tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-18748683764380631552024-03-05T20:25:46.019-06:003and43and4http://www.blogger.com/profile/01852518714785564488noreply@blogger.comBlogger71125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1874868376438063155.post-5435194156271797732009-02-22T13:26:00.000-06:002009-02-22T13:27:39.105-06:00How the New York Post Monkey Cartoon Should've Looked<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgC6ZsU99RTq9DNldLgzrf1rqTr0WjlN1ckHg0kWosc3HPB_B3FZ3PTwmvP0PSmVsoZGD6K6NaZRd2FoXABReaw6-lEh4qiYk3cp4XYF-gZsZ1HcGeElXQsWT_gQHTiDBGARJPJynrV_g7E/s1600-h/2009-02-19-leecamp_nypost.jpg"><img style="display:block; margin:0px auto 10px; text-align:center;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 400px; height: 271px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgC6ZsU99RTq9DNldLgzrf1rqTr0WjlN1ckHg0kWosc3HPB_B3FZ3PTwmvP0PSmVsoZGD6K6NaZRd2FoXABReaw6-lEh4qiYk3cp4XYF-gZsZ1HcGeElXQsWT_gQHTiDBGARJPJynrV_g7E/s400/2009-02-19-leecamp_nypost.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5305705491944525522" /></a>3and4http://www.blogger.com/profile/01852518714785564488noreply@blogger.com6tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1874868376438063155.post-19925672972556941812009-02-10T11:26:00.006-06:002009-02-10T12:16:00.001-06:00R.I.P J. Dilla “King of the Beats"Madlib - Beat Konducta Vol. 5-6: A Tribute to… (2009; Stones Throw)<br /><br /><a href="http://www.mediafire.com/?duwnwiwmmnd"><img style="display:block; margin:0px auto 10px; text-align:center;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 400px; height: 400px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgf2jaCewDt0U4lYFNGYLpxRy8JPCtd-TTUNObPIcAtThrqBp1-xji2KPURYaL5g53ZepRasWarREOL_DSHI1pCGEzOvGtzTwnUbFJGiOCcUjnxv7cyPg0Q2CU87KaTunrT2KJoFF-kZecd/s400/beat-konducta-vol-5-dil-cosby-suite.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5301233371825189442" /></a><br /><br /><br /><br /><br />When Madlib followed J Dilla’s now-classic Donuts with an instrumental concept-album of his own, a series was born. “Beat Konducta,” the alias he often scribbled on the beat CDs he handed to friends and potential collaborators, left the realm of the unknown and entered the record-buying public’s conscious as Madlib’s latest nom de plume. His unedited CDs often wove quirky narratives, served as obsessive listening material to those lucky enough to hear them, and became raw working material for Madvillain, Jaylib, Ghostface, De La Soul, Talib Kweli, and Erykah Badu. <br /><br />The concept of the Beat Konducta series was simple: put Madlib’s raw beat tapes into album form--one by one on vinyl, with two volumes at a time appearing on sporadically released CDs. <br /><br />The first two volumes of Beat Konducta, Movie Scenes, were a soundtrack to a movie that existed only in Madlib’s mind. It’s score ranged from Blaxploitation soul to African-psychedelia, from Tropicalia to moody progressive rock. The second installment took its listeners on a tour of Bollywood, circa 1975. Beat Konducta in India paid sincere tribute to musical giants largely unheard of by Western ears. And kept the funk levels up all the way. <br /><br />Beat Konducta Vol. 5-6: A Tribute to...is a 42-track piece dedicated to the late J Dilla. Madlib and J. Rocc--arguably Dilla’s closest musical compatriots during his time spent in Los Angeles--lovingly remember their friend and reflect on his boundless influence. As was the case with Donuts and in keeping with the Beat Konducta’s all-embracing musical bent, this album does not settle into one groove for too long. The result is a transfixing, sometimes jarring, and always soulful homage to the man Madlib crowned “King of the Beats.”<br /><br /><br /><br />33and4http://www.blogger.com/profile/01852518714785564488noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1874868376438063155.post-10783163454152090572009-02-01T09:32:00.002-06:002009-02-01T09:40:05.929-06:00Herbert Hoover Lives<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiwMxDAtDz1gMHwXe1xz9ZoC3DpFG7vHuI1uT47SC_7NCZ8Mp_s7Wkd6fSw6Nz-bBi7RSnH92BdHKMvcBD2CxdTBIUXNf0vkrOlRiFb55xQB6IG-3Ucwx539aJg4OviGXcJ8sOCyIVh3pdE/s1600-h/01richlarge.jpg"><img style="display:block; margin:0px auto 10px; text-align:center;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 307px; height: 400px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiwMxDAtDz1gMHwXe1xz9ZoC3DpFG7vHuI1uT47SC_7NCZ8Mp_s7Wkd6fSw6Nz-bBi7RSnH92BdHKMvcBD2CxdTBIUXNf0vkrOlRiFb55xQB6IG-3Ucwx539aJg4OviGXcJ8sOCyIVh3pdE/s400/01richlarge.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5297852915926054834" /></a><br /><br /><br />By FRANK RICH<br /><br /><br />HERE’S a bottom line to keep you up at night: The economy is falling faster than Washington can get moving. President Obama says his stimulus plan will save or create four million jobs in two years. In the last four months of 2008 alone, employment fell by 1.9 million. Do the math.<br /><br />The abyss is widening. Of the 30 companies in the Dow Jones industrial index, 22 have announced job cuts since October. Unemployment is up in all 50 states, with layoffs at both high-tech companies (Microsoft) and low (Caterpillar). The December job loss in retailing is the worst since at least 1939. The new-home sales rate has fallen to its all-time low since record-keeping began in 1963. <br /><br />What are Americans still buying? Big Macs, Campbell’s soup, Hershey’s chocolate and Spam — the four food groups of the apocalypse.<br /><br />The crisis is at least as grave as the one that confronted us — and, for a time, united us — after 9/11. Which is why the antics among Republicans on Capitol Hill seem so surreal. These are the same politicians who only yesterday smeared the patriotism of any dissenters from Bush’s “war on terror.” Where is their own patriotism now that economic terror is inflicting far more harm on their constituents than Saddam Hussein’s nonexistent W.M.D.? <br /><br />The House stimulus bill is an inevitably imperfect hodgepodge-in-progress. Obama’s next move, a new plan to prevent the collapse of America’s banks, may prove more problematic still, especially given the subpar record of the new Treasury secretary, Timothy Geithner, in warding off calamity while at the New York Fed. No one should expect the Republicans to give the new president carte blanche, fall blindly into lock step or be “post-partisan.” (Though that’s exactly what the G.O.P. demanded of Democrats with Bush: You were either with him or with the terrorists.) <br /><br />But you might think that a loyal opposition would want to pitch in and play a serious role at a time of national peril. Not by singing “Kumbaya” but by collaborating on possible solutions and advancing a policy debate that many Americans’ lives depend on. As Raymond Moley, of F.D.R.’s brain trust, said of the cross-party effort at the harrowing start of that presidency in March 1933, Hoover and Roosevelt acolytes “had forgotten to be Republicans or Democrats” as they urgently tried to rescue their country.<br /><br />The current G.O.P. acts as if it — and we — have all the time in the world. It kept hoping in vain that the fast-waning Blago sideshow would somehow impale Obama or Rahm Emanuel. It has come perilously close to wishing aloud that a terrorist attack will materialize to discredit Obama’s reversals of Bush policy on torture, military tribunals and Gitmo. The party’s sole consistent ambition is to play petty politics to gum up the works. <br /><br />If anything, the Republican Congressional leadership seems to be emulating John McCain’s September stunt of “suspending” his campaign to “fix” the Wall Street meltdown. For all his bluster, McCain in the end had no fixes to offer and sat like a pet rock at the White House meeting on the crisis before capitulating to the bailout. His imitators likewise posture in public about their determination to take action, then do nothing while more and more Americans cry for help.<br /><br />The problem is not that House Republicans gave the stimulus bill zero votes last week. That’s transitory political symbolism, and it had no effect on the outcome. Some of the naysayers will vote for the revised final bill anyway (and claim, Kerry-style, that they were against it before they were for it). The more disturbing problem is that the party has zero leaders and zero ideas. It is as AWOL in this disaster as the Bush administration was during Katrina. <br /><br />If the country wasn’t suffering, the Republicans’ behavior would be a laugh riot. The House minority leader, John Boehner, from the economic wasteland of Ohio, declared on “Meet the Press” last Sunday that the G.O.P. didn’t want to be “the party of ‘No’ ” but “the party of better ideas, better solutions.” And what are those ideas, exactly? He said he’ll get back to us “over the coming months.”<br /><br />His deputy, the Virginia congressman Eric Cantor, has followed the same script, claiming that the G.O.P. will not be “the party of ‘No’ ” but will someday offer unspecified “solutions and alternatives.” Not to be left out, the party’s great white hope, Sarah Palin, unveiled a new political action committee last week with a Web site also promising “fresh ideas.” But as the liberal blogger Markos Moulitsas Zúniga observed, the site invites visitors to make donations and read Palin hagiography while offering no links to any ideas, fresh or otherwise.<br /><br />For its own contribution to this intellectual void, the Republican National Committee convened last week under a new banner, “Republican for a Reason.” Perhaps that unidentified reason will be determined by a panel of judges on a TV reality show. It had better be brilliant given that only five states (with 20 total electoral votes) now lean red in party affiliation, according to Gallup. At this rate the G.O.P. will be in Alf Landon territory by 2012. <br /><br />The Republicans do have one idea, of course, but it’s hardly fresh: more and bigger tax cuts, particularly for business and the well-off. That’s the sum of their “alternative” stimulus plan. Obama has tried to accommodate this panacea, perhaps to a fault. Mainstream economists in both parties believe that tax cuts in the stimulus package will deliver far less bang for the buck than, say, infrastructure spending. The tax-cut stimulus embraced a year ago by the G.O.P. induced next-to-no consumer spending as Americans merely banked the savings or paid down debt.