Ouch.
Palin: Voting for Obama is Voting for Socialism
“See, under a big government, more tax agenda, what you thought was yours would really start belonging to somebody else, to everybody else. If you thought your income, your property, your inventory, your investments were, were yours, they would really collectively belong to everybody. Obama, Barack Obama has an ideological commitment to higher taxes, and I say this based on his record… Higher taxes, more government, misusing the power to tax leads to government moving into the role of some believing that government then has to take care of us. And government kind of moving into the role as the other half of our family, making decisions for us. Now, they do this in other countries where the people are not free. Let us fight for what is right. John McCain and I, we will put our trust in you.”
Really?
Trite, but Clever, Really.
Photo of Obama’s shoes from http://digitaljournalist.org/issue0810/callie-bp.html; a great photo site.
Rove on McCain
I should have read further down the page before I posted about Henninger.
Karl Rove, writing an opinion piece in the WSJ proves himself to (still) be a$$hole:
No campaign moves in a straight line. Every race experiences turns toward one side or the other, driven by events, the determined efforts of one candidate, or even a bored media hoping for a new story line.
Is there one more turn in the contest and, if so, will it be toward Mr. McCain?
…there are a few things bending toward Mr. McCain. The emergence of “Joe the Plumber” and the likelihood of an agreement with Iraq on a continued U.S. troop presence are two of them. Both are opportunities for Mr. McCain to contrast himself against Mr. Obama.
Yes, please Senator McCain do contrast yourself with Senator Obama, that’s going to help the Dem’s cause.
…Mr. Obama’s troublesome friendships with Bill Ayers, Tony Rezko and (especially) Rev. Jeremiah Wright are important. But only 12 days remain. These relationships should have been highlighted by the McCain campaign in the spring and summer.
But Mr. McCain complicated things by unilaterally declaring Rev. Wright off limits.
I wonder if that was because Obama renounced his relationship with Wright, calling Wright’s comments “appalling” and that Wright’s comments are “completely opposed to what I stand for and where I want to take this country.” We’ll just ignore those facts, as Rove does as well.
Mr. McCain’s economic argument is simple: Raising taxes on small businesses in the face of recession will deepen and prolong the downturn. Taxing Joe the Plumber and other entrepreneurs to pay for what the National Taxpayers Union says are Mr. Obama’s $293 billion-a-year new spending plans is an expense the nation cannot afford.
Cough; Joe the Plumber doesn’t make anywhere close to $250k, nor does the business he wants to buy, as reported by the WSJ and that he’d actually get a tax-cut under Senator Obama’s plan. Oops.
I could go on and on. But why waste my time on Rove. Really.
Henninger on Palin
Daniel Henninger, writing an opinion piece in the WSJ proves himself to be pretty silly:
The complaint against the Alaska governor, at its most basic, is that she doesn’t qualify for admission to the national political fraternity….Boy, that’s rich.
Well no, it’s that she has no qualification to lead the country in time of emergency, but I digress.
If nothing else, the quick surge of party-wide excitement and campaign contributions after his selection of Sarah Palin made clear that at that moment the McCain candidacy was moribund and headed for a low-turnout debacle. If he had picked any of the men on his veep shortlist — Pawlenty, Sanford, Romney or Lieberman — they’d have won approval from the media’s college of cardinals, and killed his campaign.
Oh, so it’s OK to pick Palin, despite her lack of qualifications, because she re-vitalized the voters for the GOP. Mmkay.
It seems only yesterday that the most critical skill in presidential politics was being able to connect to and talk to people in places like Bronko’s Bar or Saddleback Church. That’s a skill I suspect Barack Obama will never learn.
Really!, Really?
Really, A Donkey on Your Scarf?
Photo by Max Whittaker/Getty Images
Gosh, I wonder where she bought that scarf?
Palin Dressed to the Nines; Hrm, I mean the $150Ks
The Republican National Committee has spent more than $150,000 to clothe and accessorize vice presidential candidate Sarah Palin and her family since her surprise pick by John McCain in late August.
According to financial disclosure records, the accessorizing began in early September and included bills from Saks Fifth Avenue in St. Louis and New York for a combined $49,425.74.
The records also document a couple of big-time shopping trips to Neiman Marcus in Minneapolis, including one $75,062.63 spree in early September.
The RNC also spent $4,716.49 on hair and makeup through September after reporting no such costs in August.
Full article after the jump.

