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Sun 05 September, 2010

00:20 Marco Rubio's father dies at age 83 » The Buzz: Florida Politics

Mario Rubio who fled Cuba to bring his family to America, has died at age 83. His son, Marco, ascended in Florida politics to become the first Cuban-American speaker of the House and is now a leading candidate for U.S....

Sat 04 September, 2010

23:52 Rubio’s father dies » March On Politics

Mario Rubio, father of Republican U.S. Senate candidate Marco Rubio, has died at age 83 of lung cancer and emphysema.

Marco Rubio’s campaign said his political activities “will be placed on temporary hold,” and the campaign “will resume our full schedule some time in the coming days.”

Rubio, a…


23:30 Marco Rubio’s Father Passed Away » Florida Progressive Coalition Blog

Our condolences go out to the family. No matter how much we disagree with Rubio’s policies and politics, we would never wish ill will towards him or his family. Details here. Kendrick Meek’s statement.

23:18 Television - Ain't That Nothin' » Pushing Rope



The band that made great guitar playing cool in punk rock. Television paved the way for Sonic Youth and Dinosaur Jr.

23:18 Ethics Complaint Against David Rivera » Pushing Rope

It is bad when The Corner is making a check list of scandals surrounding David Rivera. National Review contributor urged Republicans to back Rivera's primary challenger Paul Crespo. Ouch.

Things are not getting better for Rivera. William Barzee has filed an ethics complaint against Rivera.


WILLIAM R. BARZEE, ATTORNEY AT LAW

FORMER SUPPORTER AND DONOR FILES FEC COMPLAINT AGAINST DAVID RIVERA

I would like to inform you that I have filed a complaint with the Federal Elections Commission regarding David Rivera’s apparent violations of federal election laws. As a former supporter and donor to David Rivera, I am saddened and surprised by what I see as a disregard for the rules and laws that govern our elections.

I have filed this complaint as a private citizen based upon a good faith belief that federal candidate David Rivera and the 527 Committee “Voters Response” have violated federal campaign finance laws in at least two ways. First, by coordinating with a 527 committee to attack candidate Joe Garcia and second, by avoiding campaign contribution limits by off-setting campaign expenses through the 527.

Sarah Bascom of Bascom Communications has been acting as spokesperson for the Rivera campaign. Rivera campaign finance reports however show no payment for her services. The 527 “Voters Response” on the other hand has been paid by Bascom Communications for its services. “Voters Response” is the 527 committee that has launched repeated unfair attacks against Joe Garcia.

Enough is enough.

527 committees were not created to launch attacks on behalf of a candidate’s campaign, nor were they created as a way to avoid campaign contribution limits.

I call on David Rivera to end the nasty political attacks and to stop abusing our campaign finance laws.

William R. Barzee


Barzee is accusing Rivera of coordinating with a 527 group. That is illegal under federal law.

Ethics complaints never go anywhere in Florida politics. So don't expect much to come from this. However, an ethics complain isn't exactly something Rivera wants to brag about on a campaign mailer. David Ramba of Voters Response said the attack attack ads against Democrat Joe Garcia have nothing to do with Rivera. Riiight.


``The stuff I did against Joe Garcia had nothing to do with David Rivera,'' said Ramba, a Tallahassee lawyer who has donated $2,400 to Rivera's campaign.


Where this gets fishy is Voter Response made a payments totaling $3,000 to Bascom Communications & Consulting. Rivera uses Bascom Communications & Consulting for his campaign. Sarah Bascom said her firm is not involved with Voter Response. Bascom better check her financial records before making that statement.

22:27 How Long Till Jose Diaz Will Answer Questions Important to Voters of District 115? » Florida Progressive Coalition Blog

Find out more, here.

22:14 Contribute to Michele Bachmann In What Language » Pushing Rope



The Michele Bachmann campaign web site has a contribute page written in Lorem Ipsum. Translation: dummy text to give an idea to the customer what a print or web page will look like. The Bachmann campaign posted the sample without ever changing the text.

Hat tip to GottaLaff for this hysterical find. If Bachmann wanted to show that people in government are incompetent then mission accomplished.

22:01 Gusher Up-Date » Why Now?

The Associated Press is reporting that the Failed blowout preventer on BP oil well reaches the surface. They finally got it aboard at about 7PM CDT after almost 30 hours. The FBI was waiting on the vessel and will escort the BOP to a NASA facility for examination. McClatchy reports that Up to 90% [...]

21:12 Missouri's New Anti-Abortion Law » Pushing Rope

Republicans in the Florida legislature attempted to urge women who were going to have an abortion to view an ultrasound. The bill was vetoed by Gov. Charlie Crist. Missouri is going one step further by forcing women to read


"The life of each human being begins at conception. Abortion will terminate the life of a separate, unique, living human being." This statement will be prominently featured on state mandated literature doctors are now required to distribute to women considering abortions – regardless of the doctor, patient, or medical organization’s philosophy or beliefs.


So much for the religious freedom Republicans say they love.

It is required law for women to read this material before getting an abortion. It serves no medical purpose whatsoever. The goal of Republicans and social conservatives is to make the woman feel like shit and decide not to have an abortion. If a woman doesn't want to have an abortion then that is her choice. Forcing to read Christian Right propaganda is absolutely unnecessary. Christian conservatives that say otherwise would freak out if mothers to be were given pro-choice material in the delivery room.