<br /><br />We also now know conclusively that the larger Bush tax cuts, besides running up record deficits and exacerbating income inequality, were also at best a placebo on our road to ruin. In a January survey of economists, including former McCain advisers like Douglas Holtz-Eakin and Mark Zandi, The Washington Post determined that the job growth the Bush administration kept bragging about (“52 straight months!”) was a mirage inflated by the housing bubble. Job growth — about 2 percent — was in fact the most tepid of any eight-year period “since data collection began seven decades ago.” Gross domestic product grew at a slower pace than in any eight years since the Truman administration.<br /><br />But even if tax cuts alone could jump-start a recovery, they couldn’t do the heavy lifting that Obama has promised and the country desperately needs: a down payment on a new economy to replace our dilapidated 20th-century model and bring back long-term growth. The Republicans don’t acknowledge the need for this transformation, or debate it in good conscience, preferring instead to hyperventilate over the contraceptives in a small family-planning program since removed from the stimulus bill. All it takes is the specter of condoms for the party of Vitter, Foley and Craig to go gaga. <br /><br />The Republicans’ other preoccupation remains Rush Limbaugh, who is by default becoming their de facto leader. While most Americans are fearing fear itself, G.O.P. politicians are tripping over themselves in morbid terror of Rush.<br /><br />These pratfalls commenced after Obama casually told some Republican congressmen (correctly) that they won’t “get things done” if they take their orders from Limbaugh. That’s all the stimulus the big man needed to go on a new bender of self-aggrandizement. He boasted that Obama is “more frightened” of him than he is of the Republican leaders in the House or Senate. He said of the new president, “I hope he fails.” <br /><br />Obama no doubt finds Limbaugh’s grandiosity more amusing than frightening, but G.O.P. politicians are shaking like Jell-O. When asked by Andrea Mitchell of NBC News on Wednesday if he shared Limbaugh’s hope that Obama fails, Eric Cantor spun like a top before running off, as it happened, to appear on Limbaugh’s radio show. Mike Pence of Indiana, No. 3 in the Republican House leadership, similarly squirmed when asked if he agreed with Limbaugh. Though the Republicans’ official, poll-driven line is that they want Obama to succeed, they’d rather abandon that disingenuous nicety than cross Rush.<br /><br />Most pathetic of all was Phil Gingrey, a right-wing Republican congressman from Georgia, who mildly criticized both Limbaugh and Sean Hannity to Politico because they “stand back and throw bricks” while lawmakers labor in the trenches. So many called Gingrey’s office to complain that the poor congressman begged Limbaugh to bring him on air to publicly recant on Wednesday. As Gingrey abjectly apologized to talk radio’s commandant for his “stupid comments” and “foot-in-mouth disease,” he sounded like the inmate in a B-prison-movie cowering before the warden after a failed jailbreak. <br /><br />“It’s up to me to hijack the Obama honeymoon,” Limbaugh soon gloated, “and I’ve done it.” In his dreams. He has hijacked what’s left of the Republican Party; the Obama honeymoon remains intact. The nightmare is that we have so irrelevant, clownish and childish an opposition party at a moment when America is in an all-hands-on-deck emergency that’s as trying as war. To paraphrase a dictum that has been variously attributed to two of our most storied leaders in times of great challenge, Thomas Paine and George Patton, the Republicans should either lead, follow or get out of the grown-ups’ way.3and4http://www.blogger.com/profile/01852518714785564488noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1874868376438063155.post-53281900945269164162009-01-04T11:10:00.001-06:002009-01-04T11:13:17.427-06:00Radical Obama acting like he won the electionAccording to the Washington Post, right-wingers are angry with Obama for...not being right-wing. It seems they're upset that Obama isn't appointing the same people John McCain would have appointed if he had won. As the Post put it, "conservatives fear that some of these Obama transition advisers are too far left on the political spectrum and are a sign of radical policies to come."<br /><br />What are the signs of "radicalism" that Obama is showing? He's filling regulatory positions with people who want regulate industry -- instead of the industry-stooge-hack-lobbyists who have filled the positions during the Bush years. <br /><br />And in the area of civil rights, it's even worse -- Obama has people on his transition advisory team who are, get this, gay and, gulp, non-white.<br /><br />To conservative tool Roger Clegg, this is "disturbing." Roger is also "has some fears about a return to racial quotas." Why? Because Obama had the radical gall to put the president of the NAACP on his civil rights advisory team.<br /><br />So all those emails from our grandparents were right -- Obama really is a radical hellbent on destroy America with gays, blacks, and extremists who believe corporations should follow some rules. <br /><br />But back to the matter at hand--conservatives who are in stunned disbelief that Obama isn't following the usual rules of an election whereby right-wing hacks get to have all the administration jobs even if they don't win the election. How are they to deal with Obama's brazen and outrageous decision to implement the policies the public voted for? <br /><br />Here's our suggestion for how right-wingers can cope with the unfairness of Obama's appointments...<br /><br /><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEie65XqdlWAoclVj3BRqLwMzrG2FOlKVNAQ2gZ-XxPaLccgT31st5L18ZmNmgI9b1FfT3ZOe9j6KnsXQkN_4KqHUG5UwbHsLC1rAzoRbiDJSCIYEmnYh9YIkdFz0QzBlZ_fesTpGpL-PcuZ/s1600-h/original_opt.jpg"><img style="display:block; margin:0px auto 10px; text-align:center;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 400px; height: 259px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEie65XqdlWAoclVj3BRqLwMzrG2FOlKVNAQ2gZ-XxPaLccgT31st5L18ZmNmgI9b1FfT3ZOe9j6KnsXQkN_4KqHUG5UwbHsLC1rAzoRbiDJSCIYEmnYh9YIkdFz0QzBlZ_fesTpGpL-PcuZ/s400/original_opt.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5287487454357078722" /></a>3and4http://www.blogger.com/profile/01852518714785564488noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1874868376438063155.post-72646334860070886692008-12-06T09:57:00.000-06:002008-12-06T09:58:46.582-06:00Quick Thoughts from KansasBy: nate silver<br /><br />Six points of general consensus among the reporters, strategists and analysts that were present at the Dole Institute.<br /><br />1. Obama will have a relatively long honeymoon period, and the public will be inclined to be relatively sympathetic toward him.<br />1a. The Democrats' largest problem is with the public perception of their Congressional leadership.<br /><br />2. Obama, politically speaking, has handled his transition very well. The Republicans on the panel felt extremely reassured by appointments like Jim Jones and Robert Gates. This bought Obama a huge amount of political capital.<br /><br />3. The Republican bench is relatively inadequate at the present time in terms of candidates for national office.<br />3a. On the other hand, the 2012 Presidential cycle is already being looked at as something of a lost cause. Some of the stronger candidates -- both known and unknown -- might want to wait until 2016 to run.<br />3b. In the long-term, the future of the party probably lies in governor's offices. If the Republicans are smart, this may be their major focus in 2010-12, as opposed to the Congress and even perhaps the Presidency.<br /><br />4. Sarah Palin is, for the time being, the public face of the Republican Party.<br />4a. This is not necessarily a good thing for the Republican Party.<br /><br />5. The compressed primary calendar is problematic.<br />5a. The compressed primary calendar is unlikely to change.<br /><br />6. Obama ran the best campaign we have seen in a generation.3and4http://www.blogger.com/profile/01852518714785564488noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1874868376438063155.post-42937345126528210092008-11-12T11:22:00.000-06:002008-11-12T11:23:46.402-06:00The Center Left NationConservatives started spinning even before the dancing stopped on election night. Obama's victory is impressive, but "this is still a center right nation," went the mantra. "This was a good Democratic year, says Bill Kristol, "but this is still a center-right country. Conservative and the Republican Party will have a real chance for a comeback. National Review editor Rich Lowry is less sanguine, but concludes: <br /><br />"Even in unimaginably challenging conditions for Republicans, the ideological composition of the election was essentially unchanged from 2004. Only 22 percent of voters identified themselves as liberals. The rest were moderates or conservatives. It is indeed, as conservatives have been insisting in recent days, a center-right country. The question is how to appeal to the center again."<br /><br />Sure, this is a center-right country, but only if you substitute addition for analysis. There are more conservatives than liberals - as there has been for years. So add them to the 44% of the electorate that says they are "moderates," and you get a center-right majority. <br /><br />But do a little analysis. "Moderate" isn't a place holder, as voters who describe themselves that way have attitudes on the issues of the day. And when you look at attitudes, rather than addition, there is no question: Conservatives have had their day. This is a center-left, not a center-right nation.<br /><br />The Center for America's Future joined with Democracy Corps to do a nation wide poll on election eve and with an expanded sample, we could probe attitudes of voters by political identification. What we found was clear: on both values and issues, moderates line up with liberals to form a strong majority that isolates conservatives. <br /><br />On national security, does our security depend on building strong ties with other nations or on our own military strength? Liberals say ties with other nations 76-20; moderates 63-31. Conservatives go the other way 51-43. <br /><br />Should we begin to take troops out of Iraq or stay the course until we reach stability? Liberals 92-7 for getting troops out; moderates 64-33. Conservatives? By two to one -- 66-33 -- they would stay the course.<br /><br />Does government regulation do more good or more harm? Liberals believe it does more good than harm by 75-18; moderates by 60-36. Conservatives go the other way, even after the financial collapse, 52-44.<br /><br />Are you worried that we will fail to make investments we need to create jobs or worry that we will spend too much and have to raise taxes? Liberals worry about not making needed investments 73-23; moderates by 53-44. Conservatives worry about spending and taxes 69-29.