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Well, Isn’t This A Nice Change?


I have thought what I would write about after my post on my beloved Sweetie (and I have been out of town helping to get my mom’s new Assisted Living unit set up for her this weekend). Honestly, I didn’t want to go off on anything or anyone today. Fortunately, thanks to NQ artist, Pat Racimora, I have something positive about which to write.

Naturally, it’s about Secretary Hillary Clinton. For once, there was a GOOD article, calling out some of the sexism with which she has had to deal, while highlighting the incredible work she has been doing on behalf of the State4 Department, and our country. David Rothkopf had this article, “It’s 3:00 a.m. Do you Know Where Hillary Clinton Is?” I admit, when I first saw the title, I thought he was being snarky, and it was going to be yet another hatchet job on this amazing woman, this bright star. Imagine my delight when I read it, and discovered, far from snark, this was a serious article, about a serious role, and a serious person. All I can say is, it’s about damn time:

When it comes to Hillary Rodham Clinton, we’re missing the forest for the pantsuits.

Clinton is not the first celebrity to become the nation’s top diplomat — that honor goes to her most distant predecessor, Thomas Jefferson, who by the time he took office was one of the most famous and gossiped-about men in America — but she may be the biggest. And during her first seven months in office, the former first lady, erstwhile presidential candidate and eternal lightning rod has drawn more attention for her moods, looks, outtakes and (of course) relationship with her husband than for, well, her work revamping the nation’s foreign policy.

Even venerable publications — such as one to which I regularly contribute, Foreign Policy — have woven into their all-Hillary-all-the-time coverage odd discussions of Clinton’s handbag and scarf choices. Daily Beast editor Tina Brown, while depicting herself as a Clinton supporter, has been scathing and small-minded in discussing such things as Clinton’s weight and hair, while her “defense” of Hillary in her essay “Obama’s Other Wife” was as sexist as the title suggests.

Indeed, sexism has followed Clinton from the campaign trail to Foggy Bottom, as seen most recently in the posturing outrage surrounding the exchange in Congo when Clinton reacted with understandable frustration to the now-infamous question regarding her husband’s views. Major media outlets have joined the gossipfest, whether the New York Times, which covered Clinton’s first big policy speech by discussing whether she was in or out with the White House, or The Washington Post, where a couple of reporters mused about whether a brew called Mad Bitch would be the beer of choice for the secretary of state.

May I just pause here to say, THANK YOU for calling these “news” sources out for these sexist depictions/attacks on Clinton. Thank you.

As to the work of Secretary Clinton, the article continues:

Amid all the distractions, what is Clinton actually doing? Only overseeing what may be the most profound changes in U.S. foreign policy in two decades — a transformation that may render the presidencies of Bill Clinton and George W. Bush mere side notes in a long transition to a meaningful post-Cold War worldview.

The secretary has quietly begun rethinking the very nature of diplomacy and translating that vision into a revitalized State Department, one that approaches U.S. allies and rivals in ways that challenge long-held traditions. And despite the pessimists who invoked the “team of rivals” cliche to predict that President Obama and Clinton would not get along, Hillary has defined a role for herself in the Obamaverse: often bad cop to his good cop, spine stiffener when it comes to tough adversaries and nurturer of new strategies. Recognizing that the 3 a.m. phone calls are going to the White House, she is instead tackling the tough questions that, since the end of the Cold War, have kept America’s leaders awake all night.

In these early days of the new administration, it has been easy to focus on what Clinton has not achieved or on ways in which her power has been supposedly constrained. Indeed, some of her efforts have been frustrated by difficult personnel approvals or disputes with the White House about who should get what jobs. But this is the way of all administrations. More unusual has been the avidity with which the new president has seized the reins of foreign policy — more assertively than either George W. Bush or Bill Clinton before him. Obama’s centrality amplifies the importance of his closest White House staffers, while his penchant for appointing special envoys such as Richard Holbrooke (on Afghanistan and Pakistan) and George Mitchell (on the Middle East) has been interpreted by some as limiting Clinton’s role.