19:21 Sets » Why Now?

Keith at the Invisible Library wrote a post, Either Or, about the “game” that Jon Stewart started usually called “Evil or Stupid”. Keith points out that the sets are not exclusive and there are certainly some people who are both evil and stupid. I favor “ignorant” over “stupid” because “stupid” implies that they incapable of [...]

19:06 Rick Scott Wants to Abolish Medicare & VA » Pushing Rope

Politifact rates Rick Scott's claim that Alex Sink wants to cut Medicare false. As I noted, Sink as Governor would not have the executive power to cut Medicare. Sink made the same point herself.


"That's how he's setting it up. He'll be calling me names for the next nine weeks," she told reporters. "I don't even know where he got that from. Of course I don't want to cut Medicare ….. It's a federal issue."


Medicare is a federal program. The governor of Florida does not have the power to cut a national program.

As CEO of Columbia/HCA, Scott advocated abolishing Medicare and Medicaid. Scott wanted all health care to be privatized. Which would also financially help companies such as Columbia/HCA. The poor and uninsured would be left at the mercy of private health care providers.

"Let us make a profit. So what?" Scott told USA Today in 1994.

The guy is all heart.

Scott also wanted to abolish the Veterans Administration.


"If you look at how the government runs VA hospitals and Medicare and Medicaid, you can see that the whole system is inefficient," Scott told the South Florida Business Journal the same year. "The things we are doing wrong in health care can be corrected if private business could run national health care administration."


Rachel Mayo of the Healthcare Information and Management Systems Society found that the VA provides "the best value in health care."


Another key to the VHA’s turnaround was its close tracking of performance measurements. Providing higher quality care was a major focus for the system as changes were implemented. This started with a reengineering effort beginning in 1995, which was focused on making quality management more systematic. The VHA began with a determined effort to create a product that had the best value in the market. Management defined several quality dimensions to focus on during reengineering:

• Personnel/human resources – hire and keep the top prospects available
• Clinical care activities – perform the clinical activities which are necessary for good health
• Performance indicators – establish and keep track of important indicators
• Internal review and improvement – involve all groups across organization in improvement
• External review and oversight – get an outside opinion of progress


Scott's companies Columbia/HCA and Solantic have been accused of Medicare fraud. Scott has forfeited his right to be taken seriously as a voice on health care issues. The fact that Scott is accusing Sink of cutting the same Medicare system he wishes to destroy is laughable.

18:57 More Misery In New Zealand » Why Now?

As if the destruction caused by the earthquake wasn’t enough, people fled from houses and apartments in their nightclothes in the winter, and now Gale force winds head for Christchurch. The storm will probably knock down some of the damaged buildings and the associated rain will destroyed things that might have been salvaged if there was [...]

17:19 Let’s Start A Kerfuffle » Why Now?

You would think that the media has enough to report on without starting fights over nothing, but they just can’t resist. Professor Stephen William Hawking, CH, CBE, FRS, FRSA has a new book coming out, The Grand Design, which will be released on September 7, 2010. Like many books today, the publishers have sent out review copies [...]

17:00 Rachel Maddow on Rick Scott » Pushing Rope



Richel Maddow gives background on Rick Scott's past of $1.7 billion of Medicare fraud and being against health care reform.

17:00 Florida Hometown Democracy Interview » Pushing Rope

Florida Hometown Democracy founder Leslie Blackner and campaign’s communications director Wayne Garcia talk to WMNF about Amendment 4. The amendment will allow Florida voters to vote on land use changes. Garcia explains, if approved, the amendment will allow voters to decide on major projects. Voters will not have to go to the ballot to decide if a traffic light or a bus stop. You can listen to the interview on WMNF. Click the audio link at the top of the page.

17:00 Rock Paper What? » Bark Bark Woof Woof


15:56 Kendrick Meek Death Watch: the Media Narrative » Pushing Rope



The media is now portraying the Florida U.S. Senate general election as a two man race between Charlie Crist and Marco Rubio. Crist released an internal poll showing Kendrick running a distant third behind Crist and Rubio. Alison Morano explains to a reporter that people should not pay any attention to the Crist internal polling numbers by Frederick Polls. Normally, I would agree. However, the Frederick Polls numbers match other polls.

Frederick Polls

Charlie Crist 35%
Marco Rubio 34%
Kendrick Meek 17%
Undecided 14%

National poll numbers averaged out by TPM Poll Tracker



The endorsement by Florida State Sen. Al Lawson doesn't help matters for Team Meek.



As the race continues the media will focus on Crist and Rubio. Meek will become the also ran candidate. Team Meek staffers can keep telling people their candidate will soon catch on fire. It is a narrative by Team Meek that is getting rather old. Team Meek is the political equivalent of all talk and no action.

Update: the Miami Herald runs a story the possibility of Meek supporters turning to Crist to keep Runio from winning. Beth Reinhard cites Democrats nominating Bill McBride as an example of why backing Crist is bad strategy.