<br /><br />Did you worry more that Barack Obama would raise taxes or that John McCain would continue Bush's economic policies? Liberals by a margin of 58% worry about McCain; moderates the same by 29%. Conservatives by 46 - 70-24 - worry about Obama.<br /><br />Should homosexuality be accepted or discouraged by society. Liberals say accepted by 82-17; moderates by 61-28. Conservatives want homosexuality discouraged by 63-31.<br /><br />When we asked whether Republicans lost because they were too conservative or not conservative enough, or whether they should move to the center or reaffirm their principles and stay on the right, liberals and moderates were clear. They lost because they were too conservative and should move back towards the center. Conservatives, not surprisingly, reaffirmed the faith.<br /><br />On issue after issue, moderates stand with liberals, not conservatives. This is a center-left nation. <br /><br />Republicans are not only an aging, monochromatic, regional minority party. They not only must now suffer the circular firing squad that follows defeat. They not only struggle to find a compelling leader or a relevant agenda. They swim against the tide. They are a largely conservative party in a center-left nation. Obama's mandate is clear. And they'd be well advised to get out of the way.<br /><br /><br />33and4http://www.blogger.com/profile/01852518714785564488noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1874868376438063155.post-57532601975231368982008-11-10T11:10:00.002-06:002008-11-10T11:23:15.886-06:00Crystal Stilts: Alight of Night<a href="http://www.mediafire.com/?myngnkjimmg"><img style="display:block; margin:0px auto 10px; text-align:center;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 400px; height: 400px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiLGHjaZblJ5j5GWOsoJbnyL3TNsMLEiJCzVgHNn_mwkSND76dLyDug0SmMF-4AuDjssRZ_F7kQey2MuHeJJLH_-c_If_f9frMmcoEjYoFgFDbCTfhXZ0UkMNuvN0APlSTr5ro5tlYUoFg5/s400/cs.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5267079929662245074" /></a><br /><br />click cover to download<br /><br />1. The Dazzled <br />2. Crystal Stilts <br />3. Graveyard Orbit <br />4. Prismatic Room <br />5. The Sinking <br />6. Departure <br />7. Shattered Shine <br />8. Verdant Gaze <br />9. Bright Night <br />10. Spiral Transit <br />11. The City in the Sea <br /><br /><br />enjoy 33and4http://www.blogger.com/profile/01852518714785564488noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1874868376438063155.post-43126921920798818532008-11-10T10:32:00.001-06:002008-11-10T10:36:21.039-06:00A Center-Left Agenda for the First 100 DaysBy: Katrina vanden Heuvel<br /><br /><br />At the end of this remarkable week, we're starting to look ahead to the First 100 Days of the Obama presidency. Already, we're hearing calls in the mainstream media warning the new administration "not to overreach." And working overtime, the Inside-the-Beltway Punditocracy continues to reveal its ability to ignore reality -- even while describing itself as "realist" -- with its claims that this is still a center-right nation, despite all evidence to the contrary.<br /><br />But as Nobel Prize winning economist Paul Krugman writes in yesterday's New York Times, "Let's hope that Mr. Obama has the good sense to ignore this advice...this year's presidential election was a clear referendum on political philosophies -- and the progressive philosophy won."<br /><br />Obama himself his talked about needing to measure his accomplishments over the first 1,000 Days, rather than 100, given the problems he has inherited from arguably the worst president ever (my words, not Obama's). Indeed, it will take years to undo the damage of the Bush administration and the conservative ideology that has dominated this country for nearly thirty years. But the First 100 Days are still crucial -- not only in signaling to the American people and the world that the administration will take determined steps to repair this nation -- but there is a historical precedent for the need to move forward expeditiously in order to seize the moment and the mandate.<br /><br />President Obama will need to be bold to deal with the challenges he faces: a cratering economy, broken healthcare system, two wars, poverty and inequality, and the stained US reputation in the world. The millions who were mobilized and inspired by Obama's campaign and candidacy also have their work cut out for them -- continuing to drive a bold agenda to respond to these crises -- just as progressives have in recent years on the war, energy independence, trade, healthcare, and other issues that are defining the new "center" of American politics and hearts and minds.<br /><br />Here is a list of actions -- ones I care deeply about -- that President Obama can take in the First 100 Days to immediately achieve real and significant change. Some of these he can literally achieve on Day 1 with the stroke of a pen, others will demand coalition building and an inside-outside strategy to push legislation. Many of these ideas are drawn from good groups like the Center for Constitutional Rights, Amnesty International USA, the Apollo Alliance, and Public Citizen. You may have others and I'd welcome hearing yours -- just post a comment.<br /><br /><strong>Bush Executive Orders</strong>: As Obama himself said of his first 100 days when campaigning in Denver, "I would call my attorney general in and review every single executive order issued by George Bush and overturn those laws or executive decisions that I feel violate the constitution."<br /><br /><strong>Economic Stimulus</strong>: Stop the bleeding -- through expanded health and unemployment benefits and providing real aid to beleaguered state and local governments so they can sustain essential public services.<br /><br /><strong>Iraq</strong>: Present plan and hold to your timeline for withdrawal.<br /><br /><strong>Health Care Reform</strong>: Begin immediately by expanding health insurance to kids and passing the State Children's Health Insurance Program legislation vetoed by Bush.<br /><br /><strong>Women's Health and Reproductive Rights</strong>: Repeal the Global Gag Rule that requires NGOs receiving federal funding to neither promote nor perform abortions in other countries.<br /><br /><strong>Energy and the Economy</strong>: Announce a clean energy strategy that will reduce oil dependence, address global warming, create thousands of green jobs, and improve national security. Groups like the Apollo Alliance, Center for American Progress, and Natural Resources Defense Council have strong and concrete plans in this regard. Incorporate elements of this plan into stimulus package.<br /><br /><strong>Bailout for Main Street</strong>: Work to ensure that homeowners have real opportunities to renegotiate mortgages and remain in their homes.<br /><br /><strong>Poverty and Inequality</strong>: Appoint a Hunger Czar -- as Senator George McGovern and Congressman Jim McGovern call for in a recent op-ed -- who would "coordinate the various food, nutrition and anti-poverty programs... to increase the independence, purchasing power and food security of every human being." Announce your commitment to the goal of cutting poverty in half in ten years.<br /><br /><strong>Labor and Trade</strong>: Reject Colombia, Korea and Panama trade agreements as currently written and ensure future agreements promote the public interest. Work towards passage of Employee Free Choice Act.<br /><br /><strong>Science</strong>: Allow federal funding of embryonic stem cell research.<br /><br /><strong>Global Warming</strong>: Reverse the Bush EPA decision and allow California to regulate greenhouse gas emissions from cars and trucks. Call for a new climate treaty and ask Al Gore to lead that effort.<br /><br /><strong>Guantánamo</strong>: Close it, and try people in the US or resettle in countries where they face no risk of persecution or torture. New York Times columnist Nicholas Kristof offers a compelling idea to "turn it into an international center for research on tropical diseases that afflict poor countries... [serving as] an example of multilateral humanitarianism."<br /><br /><strong>Detention</strong>: Close all CIA black sites and secret detention sites. End extraordinary rendition. Abolish preventive detention that allows people to be held indefinitely without charge. Initiate criminal investigations into programs of rendition and secret detention. End trials by military commission. End opposition to full habeas corpus hearings for detainees in Guantánamo and other similar situations. Make known the names and whereabouts of all those detained in rendition and secret detention programs.<br /><br /><strong>Torture</strong>: End use in court of any evidence obtained through torture. Officially reject all memos, signing statements and executive orders that justify the use of torture. Establish an independent commission of inquiry into all aspects of detention and interrogation practices in the "war on terror." Announce administration will work for redress and remedy for victims of human rights violations for which US authorities are found to be responsible.<br /><br /><strong>Protect Dissent</strong>: Ensure that the FBI adheres to surveillance guidelines. Open Justice Department investigation into surveillance related misconduct. Pledge to end all secret surveillance programs not reviewed by courts or congressional committees.<br /><br /><strong>Limit State Secrets Privilege</strong>: Issue new Executive Orders that reverse the expansion of state secrets privilege and the over-classification of documents. Pass legislation making it clear that military contractors are accountable for abuses.<br /><br /><strong>Roll Back Executive Power</strong>: Repudiate unitary presidency. Renounce use of signing statements as a tool for altering legislation. Pledge to abide by the War Powers Act and end abuse of Authorization to Use Military Force. (Or as Bruce Fein -- a key player in the Reagan Justice Department -- said, "Renounce presidential power to initiate war anywhere on the planet, including Iran.")<br /><br />These are doable, and by taking these steps -- with deliberate haste -- President Obama would get a real start on repairing our nation and people's lives<br /><strong></strong><br /><br /><br /><br />33and4http://www.blogger.com/profile/01852518714785564488noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1874868376438063155.post-40786622297289112942008-11-09T14:32:00.003-06:002008-11-10T11:23:59.564-06:00Peter & The Wolf - Mellow Owl<a href="http://sharebee.com/676a2218"><img style="display:block; margin:0px auto 10px; text-align:center;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 280px; height: 250px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjIZRt1nFhtcVPVrE74tkYL945lRe3EOJ_fSvOOvtLzSAvWd6vPwtjPV3mHsSrhFpuG0BG15QM-QG63i15ybFzPxSUNRz53OjJXGjOBtl3pQgXXHfoi7bR_i0SVtxr7zGlrb9EHn70bRHxK/s400/Peter+and+the+Wolf-Mellow+Owl.