Given the challenges involved, it was perhaps natural that the White House would have a bigger day-to-day hand in some of the nation’s most urgent foreign policy issues. But with Obama, national security adviser Jim Jones, Vice President Joe Biden and Secretary of Defense Robert Gates absorbed by Iraq, Afghanistan and other inherited problems of the recent past, Clinton’s State Department can take on a bigger role in tackling the problems of the future — in particular, how America will lead the world in the century ahead. This approach is both necessary and canny: It recognizes that U.S. policy must change to fulfill Obama’s vision and that many high-profile issues such as those of the Middle East have often swamped the careers and aspirations of secretaries of state past.

Which nations will be our key partners? What do you do when many vital partners — China, for example, and Russia — are rivals as well? How must America’s alliances change as NATO is stretched to the limit? How do we engage with rogue states and old enemies in ways that do not strengthen them and preserve our prerogative to challenge threats? How do we move beyond the diplomacy of men in striped pants speaking only for governments and embrace potent nonstate players and once-disenfranchised peoples?

In searching for answers, Clinton is leaving behind old doctrines and labels. She outlined her new thinking in a recent speech at the Council on Foreign Relations in New York, where she revealed stark differences between the new administration’s worldview and those of its predecessors: The recurring themes include “partnership” and “engagement” and “common interests.” Clearly, Madeleine Albright’s “indispensable nation” has recognized the indispensability of collaborating with others.

Who those “others” are is the area in which change has been greatest and most rapid. “We will put,” Clinton said, “special emphasis on encouraging major and emerging global powers — China, India, Russia and Brazil, as well as Turkey, Indonesia and South Africa — to be full partners in tackling the global agenda.” This is the death knell for the G-8 as the head table of the global community; the administration has an effort underway to determine whether the successor to the G-8 will be the G-20, or perhaps some other grouping. Though the move away from the G-8 began in the waning days of the Bush era, that administration viewed the world through a different lens, a perception that evolved from a traditional great-power view to a pre-Galilean notion that everything revolved around the world’s sole superpower.

Obama and Clinton have both made engaging with emerging powers a priority. Obama visited Russia earlier this year and will host Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh in his first state dinner in November. Clinton has made trips to China and India, and she would have been with Obama in Russia had she not injured her elbow. Both have visited Africa and the Middle East, reaching out to women and the Islamic world.

To anyone who has been following Clinton throughout her career, the manner in which she has been pursuing her position should come as no surprise. You may recall a book she wrote some time ago, It Takes A Village, in which these kinds of concepts have been discussed. She works in a collegial manner, holding the bigger picture firmly in hand as she goes about her work. It isn’t about her. It is about the world, the country, and the citizens here and abroad. It is about pulling women and children up out of poverty, having people be educated, allowing people to live their lives, and not just fight to survive. That’s her deal, and it has been for a long, long time. And it is that commitment that leads to this:

On many critical agenda items — from a rollback of nuclear weapons to the climate or trade talks — such emerging powers will be essential to achieving U.S. goals. As a result, we’ve seen a new American willingness to play down old differences, whether with Russia on a missile shield or, as Clinton showed on her China trip, with Beijing on human rights.

At the center of Clinton’s brain trust is Anne-Marie Slaughter, the former dean of Princeton’s Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs. Now head of policy planning at the State Department, Slaughter elaborated on the ideas in Clinton’s speech. “We envision getting not just a new group of states around a table, but also building networks, coalitions and partnerships of states and nonstate actors to tackle specific problems,” she told me.

“To do that,” Slaughter continued, “our diplomats are going to need to have skills that are closer to community organizing than traditional reporting and analysis. New connecting technologies will be vital tools in this kind of diplomacy.”

A new team has been brought in to make these changes real. Clinton recruited Alec Ross, one of the leaders of Obama’s technology policy team, to the seventh floor of the State Department as her senior adviser for innovation. His mission is to harness new information tools to advance U.S. interests — a task made easier as the Internet and mobile networks have played starring roles in recent incidents, from Iran to the Uighur uprising in western China to Moldova. Whether through a telecommunications program in Congo to protect women from violence or text messaging to raise money for Pakistani refugees in the Swat Valley, technology has been deployed to reach new audiences.