The Anyone-But-Rubio logic recalls what Democrats said about Janet Reno in 2002. She can't win, they said. No way this controversial former U.S. attorney general with Parkinson's disease can beat Gov. Jeb Bush. So they nominated a little-known, politically unseasoned Tampa lawyer named Bill McBride -- and he got trounced.

The so-and-so-can't-win logic becomes a self-fulfilling prophecy.


The Crist/McBride comparison is faulty. Crist has name recognition, won state races and has more money than Meek or Rubio. The more likely scenario is Crist and Meek splitting the Democratic base and providing Rubio with an easier path to victory.

The Beth Reinhard article continues the trend of the media openly wondering if Meek can win. Team Meek can spin things all they want but until the polls show they are in the lead the narrative will continue.

15:34 Jan Brewer-Governor of Arizona-Just Wow » Deep Something

OK, so things are a little crazy in Arizona lately. I know they're so concerned about the hordes of illegal aliens running over the boarder and destroying our economy (which the good bankers on Wall Street spent so much time creating for us), that they have to a pass a law that flies in the face of the Constitution. But I think opening statement in a recent gubanatorial debate for Arizona Governor explains a lot. It doesn't get much freakier than this. I thought it might be a Saturday Night Live skit at first. As the title says, "Just Wow!"

15:33 Poll: Nearly Three-Quarters Say Bush Recession Is Bush’s Fault » Pensito Review

71 percent

- Portion of Americans who say the Bush Recession was caused by George Bush, according to a new USA Today/Gallup poll. Republicans say recession is Obama's fault four to one. Democrats blamed Bush 20 to one.


15:01 As midterms near, Obama on shaky ground » The Buzz: Florida Politics

The weekend in Florida was conceived to soothe one distraction — the gulf oil disaster — but only intensified another. "I was not commenting, and I will not comment, on the wisdom of making the decision to put a mosque...

14:25 Why is the Deficit Reduction Commission so Focused on Scoial Security? » Political Bloviation

In defense of Alan Simpson – Glenn Greenwald – Salon.com. Glenn posits that Chairman Simpson’s belligerence helps pull down a veil of secrecy around the deficit reduction commission  : That’s why Commission co-chair Alan Simpson — with his blunt contempt for Social Security and and other benefit programs (such as aid to disabled veterans) and [...]

14:21 Bill Clinton raising money for Meek, again » The Buzz: Florida Politics

Bill Clinton will headline a fundraiser Tuesday night in NYC for Kendrick Meek. It's being hosted by Sant Singh Chatwal, a major Democratic donor, and is expected to a be a "six figure event," our source says. Clinton has held...

13:50 Good Match: Scott's Running Mate Has Ethics Problems Too » The Seminole Democrat

No, Jennifer Carroll didn't defruad Medicare recipients, swindle taxpayers, or sit on a board of directors at a company that Iran and Saudi Arabia used to suppress the internet like her running mate, Rick Scott. She's not THAT bad. But she was busted with a fake degree from a diploma mill, which is a crime in several states. Of course, not Florida.Match made in teabagger heaven.

12:22 CEOs Who Fired Most Americans Earn 42% More Than Average » Pensito Review

$12 Million

- Average amount earned by CEOs at the 50 companies responsible for most layoffs, an amount that is 42 percent higher than the average for the Standard & Poor 500.


11:06 Gingrich Proposes Govt Seize Ground Zero to Stop ‘Mosque’ – But Govt Already Owns WTC, Which Does Not Include Park 51 Site » Pensito Review

he attention span of American voters is famously short, and today it appears that a majority of independent voters are ready to vote Republicans back into power, apparently having already forgotten how Republicans’ vaunted conservative principles evaporate the minute they gain power. And buoyed by Democrats’ bad polling, Republicans are not only measuring the drapes [...]

10:44 Google Analytics Opt-out Browser Add-on » Discourse.net

Google Analytics Opt-out Browser Add-on (BETA) To provide website visitors with more choice about how their data is collected by Google Analytics, we have developed the Google Analytics Opt-out Browser Add-on. The add-on communicates with the Google Analytics JavaScript (ga.js) to indicate that information about the website visit should not be sent to Google Analytics. If you want to opt out, download and install the add-on for your current web browser. The Google Analytics Opt-out Browser Add-on is available for Internet Explorer (versions 7 and 8), Google Chrome (4.x and higher), and Mozilla Firefox (3.5 and higher)....

09:38 "Anyone But Rubio" » Florida Politics

Meet Jennifer Carroll, the phony "outsider" with a fake degree.


"Anyone But Rubio"

"Remember the saying 'Anyone But Bush' among Democrats in 2004 who feared a second term by George W. Bush?"

Florida Democrats are slinging a variation on the slogan for 2010: "Anyone But Rubio.''

To liberal voters, Republican Senate candidate Marco Rubio is a right-winging, tea-partying, oil-drilling, stimulus-hating, Obamacare-shunning, taxes-on-the-rich-cutting nightmare. And these Democrats are determined to stop him from winning on Nov. 2 by any means necessary, even if that means bailing on their own party's nominee, Kendrick Meek.

A vote for Meek is a vote for Rubio, the thinking goes, because Meek can't win. He's a lackluster Miami congressman lacking money, profile and oomph.