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5266759552412849170" /></a><br /><br /><br />click cover to download<br /><br />"Mellow Owl was written and recorded on a farm in Canada, and an undisclosed location in Vermont, according to liner notes. As Red Hunter told Splice Today in a recent interview, "I'm trying out all kinds of new stuff here to see what works. I'm really influenced by these native dudes I met in Fiji who sang super mellow beach harmonies, so I guess it'll be some island jams." <br /><br /><br />1. Supermellofied<br />2. Moondance Of Nightowl<br />3. Ballad of Redhook<br />4. Fireflies<br />5. Bottle Rockettes<br />6. Dime Novel Afterparty<br />7. Trainhopper<br />8. City Birds<br />9. Fiji Boy Part VII<br />10. The Owl Speaks<br />11. This Kid I Knew<br />12. The Bride Of S. Travels <br /><br /><br />enjoy 33and4http://www.blogger.com/profile/01852518714785564488noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1874868376438063155.post-72942725399905314392008-10-28T14:36:00.001-05:002008-10-28T14:38:49.774-05:00The Christian Right Killed the Republican PartyBy: Jane Devin<br /><br /><br />When Ronald Reagan began courting the religious right in his bid to win the Presidency, I doubt he knew he was spelling death to the lean tenets of Goldwater conservatism. Yet soon afterward, under the thumb of right-wing religion, the Republican party became a bloated fool, stuffed with hypocrisy, greed, and anti-intellectualism. In 2008, the price is being paid through lost elections and a loss of public trust.<br /><br />While Bush railed about the axis of evil, there was another axis that gathered steam during the Reagan years. The Moral Majority, Focus on the Family, and The Christian Coalition were all formed within years of each other as religiopolitical groups. Jerry Falwell, James Dobson, and Pat Robertson, the respective leaders of these movements, formed a triad that sought to influence politics through a gospel of neo-conservative Christian rhetoric aimed at millions of faithful adherents whose votes, it was hoped, could swing the socio-political pendulum away from progress and back to "traditional values." <br /><br />In order to win the votes of the triad's faithful followers, Republican politicians bartered themselves into a hear-no-wrong, see-no-wrong trade-off. This trade-off allowed Falwell to hold sway with politicians, and appear as a respected political pundit on right-wing shows, even after outlandishly insisting that the purple Tinky Winky children's character was gay, or that the anti-Christ was coming in the form of a Jew. He could promote the idea of ending the public school system in favor of church-run schools, as he did in his book, America Can Be Saved, yet still wield considerable influence in Washington.<br /><br />In trading endorsements for blindness, Pat Robertson could say that feminism "is a socialist, anti-family, political movement that encourages women to leave their husbands, kill their children, practice witchcraft, destroy capitalism and become lesbians" -- and even suggest that a nuclear device should be used to blow up the State Department -- yet Senators and other politicians would still appear on his CBN network, even after other controversies, such as the use of Operation Blessing planes for mining activities, splintered his Coalition. <br /><br />Republican politicians continued to cater to James Dobson even after he distorted the research of scientists to promote his anti-gay agenda in Time magazine. Dobson, who operates several non-profits, has used millions in tax-free donations to try to influence nominations for the Supreme Court and to subvert the First Amendment separation of church and State, but legislators, rather than reining in the 800-pound gorilla, quaked under threat of being targeted by Dobson's political media machine. <br /><br />There was a mutuality to the trade-off between the Christian right and its adopted Republican politicians. In exchange for being given credibility and influence in Washington, the triad and their various branches would justify the intrusive Patriot Act, torture at Guantanamo Bay, and massive governmental debt to their audience of millions -- if politicians would stand against Roe v. Wade. They wouldn't make a stink about outrageously expensive no-bid contracts -- if it meant that their "faith-based" charities could get governmental grants. They would support war against a country that had nothing to do with 9/11 -- if politicians went on the record against same-sex marriage. <br /><br />The would ignore or excuse the fact that a large percentage of corporations paid no taxes at all -- if it meant no new taxes for them. They'd support Bush even as he misled the public about weapons of mass destruction, and they'd excuse the unethical actions of henchmen like Rove and Libby -- if it meant that school vouchers would be put on the agenda. <br /><br />Working in tandem with their pocketed politicians, the Christian right would rejoice at the FCC's repeal of the Fairness Doctrine, which gave rise to a slew of unchecked right-wing programs that hawked the myth of a vast "liberal media", even as markets narrowed and became dominated by a handful of corporations.<br /><br />Right-wing provocateurs like Ann Coulter and Rush Limbaugh were encouraged to truck in fear, loathing, and controversy, mirroring the religious right's mission to divide the country into red/blue, good/evil, conservative/liberal, Christian/un-Christian factions. There was no room for the moderate middle in this "with us or against us" equation, as witnessed by the public shredding of moderate Republican politicians like Arlen Specter, a Jew, and a vocal critic of the Christian right. "What some are trying to do is take over the party," Specter warned in 1994. "That's bad for the Republican Party and bad for the country." Specter became a target of the religious right for his support of Roe v. Wade, and his refusal to bend to the will of religious power brokers like Dobson, who attempted to use his influence to block Specter's 2005 bid to become chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee<br /><br />Today, Sarah Palin and Michele Bachmann are among two of the more prominent Republican figures that have become mouthpieces for the religious right. Their attempts to split a diverse, multi-cultural country into "pro-America" and "anti-America" factions have left little doubt who is to be considered patriotic and who is not. <br /><br />Those who are right-wing Christians -- anti-abortion, anti-feminism, anti-gay, anti-evolution, anti-taxes, pro-gun, and pro-deregulation -- and who are willing to ignore or justify massive governmental debt, corporate welfare, bank nationalization, unjustified war, falling markets, depleted retirement accounts, record foreclosures, government spying, broken treaties, torture, the impingement of a free press, the subversion of the First Amendment, the hiding of official records, the missing millions from Halliburton, and more - are patriotic. Everyone else is not. <br /><br />Barry Goldwater once said that he was "sick and tired of the political preachers" that tried to dictate his morality. <br /><br />"And I am even more angry as a legislator who must endure the threats of every religious group who thinks it has some God-granted right to control my vote on every roll call in the Senate. I am warning them today: I will fight them every step of the way if they try to dictate their moral convictions to all Americans in the name of "conservatism."<br />Goldwater, I think, would be rolling in his grave at the hijacking of his party by religious fundamentalists. It remains to be seen if the Republican party can recover from its long and seedy affair with the extreme right, but there is no doubt that many socially moderate, fiscally conservative Republicans are waiting for a leadership that is driven more by Goldwater ethics than by the bogeyman of a separatist, neo-con God.<br /><br /><br /><br />33and4http://www.blogger.com/profile/01852518714785564488noreply@blogger.com26tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1874868376438063155.post-77703285456542403182008-10-28T11:35:00.000-05:002008-10-28T11:36:58.512-05:00Evangelical Leaders Using God Like a Hired GunBy: Christine Wicker<br /><br />They tried branding Obama the anti-Christ. They tried linking him with Islamic terrorists. They've implied that unknown powers bought his allegiance by financing his education at Ivy League universities. They've used their pulpits to endorse McCain, hoping to spur a fight with the I.R.S. that would rouse their troops. <br /><br />None of these tactics has brought their errant minions under control. <br /><br />So using God like a hired gun to terrorize the town's people, the evangelical Christian mullahs are declaring that Obamageddon is at hand, using that very word and asking as the Religious Right/Republican Townhall magazine did in a September headline, "Could We Survive a Barack Presidency?" <br /><br />Evangelical publisher James Strang answers the survival question by warning his readers that people who hate Christianity will take over the country once Obama is elected. <br /><br />In fact, "life as we know it will end," Strang writes. <br /><br />Last week Focus on the Family's James Dobson added his own doomsday predictions with a 16-page rant about evils that will befall the United States by 2012 if Obama is elected. A British commentator dubbed Dobson's list of a parade of horrors.<br /><br />As a warm up Dobson blames misguided young evangelicals for putting Obama in office. It's them he's hoping to scare most. But they and emergent church leaders such as Brian McLaren, who endorsed Obama, have broken ranks and won't be coming back. He's truly delusional if he thinks they're listening to him.<br /><br />A great mass of other evangelicals, who never followed the evangelical mullahs and never will, are also going for Obama. Maybe Dobson thinks they'll listen to him. <br /><br />Not likely. They're using tried-and true-evangelical tactics on behalf of their own cause. <br /><br />Seattle's Jim Henderson, a former Pentecostal preacher and head of Offthemap.com, is trying guilt.