Of course, you need more than new ideas to revitalize the State Department; you need resources, too. The secretary has brought in former Bill Clinton-era budget chief Jack Lew to help her claw back money for statecraft that many in Foggy Bottom feel has been sucked off toward the Pentagon. She has also created special positions to back new priorities, such as Melanne Verveer as ambassador at large for women’s issues, Elizabeth Bagley to handle public-private outreach worldwide and Todd Stern as the chief negotiator on climate.

Even just a few months in, it’s clear that these appointments are far from window dressing. Lew, Slaughter and the acting head of the U.S. Agency for International Development are leading an effort to rethink foreign aid with the new Quadrennial Diplomacy and Development Review, an initiative modeled on the Pentagon’s strategic assessments and designed to review State’s priorities. Stern has conducted high-level discussions on climate change around the world, notably with China. Clinton made women’s issues a centerpiece of her recent 11-day trip to Africa, where she stressed that “the social, political and economic marginalization of women across Africa has left a void in this continent that undermines progress and prosperity.”

Unlike other politicians, I don’t think Clinton appoints people to be “window dressing,” but to get the job done. That is further evidenced with the following appointment:

Clinton has also signaled the importance of private-sector experience by naming former Goldman Sachs International vice chairman Robert Hormats, a respected veteran of four administrations, to handle economic issues at the State Department, as well as Judith McHale, former chief executive of Discovery Communications, to run public diplomacy. In the same vein, she has opened up Cuba to American telecommunications companies and reached out to India’s private sector on energy cooperation — showing that this administration will seek to advance national interests by tapping the self-interests of the business community. As with any new administration, there have been inevitable problems. The old campaign teams — Clinton’s and Obama’s — still eye each other warily, but this feeling is gradually fading. And by most accounts, the administration’s national security team has come together successfully, with Clinton developing strong relationships with national security adviser Jones and Defense Secretary Gates. Her policy deputy, Jim Steinberg, has renewed an old collaboration with deputy national security adviser Tom Donilon; the two of them, working with Obama campaign foreign policy advisers Denis McDonough and Mark Lippert, have formed what one State Department seventh-floor dweller called “a powerful quartet at the heart of real interagency policymaking.” Henry Kissinger may have overstated matters when he said this is the best White House-State relationship in recent memory, but it’s not bad, while the State-Pentagon relationship is in its best shape in decades.

Huh. Well, I’ll be. Who could have seen THAT coming? Oh, I know - the 18 million people who voted for her!

But Clinton is not looking back to what was. Rather, she is looking ahead to see how best she can fulfill her work, As such, again, she looks at the big picture, and how best to accomplish what needs doing, including:

At the heart of things, though, is the relationship between Clinton and Obama. For all the administration’s talk of international partnerships, that may be the most critical partnership of all.

So far, according to multiple high-level officials at State and the White House, the two seem aligned in their views. In addition, they are gradually defining complementary roles. Obama has assumed the role of principal spokesperson on foreign policy, as international audiences welcome his new and improved American brand. Clinton thus far has echoed his points but has also delivered tougher ones. Whether on a missile shield against Iran or North Korean saber-rattling, the continued imprisonment of Aung San Suu Kyi in Burma or rape and corruption in Congo, the secretary of state has spoken bluntly on the world stage — even if it triggered snide comments from North Korea.

It is still early, and a president’s foreign policy legacy is often defined less by big principles than by how one reacts to the unexpected, whether missiles in Cuba or terrorism in New York. Promising ideas fail because of limited attention or reluctant bureaucracies, and some rhetoric eventually rings hollow, as the self-congratulatory “smart power” already does to me.

Nevertheless, there is evidence that, seven months into the job, Obama’s unlikely secretary of state is supporting and augmenting his agenda effectively. Not as Obama’s “other wife,” not as Bill Clinton’s wife, not even as a celebrity or as a former presidential candidate — but in a new role of her own making. (drothkopf@carnegieendowment.org

David Rothkopf is a visiting scholar at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace and the author of “Superclass: The Global Power Elite and the World They Are Making” and “Running the World: The Inside Story of the NSC and the Architects of American Power.” He will be online to chat with readers Monday at 11 a.m. Submit your questions and comments before or during the discussion.)