The strategic choice, the thinking continues, is Gov. Charlie Crist. The Republican-turned-independent has nearly twice as much money as Rubio and a statewide platform, not to mention that he knows how to campaign like the dickens.
"Many Democrats more anti-Rubio than pro-anyone".


Scott gets lobbyist love

"Republican Rick Scott did some political barnstorming through the state capital Friday -- holding a series of closed-door meetings with groups of lobbyists and association officials."

"I think he hit all the right buttons,'' said Associated Industries of Florida President Barney Bishop, who hosted a Scott breakfast meeting that drew about three-dozen people, including representatives of the oil, health care, broadcasting and outdoor advertising industries.
"Republican foes, lobbyists now flock to Scott".


Charlie Misspeak

"When a television interviewer asked Gov. Charlie Crist about the national health care reform bill last week, Crist responded quickly, 'I would have voted for it, but I think it can be done better.' He went on to elaborate fluently on what was right and wrong with the bill, what he would have fixed before supporting it. There was only one problem. For months, starting the day the bill passed, Crist had repeatedly said he opposed it and would repeal it, and had backed a state lawsuit to overturn it."

"Misspeaking -- saying one thing when you actually think or mean another -- can happen to anyone, even a practiced public speaker and political figure. But with Crist, it seems to happen often:"

• In the best-known example, Crist told a television interviewer in November that he didn't endorse President Barack Obama's stimulus plan. In fact, he had repeatedly and enthusiastically backed it, including during a highly publicized Florida visit by Obama in the previous February.

• Two days after the health care comment, his campaign had to send out another clarification after Crist told a CNN interviewer he favored a constitutional ban on same-sex marriage, which he has opposed in the past. The clarification: He was talking about a state ban, which he has supported – even though that ban endangers the right to same-sex civil unions, which Crist says he favors.

• Two days after the health care bill comments, Crist told another television interviewer his campaign will refund contributions from disillusioned Republicans who gave to him before he left the party – contradicting his previously announced decision on the subject.
"Charlie Crist has had episodes of 'misspeaking' before".


Rivera and Garcia on the economy

"In the aftermath of the primary elections, District 25 congressional candidates David Rivera and Joe Garcia said the economy and unemployment are the main issues in a race attracting national attention."

Another key issue: a proposed Free Trade Agreement with Colombia that could generate business and jobs in South Florida.

But besides the Colombian issue, the candidates have different ideas about how to improve the economy.

Republican Rivera wants to reduce federal spending and taxes on small businesses, while Garcia, the Democratic candidate, wants to give loans to small businesses and invest in alternative energy.

Both candidates are after the seat left vacant by Republican Mario Diaz-Balart, who represented the district for eight years and is now running unopposed for his brother's old seat in District 21.
"Congressional District 25 candidates differ on how to fix economy".


RPOFers asleep at the wheel

The Orlando Sentinel editorial board: "Remember the nation's worst offshore drilling spill? The one that finally ended in July? You might want to remind the Republicans who run Florida's House of Representatives. They decided this week that they don't need to do anything about it until the spring." "Florida can't leave Gulf oil spill relief to Washington".


Slamming public employees

"Imposed salary, pension cuts leads to police union suit against Miami".


Scott surrogates to begin attacks on Sink

"Starting today, national political groups as well as surrogates for Republican nominee Rick Scott will begin pumping millions of dollars into television ads to paint contrasting portraits of Sink's background and policies before voters go to the polls."

Political veterans from both parties say the blitz of negative ads Scott absorbed in his primary make him damaged goods, and he may not have enough time to re-invent himself before the Nov. 2 election.

So, the alternative is to pour money into trying to define Sink, a former banking executive, as a liberal ideological disciple of President Barack Obama's health-care and economic-stimulus plans.

Palm Beach County Republican Chairman Sid Dinerstein said Sink's role in the merger between Bank of America and NationsBank that led to thousands of layoffs would be fair game, too.

"It's not like this race is Mother Teresa versus the devil," he said.

This week, Scott called Sink a supporter of "the socialist policies of President Obama."

But Sink suggested Scott must be confusing which race he is running.
"Democrats say they expected the assault, but Scott and Florida Republicans will have to mount an epic financial arms race to overcome the baggage of Scott's business background."
"There are a lot of voters that know a lot about the fraud his company committed. They believe he committed fraud. But they know him better than they know Alex, and that's because of the unprecedented amount of money he's spent," Sink pollster Dave Beattie said. "There's a reason he had to spend a record amount of money to barely win his primary."
"GOP ads take aim at Sink".


"Scott wanted to privatize all of it"

Aaron Deslatte: "Republican gubernatorial nominee Rick Scott could have to do some explaining about his past this fall, and not just what he knew about the Medicare and Medicaid fraud at his former company, Columbia/HCA."

See, he once wanted to privatize all of it: the government-funded health-care programs that pay for the check-ups, hospital stays and prescriptions for 45 million seniors and millions more poor people.

Before he was forced out in 1997 as CEO of the company amid the largest Medicare fraud investigation in U.S. history, Scott was a national player in the industry resistance to President Clinton's attempt to impose a national health care program. When Scott was still trying to expand his hospital chain, he told USA Today the state and federally run health insurance programs would be better off in the hands of profit-seeking companies. "Let us make a profit. So what?" he said in 1994.