<br /><br />He recently sent a mass email urging his friends to support Obama because he has the character and bearing to be president, and because his election gives Christians the opportunity to transform historical wrong. <br /><br />The enslavement of Africans contributed greatly to our nation's wealth and has never been addressed directly and concretely by our leaders, Henderson wrote. Linking that lack of repentance to the country's $13 trillion of debt, he told his friends that our current troubles are a matter of reaping what we've sown. He then cited the chance to elect Obama as an example of "God's mercy - as a way through this historic dilemma and one that will do for our national character what reparations never could." <br /><br />He and his ilk won't be convinced by Dobson's scare tactics. They're more likely to agree with a new bumper sticker popular in Colorado, where Focus on the Family is based.<br /><br />It reads, "Focus on your own damn family."<br /><br />So which evangelicals are left? Oh, I know. How could I have left them until last? The true faithful. The ones who always listen to Dobson.<br /><br />He's going after evangelicals who may stay home on election day because they paid too much attention to his reasons for refusing to support McCain earlier in the year. <br /><br />At that time, thinking that he was powerful enough to quash McCain's nomination, Dobson chastised fellow evangelical Gary Bauer for supporting the senator from Arizona. <br /><br />"The Senator," Dobson said in a press release from Focus on the Family, "is being touted by the media as a man of principle, yet he was involved with other women while married to his first wife, and was implicated in the so-called Keating scandal with four other senators. He was eventually reprimanded by the Congress for the 'appearance of impropriety.' The Senator reportedly has a violent temper and can be extremely confrontational and profane when angry. These red flags about Senator McCain's character are reminiscent of the man who now occupies the White House."<br /><br />The man who now occupies the White House? Oh yeah. That guy. Isn't he the last president the Religious Right elected?<br /><br />But let's forget about that. Many of God's men have fallen. God's people move on.<br /><br />Dobson's jeremiad against McCain also noted the senator's love of alcohol and gambling, as well as his acceptance of support from Log Cabin Republicans, a gay group.<br /><br />Pretty strong stuff. All true. But let's forget about that. <br /><br />The Republicans anointed McCain anyway.<br /><br />When Dobson saw that threats to take his toys and go home didn't keep McCain from winning the nomination, he forgot his previous scruples. Now Dobson sees McCain as God's man. It's Obama who's the devil. And under God's direction, as he always is, Dobson is speaking out again. But this time he is no longer dealing in truth. <br /><br />As he notes in the letter's preface, Dobson is now imagining things, things that could happen if Christians don't unite behind McCain and give that adulterous, profane, violent, scandal-tainted, bought-out-by-the-homsexuals drinker and gambler the most powerful elective office in the world. <br /><br />In the letter Dobson imagines Boy Scouts disbanding rather than allowing gay scout leaders the complete license they will get if Obama is elected. He imagines the Pledge of Allegiance being banned in schools. He imagines Communism gaining new power. He imagines doctors killing children just minutes before birth. He imagines Americans forbidden to own guns. He imagines television and radio stations forbidden to preach the Bible. He imagines ministers, lawyers, doctors, social workers all being punished for following their consciences.<br /><br />Dobson may have gotten his letter idea from Christian radio's Janet Porter who wrote an imaginary "Letter from a Future Prisoner" last year. She was fear mongering over the idea the Hillary might be elected. If that happened "thought crimes" would be instituted. Christian books would be banned. Christian speech would be called hate speech. <br /><br />Porter, an even bigger drama queen than Dobson, imagined herself in prison doing hard labor merely for defending her faith. And who does she imagine in the cell next to her?<br /><br />No, no. Not Jesus. Don't be ridiculous.<br /><br />It's a home-schooling mother weeping inconsolably because her innocent children have been put in foster care.<br /><br />All because they loved Jesus. <br /><br />All because that adulterous, profane, violent, scandal-tainted, bought-out-by-the-homsexuals drinker and gambler didn't win the presidential election.<br /><br />It's enough to make Mickey Rooney weep.3and4http://www.blogger.com/profile/01852518714785564488noreply@blogger.com99tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1874868376438063155.post-74422558480167196532008-10-27T11:41:00.003-05:002008-10-27T11:46:47.574-05:00We Are Bulletproof Atease Vol. 1<a href="http://sharebee.com/31134f4c"><img style="display:block; margin:0px auto 10px; text-align:center;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 400px; height: 400px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiv6YC0OCrulPHIt8Xm31JXBr3JF2Hit06ojIdvgH0JmJs9kxGD9poOpmBvLUnAeH2jiT-TwFmlcLDlRoeiJXml5iBAG-bbJOfDCvOCucr50qxyA7nZy6-OYV_0LlA7LdTvrAosBvRckKSL/s400/WeAreBulletproof.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5261875374043653986" /></a><br /><br /><br />Click Cover for Free Artist Supported Download<br /><br />1. The Gadflies - Weight Of The World<br />( www.myspace.com/thegadflies )<br />2. Companions In The Haze - There She Goes <br />( www.myspace.com/companionsinthehaze )<br />3. Luna Park Rescue - Paperplastic <br />( www.myspace.com/lunaparkrescue )<br />4. Dead Ringer - Where The Fuck Are My Keys? <br />( http://virb.com/deadringer )<br />5. Harry Burgess - Hold On Forget Me <br />( http://www.myspace.com/harryburgessmusic )<br />6. William H. Bonney - Bigger Than Me<br />( wearebulletpfoof.blogspot.com )<br />7. Martijn Duiven - Stop Videotaping <br />( www.myspace.com/martijnduiven )<br />8. A Clever Name Here - X'd <br />( wearebulletpfoof.blogspot.com )<br />9. Elliott Mor - Fire Rabbit <br />( http://www.myspace.com/runoutgroove )<br />10. Steady Downhill - Open The Window<br />( www.myspace.com/steadydownhill )<br />11. Popular Mechanics - Voiceless Motion ( demo )<br />( http://www.myspace.com/haveagoodflightonpopularmechanics )<br />12. Tandem Felix - Yooden Vranx <br />( www.tandem-felix.com )<br />13. Wes Scott - Lie <br />( www.myspace.com/wesleyscottmusic )<br />14. Man's Small Step - The Day Has Slowly Passed<br />( www.myspace.com/manssmallstep )<br />15. Primm And Propeller - Daniel Day-Lewis In Boxing Vs. Terrorism<br />( myspace.com/primmmusic )<br />16. William Cremin - Army Ants <br />( www.thetornacls.net )<br /><br /><br />Enjoy 33and4http://www.blogger.com/profile/01852518714785564488noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1874868376438063155.post-66006893739877201762008-10-22T09:04:00.001-05:002008-10-22T09:06:49.061-05:00Tobacco : Fucked-Up Friends<a href="http://www.mediafire.com/download.php?wwlehlvjmi4"><img style="display:block; margin:0px auto 10px; text-align:center;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEi7te29YQAyG1e_7Na4VaKVUAW-EuvqU6M2wklzff4Tg3lOwo3gUAzW4zHnGfTA835eSODzD2p2736BL7d9LcB7G67Zenl_OSENMZyg5caYf6pRrjjfmVoWvY3wz9hU8BqgoPHONDxbuLS1/s400/tobacco.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5259979092837815202" /></a><br /><br /><br />Dude from Black Moth Super Rainbow Solo Album<br /><br />Click Cover to Download <br /><br />1 Street Trash<br />2 Truck Sweat<br />3 Hairy Candy<br />4 Hawker Boat<br />5 Side 8 (Big Gums Version)<br />6 Yum Yum Cult<br />7 Berries That Burn<br />8 Get My Nails Did<br />9 Dirt (with Aesop Rock)<br />10 Gross Magik<br />11 Little Pink Riding Hood<br />12 Backwoods Altar<br />13 -<br />14 Tape Eater<br />15 Pink Goo<br />16 Grease Wizard<br /><br /><br />Enjoy 33and4http://www.blogger.com/profile/01852518714785564488noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1874868376438063155.post-62272453612333218842008-10-21T13:54:00.000-05:002008-10-21T13:55:54.056-05:00Let the Blame Game BeginBy: James Carville and Paul Begala<br /><br /><br />As Barack Obama and the Democrats appear poised for an historic sweep, we have a message for our Republican friends: It is time to point fingers. <br /><br />We are pro-finger-pointing. We disagree strongly with Gov. Sarah Palin who said recently, "Do you notice that our opponents sure have spent a lot of time looking at the past and pointing fingers? You look to the past because that's where you find blame, but we're...looking to the future, because that's where you find solutions." On the contrary, Governor, blame assignment, while much maligned, is essential to determining what went wrong and how to set it right. Besides, it's a hell of a spectator sport. Here's our primer for a little game we like to call Big Losers Always Make Excuses (BLAME): <br /><br />First -- a couple of ground rules. You can't blame the press or minorities. Sure, media-bashing is part of the conservative catechism, and minority voters are likely to support Barack Obama in record numbers. But finger-pointing is only interesting when you point at someone on your team. Republicans need a civil war -- a steel cage death match -- to sort out what they stand for. Scapegoating outsiders won't purge the party of what's rotting it on the inside. <br /><br />Here's the most important thing about finger-pointing: you have to start early. If you're a Republican who wants to avoid blame for the current meltdown, you cannot afford to wait until after the election is over. <br /><br />The smartest people in the conservative movement are already pointing like a bird dog on a South Georgia quail hunt. David Brooks and Bill Kristol are leading the way. Mr. Brooks, representing the intellectual wing of the conservative movement, called Ms. Palin, "a fatal cancer to the Republican Party." Attaboy, Brooksie. Score one for the brainiacs. <br /><br />Mr. Kristol, on the other hand, blames neither Ms. Palin nor Sen. John McCain, but rather McCain's campaign advisers, writing of the campaign: "Its combination of strategic incoherence and operational incompetence has become toxic." See? That's how you do it. Kristol can't say McCain's problem is that he supported the Iraq war, (which Kristol advocated) or that he chose Sarah Palin (whom Kristol praised). So rather than play defense, Bill went on offense, blaming McCain's Steve Schmidt-led campaign. But we have a feeling this fight will only begin when the Schmidt hits the fan. <br /><br />But where are the other voices? We need to hear, for example, from Karl Rove. Whom will he blame? We stipulate that Karl is a genius -- albeit a genius whose advice took Pres. Bush from a 91 percent approval rating down to 26. With the House of Bush ablaze, Karl is going to have to do some quick finger-pointing before they change they change his nickname from The Architect to The Arsonist. <br /><br />How about Rush Limbaugh, Sean Hannity and other radio personalities? They never liked McCain much -- but his campaign cratered only when he embraced their wild attacks on Sen. Obama. It was only after Mr. McCain borrowed the Limbaugh-Hannity line on Bill Ayers, only after Gov. Palin accused Mr. Obama of "pallin' around with terrorists," that the bottom fell out for Mr. McCain and Ms. Palin. We're betting the hot air boys will blame the intellectuals. After all, if you want to make an omelet, you've got to break a few eggheads. <br /><br />The Republican Party is atomizing, and each faction must participate in Project BLAME. The neocons may want to blame the theocons. The economic conservatives will likely blame the big spenders. The conflagration will be so multi-dimensional we'll need a program to sort out the players. They will need to answer fundamental questions: What does it mean to be a Republican? Do Republicans support laissez-faire or nationalized banking? Do Republicans support a balanced budget or half-trillion-dollar deficits? Do Republicans want a "humble foreign policy" like George W. Bush, or preventive war against countries that pose no threat, like, umm, George W. Bush? Are Republicans the party of limited government or a vast Medicare prescription drug benefit? Are they wary of Big Brother or eager to expand warrantless wiretaps? Do they support Christian values or torture? Are they the party that believes that cutting-edge technology can shoot a missile out of the sky or the party that believes humans and dinosaurs walked the earth simultaneously? <br /><br />These questions should define the 2012 GOP presidential primaries. So start blaming, all you would-be candidates. That means you, Ms. Palin, Mike Huckabee, Mitt Romney, Jeb Bush and Charlie Crist. Hurry up. You only have 1,165 days left until the Iowa Caucuses.<br /><br /><br />Yeah 33and4http://www.blogger.com/profile/01852518714785564488noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1874868376438063155.post-28064533649573197252008-10-21T11:24:00.002-05:002008-10-21T11:43:00.340-05:00Valet :: Naked Acid<a href="http://www.megaupload.com/?d=itwafi78"><img style="display:block; margin:0px auto 10px; text-align:center;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjEuhz24WPk9FQqWGplGzjUXW1yfk0Iu6A5tgQhPh0yOdsONuotg-Pk9RaaX5FzwfUMmXvbKCGIeTrLzeAS84s9G08wJz98RUiskNCmXNAuyf8rQMdx3_NP42TD1ueh9YBvFedD011cPT3K/s400/nk.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5259647959121243266" /></a><br /><br /><br />psychedelic<br /><br />Click Cover To Download<br /><br /><br /> 1. We Went There <br /> 2. Drum Movie<br /> 3. Kehaar <br /> 4. Fuck It <br /> 5. Babylon 4 Eva <br />6. Fire <br /> 7. Streets <br /><br /><br /><br />Enjoy 33and4http://www.blogger.com/profile/01852518714785564488noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1874868376438063155.post-50182088416580371812008-10-20T13:29:00.003-05:002008-10-20T14:26:29.776-05:00Weird Tapes : Get Religion<a href="http://www.zshare.net/download/18134269ce5c4038/"><img style="display:block; margin:0px auto 10px; text-align:center;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgvS0kae_j5pwzkdEEEVslNzleMxe1thdQ-ChFD1wAT5kZytgpNmvnA18Tde6SE5DD_K1o9kV1alHn8tatjgBFrLFCN4MusVA4N9Huy8xK8H-NCdLY7Qrdk56XrVoERU_uutWLT90RUyOwl/s400/Blake.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5259305224967543490" /></a><br /><br />Check Out the Gram Parsons Sample on "Home"<br /><br />Click Cover for Artist Supported Download<br /><br /><br />1. The Heavens<br />2. Glorious<br />3. Home<br />4. Nikki<br />5. Party Trash <br /><br /><br />He posts new songs on his blog all the time <br /><br />http://weirdtapes.blogspot.com/<br /><br />Enjoy<br />33and4http://www.blogger.com/profile/01852518714785564488noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1874868376438063155.post-14130874638177941892008-10-20T13:08:00.001-05:002008-10-20T13:10:09.804-05:00Meet John McCain's PalsBy: Menachem Rosensaft<br /><br /><br />Ok, who would you like to see alongside the next President of the United States in a crisis, Warren Buffett or Phil Gramm? General Colin Powell or Randy Scheunemann? Paul Volcker or Nancy Pfotenhauer? We know a great deal about Powell (Republican former Secretary of State, former National Security Advisor and former Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff), Buffett (CEO of Berkshire Hathaway, one of the richest and most successful influential businessmen in the world), and Volcker (former Chairman of the Federal Reserve), all prominent Obama supporters, but what do we know about some of the luminaries who have John McCain's ear? <br /><br />First and foremost, there is Phil Gramm, the former Chairman of the Senate Banking Committee, whom Nobel Economics Laureate Paul Krugman has called "McCain's guru on economics," and whose deregulation of the banking industry not only enabled banks to go into the subprime mortgage business in the first place, but made possible the "gimmicks" - hybrid instruments, credit swaps and the like - that McCain now rails against. Krugman famously described Gramm in his New York Times column as "the arch-deregulator, who took special care in his Senate days to prevent oversight of financial derivatives -- the very instruments that sank Lehman and A.I.G., and brought the credit markets to the edge of collapse." Gramm, we should all remember, was McCain's most prominent and influential economic adviser until earlier this summer when he dismissed the state of the economy as a "mental recession" and called Americans a "nation of whiners."<br /><br />McCain has been "palling around" with Phil Gramm for decades. The two are close personal friends, and McCain was national chairman of Gramm's short-lived 1996 bid for the Republican presidential nomination.<br /><br />And then there are the lobbyists. The neo-con Randy Scheunemann, McCain's chief foreign policy adviser, was a registered foreign agent for the Republic of Georgia and several other countries while simultaneously serving as McCain's senior foreign policy advisor. (Scheunemann also has close ties to the discredited Iraqi politician, Ahmad Chalabi.) In November 2007, Scheunemann discussed Georgia with an aide in McCain's Senate office. And according to the Washington Post, on the same day that Scheunemann was prepping McCain for a telephone call with Georgia's president in April of this year, Scheunemann's lobbying firm signed "signed a $200,000 contract to continue providing strategic advice to the Georgian government in Washington." Both McCain and Sarah Palin have made American support for Georgia a cornerstone of their foreign policy. Palin told Charles Gibson in her ABC News interview that she considered the Russian invasion of Georgia to have been "unprovoked," and that the United States might have to go to war against Russia to protect Georgia. Not surprisingly, Scheunemann was one of the McCain advisers who prepped Palin for the Gibson interview. As Kelley Beaucar Vlahos recently asked in The American Conservative (hardly a left-wing publication), "When McCain suggests there will be 'severe, long-term negative consequences' for Russia if it doesn't leave Georgia alone, how do Americans know that isn't the $800,000 Scheunemann's lobbying shop has gotten from Georgia since 2004 talking?"<br /><br />Charlie Black, McCain's chief campaign adviser, is a long-time lobbyist for Colombian interests, as are numerous major contributors to the McCain campaign. The lobbying firm Black headed until earlier this year earned more than $1.8 million from Occidental Petroleum Company, Colombia's largest oil and gas producer, and has represented numerous other Colombian businesses and individuals. According to the New York Times, Black<br /><br />"lobbied Congress, the State Department and the White House on Occidental's behalf regarding 'general energy issues' and 'general trade issues' involving Colombia. His list of activities also included winning 'foreign assistance for Colombia' and efforts to block an economic embargo against the country, which has a questionable human rights record." <br />Small wonder, then, that McCain considers the Colombian Free Trade Agreement "something that's a no-brainer." McCain's instinctive position appears to be that what's good for his lobbyist pals must be good for the United States. This is the same Charlie Black, incidentally, who told Fortune Magazine in June that another terrorist attack on U.S. soil "would be a big advantage" to McCain, and who masterminded Jesse Helms' racist 1990 North Carolina senatorial campaign against Harvey Gantt.<br /><br />Still others in the McCain entourage have close ties to the mortgage industry. Campaign Manager Rick Davis used to head the Homeownership Alliance, an advocacy group on the behalf of Fannie Mae and Freddy Mac, and Davis Manafort, the lobbying firm that still bears Davis' name, received monthly $15,000 payments from Freddie Mac until August of this year. And Kurt Pfotenhauer, the husband of McCain's senior policy adviser Nancy Pfotenhauer, was the top lobbyist for the Mortgage Bankers Association. The telegenic Nancy Pfotenhauer is also a former Washington lobbyist for Koch Industries whose Koch Oil subsidiary was once cited by a Senate Committee as "the most dramatic example of an oil company stealing by deliberate mismeasurement and fraudulent reporting." Only a few days ago, Ms. Pfotenhauer said that while the Obama-Biden ticket was doing well in Northern Virginia, "the rest of the state, real Virginia, if you will, I think will be very responsive to Senator McCain's message." She apparently believes that the upstate part of the Commonwealth of Washington, Jefferson, Madison and Monroe has somehow turned into a "fake" Virginia.<br /><br />Davis has another questionable accomplishment to his credit. According to the Washington Post, he "helped arrange an introduction in 2006 between McCain and a Russian billionaire whose suspected links to anti-democratic and organized-crime figures are so controversial that the U.S. government revoked his visa." No one has suggested that McCain ever did any improper favors for Oleg Deripaska, the billionaire in question who just happens to be, again according to the Washington Post, "one of the richest men in Russia and a close ally of President Vladimir Putin." Nevertheless, the very fact that McCain had dinner and drinks, that is, "palled around," with the controversial Deripaska at least once less than three years ago at an exclusive Swiss resort (seven months later, in August 2006, McCain allegedly had dinner again with Deripaska and Davis in Montenegro) is at least as noteworthy as what Colin Powell has called Barack Obama's "very, very limited relationship" with Bill Ayers on the board of a respected Republican-funded educational foundation in Chicago.