Indeed - she is embracing a “role of her own making.” It is hard not to consider what could have been had she been President instead of Secretary of State. Don’t get me wrong - as I have said a number of times, I am glad that Clinton is in such a crucial role for our country. Clearly, we need her. But the same intelligence; the ability, and vision, to hold the big picture in her grasp while determining the best course to achieve those goals, while finding the people who can affect those goals; the nation-building, yes, the community-building; are all the ingredients necessary for a good presidency. And I am pretty sure that a President Hillary Clinton would not have made any “wee-wee” remarks about the press corp, either. It’s a matter of decorum, the ability to hold things, events, people, in tension. It’s a matter of vision, and the ability to effect change in a real, meaningful way. That’s our Hillary. Thank heavens she is finally starting to get the recognition she so richly deserves.

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Comment by Diana L. C. | 2009-08-26 10:46:26

RRRA–Thanks so much for pointing us all to Rothkopf’s intelligent article and for your comments as well. It does me so much good to know I was right when I supported her. I am thankful every day for this amazing example of a woman who has been given a chance to work for good.

Comment by carolhaka | 2009-08-26 13:50:55

I love my Hillary.

I also love Sarah.

Her latest post on Facebook:

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2009/08/26/sarah-palin-tells-friends_n_269559.html

CAROL HAKA :evil:

 
 

Comment by Sassy | 2009-08-26 11:16:16

Thank you Amy!
Most of the positive remarks I hear are given grudgingly and in the context of her being an appendage of the new administration.
In the eyes of most of the media, criticism cannot be directed at her boss,
therefore, she has credibility now.
I wish her the very best and hope she has
a peaceful future with few regrets.

Comment by Senneth | 2009-08-26 21:25:42

Thank you, RRRAmy. Although I will admit that I couldn’t make my way through the piece. When the Obama fest and his firm grasp on foreign policy began, I became too nauseous to continue. Still, it’s always great to have positive views on our Hill.

 
 

Comment by SYD | 2009-08-26 11:18:06

There is something very odd about how the Leftie Rags are suddenly our friends again:

http://syd4.blogspot.com/2009/08/so-leftie-rags-are-our-friends-again.html

Just sayin’….

 

Comment by Peggy Sue | 2009-08-26 11:23:28

Love that last line of the article:

“Not as Obama’s “other wife,” not as Bill Clinton’s wife, not even as a celebrity or as a former presidential candidate — but in a new role of her own making.”

and which you picked up, Amy. I think it says everything about Hillary Clinton. I share your feelings–I’m grateful that HRC is heading State. For me, it’s the one bright spot in a rather dismal landscape and makes me feel confident that the American public is being well-served here and abroad.

And yes, it’s about time Hillary got some credit and decent press. Tina Brown ought to be ashamed of herself for her endlessly catty remarks while pretending support.

Thanks for the piece!

Comment by Rabble Rouser Reverend Amy | 2009-08-26 11:59:43

My pleasure! As Elise pointed out at my blog, and as I have noted many times here, even the “policies” of Obama’s that she is enacting are HER policies, ones SHE crafted, to which Obama helped himself (it just burned me up during the campaign when they kept saying Obama’s policy on “such and such” (like the 5 million green jobs) was similar to Clinton’s when he had taken it whole cloth from Clinton, without changing word one. Or int he debates, he would always say, “Uh, um, yeah - what she said…”

I guess it’s no wonder, then, that she is able to implement them so fully - they’re HER policies all along. He just gets all the credit for them, just like he did during the campaign. Kind of an “Agony and the Ecstasy” moment, you know?

Anyway - glad y’all like it. She really is just one of the best people we have on our side, isn’t she?

 
 

Comment by Ginger | 2009-08-26 11:34:23

… this is like a job interview. We’re asking people to hire one of us to contend to have the toughest job in the world. So it shouldn’t be handed over; it should be the result of a vigorous contest.

- Hillary Rodham Clinton

PBS Newshour Interview
On the eve of the TX & OH primaries

Comment by carolhaka | 2009-08-26 13:53:32

As a Texan and a Hillary Clinton supporter - thanks for making me cry again!

CAROL HAKA :evil:

 
 

Comment by foxyladi14 | 2009-08-26 11:43:04

great article about our girl.
thanks Amy.