He also had his eyes on Veterans Administration hospitals.
"The issue is relevant now because Scott"
has said he wants to cut $1.4 billion from the $18-billion Medicaid program without providing any specifics on how, other than continuing a regional experiment launched by former Gov. Jeb Bush to turn over Medicaid patients to HMOs and other health-care networks.

Scott opened the door further last week by calling Democratic opponent Alex Sink "another liberal Obamacrat who wants to raise taxes, cut Medicare, and supports Obama's failed stimulus."
"Scott once urged privatization of Medicare, Medicaid".


Voucher madness

"Florida does not regulate the more than 2,000 private schools that operate in the state. The schools set their own grading standards and curriculum, run their own finances and issue their own diplomas. That leaves parents dependent on unregulated accrediting agencies that have varying standards." "In Florida, scant oversight of private schools".


They all end up in Florida

"Balloon boy family moves to Florida".


Scott's free ride

"Now that he's mending fences with Florida's Republican establishment, gubernatorial nominee Rick Scott faces a full frontal assault from Democrats."

Democratic Governors Association executive director Nathan Daschle says Scott "represents the worst of American politics" and, in a letter this week, the DGA chief called on Republican Governors Association chairman Haley Barbour to stop campaigning for Scott.

Barbour, the governor of Mississippi, has participated in post-primary unity events around Florida and was scheduled to speak at the state party's meeting in Orlando Friday night.

Daschle sent copies of his letter to former Gov. Jeb Bush, RPOF Chairman John Thrasher and presidential aspirants Newt Gingrich, Mike Huckabee and Mitt Romney.

The RGA this week pitched in $2 million to the Republican governor's race to bolster the state party's sagging coffers. The association previously plunked down $2 million to fund ads against Democratic nominee Alex Sink.

Firing back, the DGA funneled $1 million into its party's gubernatorial race. That's on top of a $1 million check the DGA sent in July, said DGA spokeswoman Emily Bittner.
"National Parties Raise Stakes on Scott-Sink Race".


'Glades

"The cash-strapped South Florida Water Management District has 10 years to build at least 42,000 acres of treatment areas so that water flowing into the Everglades meets federal standards." "Under judge's order, EPA proposes rules for Everglades water cleansing".


"A five-second check"

"A Florida bill would require all employers to use a federal website to run a five-second check on the immigration status of new workers." "Federal website aims to crackdown on illegal hires".


From the "Crystal Ball"

Sabato calls the Florida Gubernatorial race a "toss-up" "Sixty Days to Go".


Chamberlin out

Lucy Morgan: "It’s a departure that has much more significance than a mere change in governors. Jill Chamberlin is retiring as director of communications for the Florida House, taking her practical advice and deep knowledge of government and its people with her." "Little known, but with a big impact".


Rubio cancels debate with Meek

"Marco Rubio postponed Sunday's nationally televised U.S. Senate debate with Kendrick Meek to be with his ailing father." "Marco Rubio's father's health deteriorates; 'Meet the Press' debate postponed". See also "Sunday's live televised debate between Rubio and Meek on 'Meet The Press' scrubbed" and "NBC cancels Sunday's Rubio-Meek debate".


"Florida is little more than shifting sand"

Steve Otto: "Remember Charlie Crist? Yeah, the guy who used to be the governor of Florida before deciding to ride off on his half-donkey, half-Republican beast to tilt the windmills of the United States Senate."

A lot of people wondered just where Crist was going to get the money to finance his senatorial campaign once he abandoned his Republican Party base. Kendrick Meek has demonstrated he is a viable candidate for the Democrats and Marco Rubio is on a roll for the Republicans.

On Wednesday, we learned Crist will get a financial boost on Oct. 7 when millionaire Marc Bell hosts a fundraiser at his Boca Raton place.

Bell is involved in many businesses but naturally the one drawing attention is his role as CEO of Penthouse magazine, as well as an adult meeting service.

That wouldn't be such a big deal considering the level and character of Florida politics. A little sex in a dying campaign can't hurt.

The problem: a Palm Beach Post article recalled the election of 2006. In that Republican primary, it was Tom Gallagher who accepted a $3,000 donation from Bell and was criticized by the Crist campaign. Gallagher later returned the donation.

Maybe there's a reason Florida is little more than shifting sand. It seems to fit those who would represent it.
"Spicing up the Senate campaign".


Is Bondi stable?

"Before she became the Republican nominee for Florida attorney general, Pam Bondi was a familiar face as a legal analyst on CNN and the Fox News Channel."

But Bondi may be best known for a custody battle over a St. Bernard.

Her 16-month fight with the Louisiana family that lost the dog after Hurricane Katrina played out on CNN, Fox News and the pages of People magazine. Then a Hillsborough prosecutor, she accused the family of neglecting the dog. Steve and Dorreen Couture and their two grandchildren wanted their dog back and resented Bondi for keeping him.

Both sides settled the case just before it went to trial. The terms were confidential, but reports at the time said Bondi offered to provide the St. Bernard with food and medication for life and to visit occasionally. The Coutures said they would keep in touch and send photos.