<br /><br />At last week's debate, Barack Obama told us that he would look for guidance and advice to individuals like Warren Buffett, Paul Volcker, Joe Biden, and Richard Lugar, the ranking Republican on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. We must assume that Phil Gramm, Randy Scheunemann, Charlie Black, Rick Davis and Nancy Pfotenhauer would figure prominently in a McCain-Palin administration. Is there anything else anyone needs to know before going into the voting booth?<br /><br /><br />33and4http://www.blogger.com/profile/01852518714785564488noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1874868376438063155.post-89112478495697618132008-10-17T11:27:00.003-05:002008-10-17T11:40:06.741-05:00esau mwamwaya + radioclit :: the very best mixtape<a href="http://www.zshare.net/download/2058450940aa5b53/"><img style="display:block; margin:0px auto 10px; text-align:center;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgZZuWMZyWIqiZmLz9ufHALC4V2hkdVVK3IqYfIUAZYOxzzRvZ7W_w7TVDozOyukxjtee51sqtPU-tca687yl0Y9SHMMB8UkgVPzYDgUyZpYbMJnqvxNvkdSwu6xO2McYNXQiXFGLHokHzQ/s400/the+very+best+front.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5258161281954083634" /></a><br /><br />click cover for free artist supported download<br /><br /><br /><br />"this mixtape is one of the most sincere and uplifting things I've heard in a long time." GVSB<br /><br /><br />1) Kamphopo (vocals: Esau Mwamwaya, music: Architecture In Helsinki - Heart It Races)<br />2) Wena (vocals: Esau Mwamwaya & Bleksem, music: DJ Cleo - Wena)<br />3) Tengazako (vocals: Esau Mwamwaya, music: M.I.A - Paper Planes)<br />4) Chikondi (vocals: Esau Mwamwaya, music: Hans Zimmer - True Romance Theme)<br />5) Cape Cod Kwassa Kwassa (The Very Best Remix) (vocals: Esau Mwamwaya, music: Radioclit & Vampire Weekend)<br />6) Hide And Seek (vocals: Esau Mwamwaya & Teki Latex, music: TTC - Batards Sensibles)<br />7) Salota (vocals: Esau Mwamwaya and Blk Jks, music: Cannibal Ox - Life’s Ill)<br />8) Boyz (vocals: Esau Mwamwaya, Akon & M.I.A, music: M.I.A -Boyz)<br />9) Sister Betina (vocals: Esau Mwamwaya & Mgarimbe, music: Mgarimbe - Sister Betina)<br />10) Birthday (vocals: Esau Mwamwaya & The Ruby Suns, music: The Ruby Suns)<br />11) Funa Funa (vocals: Esau Mwamwaya, music: Radioclit)<br />12) Kada Manja (classic version) (vocals: Esau Mwamwaya, music: Radioclit)<br />13) Dinosaur Of The Lost Ark (The Very Best remix) (vocals: Esau Mwamwaya & Ben Brewer, music: Bermuda)<br />14) Get it Up (The Very Best Remix) (vocals : Esau Mwamwaya, Santogold, M.I.A & Northern Cree, music: Radioclit)<br />15) Will You Be There (vocals: Esau Mwamwaya & Michael Jackson, music: Michael Jackson - Will You Be There)<br /><br /><br /><br />Enjoy <br /><br />33and4http://www.blogger.com/profile/01852518714785564488noreply@blogger.com4tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1874868376438063155.post-45537163212008594272008-10-13T10:59:00.002-05:002008-10-13T11:20:03.822-05:00Women: Women<a href="http://www.mediafire.com/?gsdlq6za11c"><img style="display:block; margin:0px auto 10px; text-align:center;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEioGqVpWTVsRHtWiFQem3KJ973aLBqY1VjmyY6BjL-Fu-RcAlrJzWfCuFXjSE2SYDQvZdN2cZawld0aCXmhRCRAi4SDDMISZVd8br0RMbUBWknyrdz8LzL9vlGOR0MrFt9qs6F1cnFIz1kj/s400/ww.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5256673531046495810" /></a><br /><br />One of the best albums of the year!!!<br /><br />Click cover to download<br /><br />Women: Women <br /><br />1. Cameras <br />2. Lawncare <br />3. Woodbine <br />4. Black Rice <br />5. Sag Harbor Bridge <br />6. Group Transport Hall <br />7. Shaking Hand <br />8. Upstairs <br />9. January 8th <br />10. Flashlights <br /><br /><br />Enjoy 33and4http://www.blogger.com/profile/01852518714785564488noreply@blogger.com3tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1874868376438063155.post-49365823073187744762008-10-13T10:50:00.001-05:002008-10-13T10:51:52.319-05:00Three Questions that Bob Schieffer Probably Won't Ask John McCain, But He ShouldBy: Paul Slansky<br /><br /><br />"Senator McCain, you used to say that the main thing you were looking for in a running mate was the ability to take over as president, if necessary, on Day One. Given how many people there are in government that clearly meet that criterion, how do you justify picking someone who so many of the most intelligent and respected members of your own party believe clearly does not? Your campaign slogan is Country First, sir. Can you tell the American people exactly how you were putting Country First when you chose a congenitally dishonest, proudly ignorant, cold-blooded demagogue with no presidential qualifications whatsoever to sit just one of your 72-year-old cancer-ridden heartbeats away from running the country in these spectacularly perilous times of almost unprecedented economic and international crises?"<br /><br />"Senator McCain, your campaign has spent the last ten days impugning your opponent's character. We've seen Sarah Palin doing it, we've seen your wife Cindy doing it, and we've even seen you doing it yourself. Well, there he is right across the table from you. Is there anything you want to say to Senator Obama about Bill Ayers or Reverend Wright or Tony Rezko? Because it would be nice if he could respond to these allegations and insinuations and put this utter bullshit behind us so you could spend the next twenty days explaining to the American people why they should vote for you instead of scaring them about why they shouldn't vote for him."<br /><br />"Senator McCain, your campaign rallies lately have become forums for foaming-at-the-mouth cretins who are so certain that your opponent is a terrorist that some have actually shouted out, "Kill him!" and "Off with his head!" Given the nation's history of intolerance against those perceived to be somehow different - be it by virtue of sexual orientation, religion, or race - can you tell the American people how you're putting Country First by fanning the fires of hatred and why they shouldn't hold you and your rabid running mate personally responsible if those fires explode into violence?"<br /><br />Okay, I know Bob Schieffer's not going to say any of the above, but I urge anyone who knows him to press him to find some less prosecutorial way to ask these questions, because John McCain's efforts to make Barack Obama's character the deciding factor in the election have served only to shine a spotlight on his own galaxies-beyond-shame cravenness, and he deserves to be called out on it to his face. I'd be more than happy to do it but no one's going to let me near him, so I'm dependent on Bob.<br /><br /><br />33and4http://www.blogger.com/profile/01852518714785564488noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1874868376438063155.post-47649678880080040592008-10-12T13:39:00.000-05:002008-10-12T13:41:52.697-05:00"Trust" in the Economy and Electoral PoliticsBy: Michael Roth<br /><br /><br /><br />I've been thinking a lot about trust recently. When it is abundant everything goes more smoothly: from love to commerce, from sports to politics. When it is lacking, everything else can seem broken or meaningless. <br /><br />Nowadays we hear the word "trust" used all the time in relation to the credit crunch and the steep decline in stock markets. It's bad enough for the economy when a business can't provide credit to a consumer. No car loan, no sales; no sales, no dealership; no dealership, no factory and so on. But lately even banks are afraid to loan money to one another. There are certainly many reasons why trust has evaporated in the credit markets, but the basic fact is that too many financial institutions were making loans (or trading loans) without having any real assurance that the borrower had the capacity to pay back the debt. The number of borrowers multiplied as the loans were traded, and the crisis of confidence spread like a stomach virus on a college campus. It's hard to tell who has deep exposure to these bad loans, who has tried to make lots of money by trading them before anybody realized they weren't going to get paid back. Uncertainty is a lack of faith, and the lack of faith destroys trust. <br /><br />It's a cliché that trust is a lot easier to destroy than it is to build. When children tell us that this time they are telling the truth, and that they lie only some of the time, they are about to learn that even one lie destroys the credibility of all your other statements -- even when these other claims are true. One lie creates general uncertainty. We are seeing this everyday on Wall Street and in the banking sector. Governments are desperately trying to restore trust, but as long as there is lingering (and, I might add, reasonable) uncertainty about who is holding the bad debts they once tried to profit from, it will be impossible to have the basic trust that makes our credit systems work. <br /><br />"Trust" is also a big issue in the political world. Lately, Sarah Palin has been trying to undermine the confidence that many have developed in Barack Obama by insinuating that he has had associations with unsavory, radical characters -- terrorists even. When John McCain calls Obama naïve about foreign leaders, he is saying, "My friends, this young man is likeable enough, but he just doesn't deserve the trust you must place in the Commander in Chief." And of course, when the junior senator from Illinois fires back on McCain's singing about bombing Iran, he is saying: "Hey, you just can't trust this guy. He's too hot-headed and impetuous." <br /><br />The problem with the politics of attack that the Rovesque McCain-Palin ticket is now employing, and the problem with Obama's defense through recrimination, is that both strategies erode trust in democracy itself. People get fed up with the electoral system and become less likely to participate in it. Sure, attack ads get our attention, but once their manipulations are exposed, we feel less likely to believe anything. And, as in the case of the credit crisis, once we lose trust in the political process, it is very difficult to restore our confidence enough to care about any election at all. <br /><br />The erosion of trust in our economy and in our leaders is not exactly news. But what can we do about it? Scientists last year reported that oxytocin can retard the erosion of trust, but I don't think mass medication is a path worth exploring here (despite the jump-start it would provide the ailing pharmaceutical industry). After all, we have good reasons for losing trust. <br /><br />The cure for the erosion of trust is not medicinal; it's social. Participation builds trust. On the university campus where I work, the only ways I've seen trust successfully restored is to involve people once again in whatever activity they'd become uncertain about. From athletics to music, from lab science to poetry workshops, participation reduces uncertainty and builds faith through practice. When you begin again to seek or offer credit in secure ways, when investments can be protected, then you feel prepared to take a few new risks. When you get involved with your fellow-citizens in a political campaign or make your voice heard with your neighbors, you begin to see that democracy isn't only about attack. Democracy is about participating with people who you grow to trust by working together. <br /><br />Teachers know this. We have to earn the trust of our students everyday so that they can risk making mistakes, so that they can take the chance to open themselves to learning. That's why we encourage the participation of our students. <br /><br />Our current, acute crisis of confidence will pass. Then we must rebuild trust by participating in our economy and polity rather than just try to tear down others who are doing so.