 

Comment by Linda Anselmi | 2009-08-26 11:53:07

I am glad that Clinton is in such a crucial role for our country. Clearly, we need her. But the same intelligence; the ability, and vision, to hold the big picture in her grasp while determining the best course to achieve those goals, while finding the people who can affect those goals; the nation-building, yes, the community-building; are all the ingredients necessary for a good presidency.

Well said Amy! I keep hoping…

 

Comment by susan h | 2009-08-26 12:07:55

Hillary is certainly the bright light in the Obama administration. He has yet to appoint many top level executives; and those he has appointed, like Tim Geitner, come in with questionable ethics (”I just didn’t know I had to pay taxes”).

It is bittersweet to see Hillary being so brilliant as secretary of state; clearly, she is in her element working directly WITH people and making decisions that will help others here and abroad. But there is still that lingerning WHAT IF she had actually become the president. Yet, my heart swells with pride for her accomplishments and so many of us here recognized her brilliance and have been with her all the way since DAY ONE.

 

Comment by Tricia Spiegel | 2009-08-26 12:26:18

Only overseeing what may be the most profound changes in U.S. foreign policy in two decades — a transformation that may render the presidencies of Bill Clinton and George W. Bush mere side notes in a long transition to a meaningful post-Cold War worldview.

This is huge–and it is Hillary. Just doing what should be done, and doing it well!

 

Comment by Murray | 2009-08-26 12:27:53

Two red flags for me:
1) “Clinton…naming former Goldman Sachs International vice chairman Robert Hormats, a respected veteran of four administrations, to handle economic issues at the State Department.”

2) In response to SYD: Yes, I also wonder why the Lefty Rags are trying to play nice with us. Smells like a setup, with Hillary as the fall guy.

 

Comment by ladydawnelle | 2009-08-26 12:53:54

VANITY THY NAME IS OBOT

ok now that I got that off my chest

Hillary, dear Hillary, I voted for you once and would gladly do it again but NOT if you’re still attached to THIS wretched administration!

off load the Thugs from the South Side and you got my vote! Otherwise it goes to Sarah (if she’ll run).

 

Comment by Thinker | 2009-08-26 12:54:37

Clinton made women’s issues a centerpiece of her recent 11-day trip to Africa, where she stressed that “the social, political and economic marginalization of women across Africa has left a void in this continent that undermines progress and prosperity.”

- I was so proud of her for making the plight of women all around the world a key issue. People can’t keep brushing off these crimes against women as “cultural matters.”

Comment by Rabble Rouser Reverend Amy | 2009-08-26 13:27:57

Indeed, Thinker. She demonstrated - again - that she is COMMITTED to this issue, and doesn’t just pay lip service to it. This has been her focus for decades, and she isn’t abt to let up yet!

 
 

Comment by beachnan | 2009-08-26 13:33:43

Hillary is “simply the best”!!! Hard not to think of what could have been, what should have been. I am glad she is getting some positive comments, but I do believe that the writer is also giving Obama more credit than he deserves. Without Hillary, I believe we would have the same old, same old from the State Department. Hillary, you’ve got my vote, if you ever decide to run again.

 

Comment by JMM | 2009-08-26 13:40:05

Thanks for posting this RRA. I needed a pick-me-up today.

 

Comment by Michael | 2009-08-26 15:02:45

HILLARY RODHAM CLINTON 2012! Edward Kennedy tried to upstage a sitting president -Jimmy Carter, and lost. Hillary Clinton will do the same thing, only she gonna win this time baby!

Comment by Sandy | 2009-08-26 15:37:45

I am hoping and praying with every fiber of my being. This country will need her more than ever!!!

 

Comment by carolhaka | 2009-08-26 16:02:25

If there is a GOD (and there is)!

CAROL HAKA :evil:

 

Comment by Rabble Rouser Reverend Amy | 2009-08-26 16:08:04

This morning, Joe Biden said that Kennedy didn’t have one petty bone in his body. I thought Carter, AND Clinton (as in Hillary) might disagree with that assessment, especially Hillary. Kennedy pretty much stabbed her in the back more than once…Not to speak ill of the dead or anything. (He did do some good work, there’s no denying.)

And oh, how I wish she would run again…

I agree with Beachnan that Obma is getting more credit than he deserves in this piece, but it’s abt damn time Clinton got some credit for all of her hard work (when was the last time SHE took a vacation?).

Great comments, y’all!