It seemed like an amicable ending. But three years later, the Coutures have little good to say about their former foe. Moreover, they say, she never kept her promise.
"Dog battle leaves hard feelings".


What's wrong with Hillsborough?

The Saint Petersburg Times editorial board: "Jim Norman wants to rise higher in public life this year by moving from the Hillsborough County Commission to the state Senate. Yet he refuses to answer how his wife managed to buy a second home with $435,000 in cash. The FBI is reportedly investigating. The only one not working to clear the air is the commissioner and future senator." "The $435,000 question".


Good question

"Crist late Friday ordered a review of a French company competing to build a high-speed rail line in Florida, saying he was concerned about questions over the company's role in the Holocaust." "Gov. Crist asks for review of French rail company, citing 'Holocaust' concerns".


09:02 Florida Political News: Sept. 4, 2010 » FLA Politics - Front Page

Meet Jennifer Carroll, the phony "outsider" with a fake degree. Our digest of, and commentary on today's Florida political news and punditry follows.


"Anyone But Rubio"

"Remember the saying 'Anyone But Bush' among Democrats in 2004 who feared a second term by George W. Bush?"

Florida Democrats are slinging a variation on the slogan for 2010: "Anyone But Rubio.''

To liberal voters, Republican Senate candidate Marco Rubio is a right-winging, tea-partying, oil-drilling, stimulus-hating, Obamacare-shunning, taxes-on-the-rich-cutting nightmare. And these Democrats are determined to stop him from winning on Nov. 2 by any means necessary, even if that means bailing on their own party's nominee, Kendrick Meek.

A vote for Meek is a vote for Rubio, the thinking goes, because Meek can't win. He's a lackluster Miami congressman lacking money, profile and oomph.

The strategic choice, the thinking continues, is Gov. Charlie Crist. The Republican-turned-independent has nearly twice as much money as Rubio and a statewide platform, not to mention that he knows how to campaign like the dickens.
"Many Democrats more anti-Rubio than pro-anyone".

 

Scott gets lobbyist love

"Republican Rick Scott did some political barnstorming through the state capital Friday -- holding a series of closed-door meetings with groups of lobbyists and association officials."

"I think he hit all the right buttons,'' said Associated Industries of Florida President Barney Bishop, who hosted a Scott breakfast meeting that drew about three-dozen people, including representatives of the oil, health care, broadcasting and outdoor advertising industries.
"Republican foes, lobbyists now flock to Scott".

 

Charlie Misspeak

"When a television interviewer asked Gov. Charlie Crist about the national health care reform bill last week, Crist responded quickly, 'I would have voted for it, but I think it can be done better.' He went on to elaborate fluently on what was right and wrong with the bill, what he would have fixed before supporting it. There was only one problem. For months, starting the day the bill passed, Crist had repeatedly said he opposed it and would repeal it, and had backed a state lawsuit to overturn it."

"Misspeaking -- saying one thing when you actually think or mean another -- can happen to anyone, even a practiced public speaker and political figure. But with Crist, it seems to happen often:"

• In the best-known example, Crist told a television interviewer in November that he didn't endorse President Barack Obama's stimulus plan. In fact, he had repeatedly and enthusiastically backed it, including during a highly publicized Florida visit by Obama in the previous February.

• Two days after the health care comment, his campaign had to send out another clarification after Crist told a CNN interviewer he favored a constitutional ban on same-sex marriage, which he has opposed in the past. The clarification: He was talking about a state ban, which he has supported – even though that ban endangers the right to same-sex civil unions, which Crist says he favors.

• Two days after the health care bill comments, Crist told another television interviewer his campaign will refund contributions from disillusioned Republicans who gave to him before he left the party – contradicting his previously announced decision on the subject.
"Charlie Crist has had episodes of 'misspeaking' before".

 

Rivera and Garcia on the economy

"In the aftermath of the primary elections, District 25 congressional candidates David Rivera and Joe Garcia said the economy and unemployment are the main issues in a race attracting national attention."

Another key issue: a proposed Free Trade Agreement with Colombia that could generate business and jobs in South Florida.

But besides the Colombian issue, the candidates have different ideas about how to improve the economy.

Republican Rivera wants to reduce federal spending and taxes on small businesses, while Garcia, the Democratic candidate, wants to give loans to small businesses and invest in alternative energy.

Both candidates are after the seat left vacant by Republican Mario Diaz-Balart, who represented the district for eight years and is now running unopposed for his brother's old seat in District 21.
"Congressional District 25 candidates differ on how to fix economy".

 

RPOFers asleep at the wheel

The Orlando Sentinel editorial board: "Remember the nation's worst offshore drilling spill? The one that finally ended in July? You might want to remind the Republicans who run Florida's House of Representatives. They decided this week that they don't need to do anything about it until the spring." "Florida can't leave Gulf oil spill relief to Washington".

 

Slamming public employees

"Imposed salary, pension cuts leads to police union suit against Miami".

 

Scott surrogates to begin attacks on Sink

"Starting today, national political groups as well as surrogates for Republican nominee Rick Scott will begin pumping millions of dollars into television ads to paint contrasting portraits of Sink's background and policies before voters go to the polls."

Political veterans from both parties say the blitz of negative ads Scott absorbed in his primary make him damaged goods, and he may not have enough time to re-invent himself before the Nov. 2 election.