<br /><br />33and4http://www.blogger.com/profile/01852518714785564488noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1874868376438063155.post-12710788713395402622008-10-06T09:49:00.001-05:002008-10-06T09:52:15.439-05:00Battleground State BreakdownBy: Michael Fauntroy<br /><br />This is the point in a presidential election cycle when the "battleground states" -- those which are undecided and likely to be close for the rest of the contest -- begin to take shape. That's in part because of state developments including "hot" state and congressional races and controversial ballot initiatives. The hot races and ballot initiatives are critical in that they help drive voters to the polls and may have an impact on which presidential candidate wins the state. Indeed, George W. Bush did as well as he did in some states during the 2000 and 2004 presidential because of the high turnouts attributed to the use of initiatives on gay marriage. Following is a breakdown of five battleground states that Senators John McCain and Barack Obama are fighting over.<br /><br /><strong>Virginia</strong><br /><br />Virginia has 13 electoral votes and Obama has a slim lead of about two points in most polls. The race will be decided in the northern Washington, D.C. suburbs, where growth in the immigrant population, coupled with large numbers of hyper-educated government contractors and technology workers have changed the demography of the region and made the state "bluer" in recent years. There is also economic anxiety as the western D.C. suburbs are choking under the force of foreclosure rates that rival some of the worst in the country.<br /><br />The hot race is for the 11th congressional district seat being vacated by Republican Representative Tom Davis, who is retiring. Gerry Connolly, a popular Democrat, is poised to win the seat, which would represent a significant Democratic pickup. There are also two former governors - Democrat Mark Warner and Republican Jim Gilmore - seeking to succeed retiring Senator John Warner. Mark Warner's lead is north of 20 points.<br /><br />Much has been made of the "bluing" of Virginia and this election will show us just how much change has occurred in the Old Dominion. Long a conservative bastion and birthplace of the Christian Conservative Movement, the state has begun a movement toward the Democratic Party. The current governor and his predecessor, who is contesting a U.S. Senate seat this year, both supported Obama and are putting their operations to work for him. The northern suburbs of Washington, D.C. have become home to many highly educated professionals and immigrants that have not been as receptive to the GOP's message. Obama also is doing surprisingly well in the Tidewater section of the state which, with its military bases and Rev. Pat Robertson, who is based in Virginia Beach, is usually solid Republican. Virginia presents a big pickup opportunity for Obama.<br /><br /><strong>Florida</strong><br /><br />Florida is the biggest prize among states that are too close to call and Obama has a three-point lead in a state that usually goes Republican. There are two interesting races to watch, with Miami-area Representatives - Mario Diaz-Balart and Lincoln Diaz-Balart - both engaged in closer than expected contests. <br /><br />There are six ballot initiatives this year, some of which are likely to drive conservatives to the polls. The most notable of the questions is one that will define marriage as a union between a husband and wife and does not recognize civil unions. This could help McCain pull out a squeaker.<br /><br />Florida, with it's diverse mix of residents, has a history of close presidential contests. This likely will be no different. The Cuban population, which is critical in the southern part of the state, is going through a generation divide here with younger voters showing signs of breaking for Obama, the Democrat. Cubans have historically been loyal to the GOP.<br /><br /><strong>Ohio</strong><br /><br />Ohio, a perennial swing state, has 20 electoral votes and Obama is clinging to a two-point lead. He will likely benefit from high turnout in the race to succeed retiring Republican Representative Deborah Pryce. She barely beat Democrat Mary Jo Kilroy, who is back to take on Republican nominee Steve Stivers.<br /><br />A ballot initiative on casino gaming in Wilmington, with statewide proceed distribution, could possibly help boost conservative turnout. However, there aren't any exceptionally controversial ballot initiatives this year and, given the drubbing the GOP took in 2006, there isn't much of a Republican turnout infrastructure, so GOP turnout could be a problem.<br /><br /><strong>Missouri</strong><br /><br />The "Show Me" state has 11 electoral votes and McCain has a two-point lead in most polls. There is a hot House race featuring the former mayor of Kansas City trying to unseat a Republican incumbent. There is a big ballot initiative that could spur Republican turnout - a constitutional change that would make English the official state language. Obama barely squeaked by Hilary Clinton in the primary and Black turnout will be critical for him. If Black voters show up in unusually high numbers, then Obama likely will win.<br /><br /><strong>Colorado</strong><br /><br />Colorado's nine electoral votes may be decisive this year and Obama holds a four-point lead. Current Representative Mark Udall and former Representative Bob Schaffer are vying to succeed Senator Wayne Allard, who is retiring; Udall has a mid-single digit lead in most polls.<br /><br />Colorado leads the nation with 18 ballot initiatives, some of which seem designed to bring Republicans to the polls including, abortion, anti-affirmative action, campaign finance reform, and a prohibition on mandatory labor union membership and dues.<br /><br />Look for the Latino/Latina vote to play a big role here, as the proportion of voters in this bloc has increased tremendously over the years. The Republican Party, through it's immigration stance, has really been damaged among these voters, which complicates McCain's task. His western roots, coupled with a high conservative turnout may be enough to bring him across the line.<br /><br /><br /><br />33and4http://www.blogger.com/profile/01852518714785564488noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1874868376438063155.post-10341635489185007572008-10-06T08:49:00.003-05:002008-10-06T09:53:23.917-05:00Gentleman Jesse & His Men - Gentleman Jesse & His Men<a href="http://rapidshare.com/files/130526093/Dzesi.rar"><img style="display:block; margin:0px auto 10px; text-align:center;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhA7v2zLeb_w2XBhYUrFuwO2EdOigOLDCIZKl0AtZhwa4Lq1aZIFwxrnaNMeCA7YSx2YDViBdLPqvJWtWwU7_d66asXc8Q-tVNkg5CsEDfe2F9Z_0FAQp_z6QoR99ZaJL3WAcvM8Xvxc5gX/s400/gj.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5254042765452874866" /></a><br /><br />click cover to download<br /><br />ridiculously great garage pop band <br /><br /><br /><br />1. Highland Crawler <br />2. Black Hole <br />3. All I Need Tonight (Is You) <br />4. The Rest Of My Days <br />5. Attention <br />6. Butterfingers <br />7. You Don't Have To (If You Don't Want To) <br />8. I Get So Excited <br />9. Sidewalks <br />10. You Got Me Where You Want Me <br />11. Wrong Time <br />12. If I Can See You (You're Too Close To Me) <br />13. Put Your Hands Together <br /><br /><br /><br />enjoy 33and4http://www.blogger.com/profile/01852518714785564488noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1874868376438063155.post-21820085322222603962008-10-06T08:42:00.004-05:002008-10-06T08:49:19.667-05:00Vivian Girls - Vivian Girls<a href="http://www.megaupload.com/?d=MDCFWOXG"><img style="display:block; margin:0px auto 10px; text-align:center;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjafJJlXVwyMxbXMqXzBJfJGQZenxprZ3NOipKc424HD8LNSJFI2klWmCZIPhsq1vTEqFnlWEHfhdeNTmtygpH7A9NHzN_r3QIQ2NOgOgn60gKFdSE59R9ZQeMjRtQS75y07CtOLmkfb2tS/s400/VG.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5254036022301527986" /></a><br /><br />22 minutes of punky noisy 60s girl group goodness <br /><br />click cover to download<br /><br />1. All the Time <br />2. Such a Joke <br />3. Wild Eyes <br />4. Going Insane <br />5. Tell the World <br />6. Where Do You Run To <br />7. Damaged <br />8. No <br />9. Never See Me Again <br />10. I Believe in Nothing <br /><br /><br /><br /><br />Enjoy 33and4http://www.blogger.com/profile/01852518714785564488noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1874868376438063155.post-67315320376229725862008-09-30T07:58:00.003-05:002008-09-30T08:17:41.832-05:00Deerhoof - Offend MaggieSounds like Yoko Ono fronting a tonally perfect art rock band!!!<br /><br /><br /><a href="http://rapidshare.com/files/148216753/05_-_Offend_Maggie.mp3<br />"><img style="display:block; margin:0px auto 10px; text-align:center;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiHGVspKnpAZf6kzQ1MkB18-AHL8Zzb3WDttddN5Cak86qgU1KiqdK31OuysJySSNToGR2nPxbFPiL2S4eX0iclvdgrFI0zX4jA_t6LCL5PWcSZgELLkE87jtTLl1bTy6jURWDoAkins4_X/s400/dh.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5251798199377858914" /></a><br /><br /><br />click cover to download<br /><br />1. The Tears and Music of Love <br />2. Chandelier Searchlight <br />3. Buck and Judy <br />4. Snoopy Waves <br />5. Offend Maggie <br />6. Basket Ball Get Your Groove Back <br />7. Don't Get Born <br />8. My Purple Past <br />9. Family of Others <br />10. Fresh Born <br />11. Eaguro Guro <br />12. This Is God Speaking <br />13. Numina o <br />14. Jagged Fruit <br /><br /><br /><br />enjoy 33and4http://www.blogger.com/profile/01852518714785564488noreply@blogger.com0