governors.

In July 2007, Palin visited Alaska Guard members serving in Kuwait.

Under state control, the Guard's duties are more routine. On Monday, Guard soldiers transported a woman with an eye injury to Nome for medical treatment. A few days earlier, Guard airmen rescued a man after his plane went down in a spruce bog 57 miles southeast of Galena. And in late July, the Guard was called in to a help a man who'd fallen off the roof of his cabin in the Brooks Range mountains.

Referring to getting his third star, Campbell told the AP his promotion comes with no extra pay or benefits and reflects his broader stewardship of Alaska's Department of Military and Veteran Affairs, of which the National Guard is one part. Campbell earns about $127,000 annually.

The extra rank is also intended to ensure the state remains in control should the federal government mobilize the National Guard for a domestic emergency.

Campbell's memo was sent to Brig. Gen. Deborah McManus, his deputy in charge of Alaska's Air Guard. It was posted on a Web site run by Andrew Halcro, a Republican who ran against Palin as an independent in the 2006 Alaska governor's race.

The memo called the low Air Guard personnel levels a "leadership issue" and spelled out a more aggressive recruiting and retention program. As part of that program, Campbell said he would personally approve promotions for colonels, lieutenant colonels and chief master sergeants.

After the memo was posted, Campbell sent Halcro information to answer concerns about the memo that had been raised after it became public.

On the recruiting program, Campbell said he was focusing on these ranks so they would understand "their significant responsibility for improving the current manpower problem."

He also said the Alaska Air Guard has only 84 percent of its assigned positions filled, the lowest rating in the country. There are only eight other states below 90 percent. Campbell said the 84 percent rating is higher than the 81 percent he reported in the March memo.

As for his promotion, Campbell said that following Hurricane Katrina in 2005, governors around the country became concerned the president could call Guard members to federal service for a state emergency without the governor's consent. That raised the possibility the troops would not be controlled by the governor.

"This promotion is a statement by the governor of Alaska that the National Guard is the state military force responsible for responding to state issues, at the direction of the governor, working for the governor," Campbell said.

Nationwide, the Army National Guard has 361,151 soldiers, 10,000 more than its planned level, according to the National Guard Bureau in Washington. The Air National Guard has 106,643 airmen, just under its approved strength of 106,700.

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