So, the alternative is to pour money into trying to define Sink, a former banking executive, as a liberal ideological disciple of President Barack Obama's health-care and economic-stimulus plans.

Palm Beach County Republican Chairman Sid Dinerstein said Sink's role in the merger between Bank of America and NationsBank that led to thousands of layoffs would be fair game, too.

"It's not like this race is Mother Teresa versus the devil," he said.

This week, Scott called Sink a supporter of "the socialist policies of President Obama."

But Sink suggested Scott must be confusing which race he is running.
"Democrats say they expected the assault, but Scott and Florida Republicans will have to mount an epic financial arms race to overcome the baggage of Scott's business background."
"There are a lot of voters that know a lot about the fraud his company committed. They believe he committed fraud. But they know him better than they know Alex, and that's because of the unprecedented amount of money he's spent," Sink pollster Dave Beattie said. "There's a reason he had to spend a record amount of money to barely win his primary."
"GOP ads take aim at Sink".

 

"Scott wanted to privatize all of it"

Aaron Deslatte: "Republican gubernatorial nominee Rick Scott could have to do some explaining about his past this fall, and not just what he knew about the Medicare and Medicaid fraud at his former company, Columbia/HCA."

See, he once wanted to privatize all of it: the government-funded health-care programs that pay for the check-ups, hospital stays and prescriptions for 45 million seniors and millions more poor people.

Before he was forced out in 1997 as CEO of the company amid the largest Medicare fraud investigation in U.S. history, Scott was a national player in the industry resistance to President Clinton's attempt to impose a national health care program. When Scott was still trying to expand his hospital chain, he told USA Today the state and federally run health insurance programs would be better off in the hands of profit-seeking companies. "Let us make a profit. So what?" he said in 1994.

He also had his eyes on Veterans Administration hospitals.
"The issue is relevant now because Scott"
has said he wants to cut $1.4 billion from the $18-billion Medicaid program without providing any specifics on how, other than continuing a regional experiment launched by former Gov. Jeb Bush to turn over Medicaid patients to HMOs and other health-care networks.

Scott opened the door further last week by calling Democratic opponent Alex Sink "another liberal Obamacrat who wants to raise taxes, cut Medicare, and supports Obama's failed stimulus."
"Scott once urged privatization of Medicare, Medicaid".

 

Voucher madness

"Florida does not regulate the more than 2,000 private schools that operate in the state. The schools set their own grading standards and curriculum, run their own finances and issue their own diplomas. That leaves parents dependent on unregulated accrediting agencies that have varying standards." "In Florida, scant oversight of private schools".

 

They all end up in Florida

"Balloon boy family moves to Florida".

 

Scott's free ride

"Now that he's mending fences with Florida's Republican establishment, gubernatorial nominee Rick Scott faces a full frontal assault from Democrats."

Democratic Governors Association executive director Nathan Daschle says Scott "represents the worst of American politics" and, in a letter this week, the DGA chief called on Republican Governors Association chairman Haley Barbour to stop campaigning for Scott.

Barbour, the governor of Mississippi, has participated in post-primary unity events around Florida and was scheduled to speak at the state party's meeting in Orlando Friday night.

Daschle sent copies of his letter to former Gov. Jeb Bush, RPOF Chairman John Thrasher and presidential aspirants Newt Gingrich, Mike Huckabee and Mitt Romney.

The RGA this week pitched in $2 million to the Republican governor's race to bolster the state party's sagging coffers. The association previously plunked down $2 million to fund ads against Democratic nominee Alex Sink.

Firing back, the DGA funneled $1 million into its party's gubernatorial race. That's on top of a $1 million check the DGA sent in July, said DGA spokeswoman Emily Bittner.
"National Parties Raise Stakes on Scott-Sink Race".

 

'Glades

"The cash-strapped South Florida Water Management District has 10 years to build at least 42,000 acres of treatment areas so that water flowing into the Everglades meets federal standards." "Under judge's order, EPA proposes rules for Everglades water cleansing".

 

"A five-second check"

"A Florida bill would require all employers to use a federal website to run a five-second check on the immigration status of new workers." "Federal website aims to crackdown on illegal hires".

 

From the "Crystal Ball"

Sabato calls the Florida Gubernatorial race a "toss-up" "Sixty Days to Go".

 

Chamberlin out

Lucy Morgan: "It’s a departure that has much more significance than a mere change in governors. Jill Chamberlin is retiring as director of communications for the Florida House, taking her practical advice and deep knowledge of government and its people with her." "Little known, but with a big impact".

 

Rubio cancels debate with Meek

"Marco Rubio postponed Sunday's nationally televised U.S. Senate debate with Kendrick Meek to be with his ailing father." "Marco Rubio's father's health deteriorates; 'Meet the Press' debate postponed". See also "Sunday's live televised debate between Rubio and Meek on 'Meet The Press' scrubbed" and "NBC cancels Sunday's Rubio-Meek debate".

 

"Florida is little more than shifting sand"

Steve Otto: "Remember Charlie Crist? Yeah, the guy who used to be the governor of Florida before deciding to ride off on his half-donkey, half-Republican beast to tilt the windmills of the United States Senate."