 
 

Comment by CG | 2009-08-26 16:42:58

RRRAmy, glad you’re back and hope you’re doing well, hope your mother is adjusting well too. Thanks for writing about Hillary and something positive. To better days ahead…

David Rothkopf has been a Hillary supporter all the long, though he is fair in criticism as well. check out http://rothkopf.foreignpolicy.com/

Comment by Rabble Rouser Reverend Amy | 2009-08-26 18:35:43

CG, truly my pleasure. You know I love being able to write abt this remarkable woman. I have followed her career for a long time, and never cease to be awed by her. I have heard some amazing stories abt her, abt things she has done for people out of the limelight. Many people have no idea the number of lives this woman has touched through her work. It is an honor to write abt her.

Honestly, CG, after my last post - abt my dear dog, Sweetie - I wanted to do something positive. Thanks for te link, too!

And thanks - my mom is getting settled in. Fortunately, she is in a VERY good facility, and her new space is spacious indeed, well maintained, and very nice. I hope she will be happy there…

rw, I can’t help but wonder abt the nod to Community Organizing myself. For heaven’s sake, Obama didn’t do it for that long, by his own admission (and those whom he allegedly “organized), he didn’t do a very good job of it. I imagine we’ll have to hear these comparisons for a little while longer…

 
 

Comment by rw | 2009-08-26 16:49:58

Good article. But, what does diplomats doing community organizing mean…I thought the Peace Corp did that:

“To do that,” Slaughter continued, “our diplomats are going to need to have skills that are closer to community organizing than traditional reporting and analysis. New connecting technologies will be vital tools in this kind of diplomacy.”

 

Comment by tango | 2009-08-26 16:54:44

Go Hillary! I’m still pissed off that the Forbes List of the 100 Most Powerful Women for 2009 has Hillary behind Nancy Pelosi and only 4 ahead of Michelle Obama! I can kinda understand Pelosi since Obama has given that woman a lot of power by letting her run amok in Congress but what the heck has Michelle Obama done that puts her anywhere near as important or influential as SOS Clinton? Oh I forgot, her fashion sense is sooooo influential. The world just swoons when she puts on another sleevless dress with a belt worn high right under her breasts. I know I’m influenced by her style - I go the exact opposite direction.

Comment by tango | 2009-08-26 16:56:09

 
 

Comment by Phishmelt | 2009-08-26 21:35:10

as i work in healthcare and take the bus into hartford CT each day. this was a great read on the bus.

 

Comment by rose | 2009-08-26 23:21:15

Thank you for this great piece on Hillary ,as many have said ,it’s about time, what she does is recognized! We Knew! I still don’t see that OB is doing so great, maybe if he dropped his puppet strings, but if Hillary couldn’t have the job she had the delgates to give it to her ,then I am glad for her great works she is doing. I don’t trust those around her though and Fox and other critics are back to insulting her again,something is up. Guess the boys don’t like being shown up. I just hope that she gets out before they sabotoge her.

 

Comment by Cathy in Ks. | 2009-08-27 00:05:10

I should have read this article much earlier. It would have made my day. Well at least now, I’ll have sweet dreams. I still say “what if”, but I’m so glad Hillary is our SOS. And who knows, maybe she will run again, if Obama and the current democratic congress doesn’t ruin it for democrats in the next several years to come. What really impressed me in the article was Henry Kissinger’s praise of the State Department. Way to go Hillary!

 

Comment by Newcelebrityblog | 2009-08-27 05:45:19

obama stumbles on his words all the time. you just don’t see as much of it on tv because of the biased liberal media. funny i don’t see it on letterman. obama even messed up the other day while using a teleprompter. get real. be honest.

 

Comment by DAB | 2009-08-27 06:50:53

I’d like to believe that the article is correct but I have my doubts about Obama not trying to marginalize Hillary by watering down foreign policy. Here’s an interesting conversation between Ann Althouse and Robert Wright on the topic:

http://bloggingheads.tv/diavlogs/21921?in=45:00&out=52:59

 

Comment by Linda Love's Sarah Palin and Dude ! | 2009-08-27 12:02:37

I Love my Sarah Palin.I voted for Hillary but, in the GE I voted for Sarh Palin.
I just don’t know if I will ever Vote a democrat till the house is cleaned out and congress is cleaned out! Even if Hillary becomes president,let’s just say.well if the democrats hold congress as they did and do now and making all this mess. I can not vote a democrat till the house is cleaned out cause democrat congress is the one who is helping destory our country and youreally think no matter if Hillary runs again democrat congress will do right by the people ? i THINK NOT ! cONGRESS AND THOSE DIRTY DEMOCRATS AND SOME REPUBLICANS HAS GOT TO GO !Nancy Pelosi-Obama- the hold congress and those in Obama’s cabinet and others have got to go.meaning out of our government for good before I would ever vote a democrat ever. I saw what was going on.I was hopeing that it would be Hillary but when it was knowing all what the main stream media, her own party, press of pro Obama did as well as Obama camp did to her..I was not going to vote another democrat.That’s the good thing of being independent.You can jump ship when ever to the other party.I am for my country befoe party!

 

Comment by Linda Love's Sarah Palin and Dude ! | 2009-08-27 12:12:17

It’s hard to get people to see what’s going on cause they are stucj with the main stream media of pro-Obama.They sat there and listen as they kept the people who chosen to not go else where as well to see.Like go to all campaings and networks and see what really what one said of the other and who was doing the lying- clip and chip the campaing video. It was Obama-MSNBC NBC WHO DI IT.

Gee all those lies he is far worst then GW-Bush Jr. look his spending it out of control while he lives without a worry on how he will live and where.No worries of a job right now and a nice retirerment of 400,000 a year so why would he care if he is a one time or not..He done destory our country in 6 months ! wake up he Nancy Peliso and so many more had this election planned for years and ready with their bought main stream media and press…Oh that Man as Msnbc said with a gun stripped to his side and said white tea party racist and did not show his face hands.wonder why ? Cause he was an African America who is standing with the people of America in fighting for his country as well and he was not the only African American there. See how the main stream media does.White racist tea party..they did not show his face.He is sueing MSM-MSNBC now !
I hope he sues then GOOD !!!

 

Comment by Kelly | 2009-08-27 13:26:49

And no it’s not dead..It will be put back in after a vote if it don’t pass by Nancy Pelosi and Obama. GOD HELP US.CONGRESS NANCY PELOSI IS RUNNING A MOB GOVERNMENT.THEY WORK FOR US.. FIRE THE BUMS ALL OF THEM !

You need to see this ! And now very inportant that you do.

http://mobsrus.ning.com/forum/topics/glenn-beckplease-watch

and this

Jennifer Rubin Reports with Michael Steele: Don’t Believe The Hype, The Public Option isn’t Dead

http://www.pjtv.com/v/2348

MSNBC & The Great Liberal Narrative: The Truth About The Tyranny of Political Correctness

http://www.pjtv.com/v/2343

And this This is a wooper “A MUST SEE ” oH HOW msnbc STILL CONTINUE PLAYING THEIR NASTY GAMES TO HOLD THE AFRICAN AMERICAN at bay with them. Now watch as we all saw how MSNBC-NBC -played their game during the election but, wait they really went to far and you will see..just watch. This African American is sueing MSNBC for what they had done. People are jumping democrat-msnbc-obama ship at a fast rate.But, at that tea party there wer many African Americas who are standing with “We The People ” to fight against the health bill and gun rights.MSNBC will play anything as the race game by useing the African Americans in their agenda.but many have now awoke and will not be held at bay with the wrong msnbc did-the wrong with what Obama lied and lied now they see he is nothing more then a Liar- The wrong MSNBC did in playing a race against the other. we stand no more. it’s we the people who will stand together MSNBC NBC MSN AND FIGHT YOUR LIES. We are free and our freedom is not your to take from any of “we The People” It’s not your choice to take over our health providers or insurance to throw us into the government control pile… NO THANKS !
VOTE ALL THE BUMS OUT SHUT MSNBC DOWN !

MSNBC & The Great Liberal Narrative: The Truth About The Tyranny of Political Correctness

http://www.pjtv.com/v/2343

 

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[...] Rev. Amy noted in her terrific piece, Well, Isn’t This a Nice Change, the Washington Post started the very short parade to end the virtual press blackout on Clinton by [...]

 

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