A lot of people wondered just where Crist was going to get the money to finance his senatorial campaign once he abandoned his Republican Party base. Kendrick Meek has demonstrated he is a viable candidate for the Democrats and Marco Rubio is on a roll for the Republicans.

On Wednesday, we learned Crist will get a financial boost on Oct. 7 when millionaire Marc Bell hosts a fundraiser at his Boca Raton place.

Bell is involved in many businesses but naturally the one drawing attention is his role as CEO of Penthouse magazine, as well as an adult meeting service.

That wouldn't be such a big deal considering the level and character of Florida politics. A little sex in a dying campaign can't hurt.

The problem: a Palm Beach Post article recalled the election of 2006. In that Republican primary, it was Tom Gallagher who accepted a $3,000 donation from Bell and was criticized by the Crist campaign. Gallagher later returned the donation.

Maybe there's a reason Florida is little more than shifting sand. It seems to fit those who would represent it.
"Spicing up the Senate campaign".

 

Is Bondi stable?

"Before she became the Republican nominee for Florida attorney general, Pam Bondi was a familiar face as a legal analyst on CNN and the Fox News Channel."

But Bondi may be best known for a custody battle over a St. Bernard.

Her 16-month fight with the Louisiana family that lost the dog after Hurricane Katrina played out on CNN, Fox News and the pages of People magazine. Then a Hillsborough prosecutor, she accused the family of neglecting the dog. Steve and Dorreen Couture and their two grandchildren wanted their dog back and resented Bondi for keeping him.

Both sides settled the case just before it went to trial. The terms were confidential, but reports at the time said Bondi offered to provide the St. Bernard with food and medication for life and to visit occasionally. The Coutures said they would keep in touch and send photos.

It seemed like an amicable ending. But three years later, the Coutures have little good to say about their former foe. Moreover, they say, she never kept her promise.
"Dog battle leaves hard feelings".

 

What's wrong with Hillsborough?

The Saint Petersburg Times editorial board: "Jim Norman wants to rise higher in public life this year by moving from the Hillsborough County Commission to the state Senate. Yet he refuses to answer how his wife managed to buy a second home with $435,000 in cash. The FBI is reportedly investigating. The only one not working to clear the air is the commissioner and future senator." "The $435,000 question".

 

Good question

"Crist late Friday ordered a review of a French company competing to build a high-speed rail line in Florida, saying he was concerned about questions over the company's role in the Holocaust." "Gov. Crist asks for review of French rail company, citing 'Holocaust' concerns".



08:48 Tropical Storm Earl – Day 11 » Why Now?

Position: 50.7N 59.2W [10 PM CDT 0300 UTC]. Movement: North-Northeast [030°] near 46 mph [74 kph]. Maximum sustained winds: 65 mph [100 kph]. Wind Gusts: 75 mph [115 kph]. Tropical Storm Wind Radius: 240 miles [390 km]. Minimum central pressure: 970 mb ↑. Currently about 180 miles [295 km] Southwest of Marys Harbour, Labrador. Earl made landfall near [...]

07:45 Verbatim » Pensito Review

People are angry in a way that I have never seen them before.

— Sen. John McCain (R-AZ), (a guy who knows "angry"), quoted by Politico, predicting a "tsunami" in the midterm elections.


07:32 Can Crist win the Anyone-But-Rubio crowd? » Naked Politics

Remember the saying ``Anyone But Bush'' among Democrats in 2004 who feared a second term by George W. Bush? Florida Democrats are slinging a variation on the slogan for 2010: ``Anyone But Rubio.'' To liberal voters, Republican Senate candidate Marco...

07:32 Spoiled Brats » Bark Bark Woof Woof

Eugene Robinson in the Washington Post:
According to polls, Americans are in a mood to hold their breath until they turn blue. Voters appear to be so fed up with the Democrats that they're ready to toss them out in favor of the Republicans -- for whom, according to those same polls, the nation has even greater contempt. This isn't an "electoral wave," it's a temper tantrum.

It's bad enough that the Democratic Party's "favorable" rating has fallen to an abysmal 33 percent, according to a recent NBC-Wall Street Journal poll. It's worse that the Republican Party's favorability has plunged to just 24 percent. But incredibly, according to Gallup, registered voters say they intend to vote for Republicans over Democrats by an astounding 10-point margin. Respected analysts reckon that the GOP has a chance of gaining 45 to 60 seats in the House, which would bring Minority Leader John Boehner into the speaker's office.

My guess is that with a decided advantage in campaign funds, along with the other advantages of incumbency, Democrats will be able to mitigate these prospective losses -- perhaps even relieving Nancy Pelosi of the hassles of moving. But there's no mistaking the public mood, and the truth is that it makes no sense.

In the punditry business, it's considered bad form to question the essential wisdom of the American people. But at this point, it's impossible to ignore the obvious: The American people are acting like a bunch of spoiled brats.
I was going to say that Mr. Robinson's rant doesn't apply to all Americans, but then when you think about it, the ones who are not angry about how life has mistreated them in some fashion or another -- the grown-ups -- are not doing the country any favors by keeping quiet. We're getting to the point where we are letting the wingnuts frame the debate, and it's time to stand up and call them out on their blatant ignorance masquerading as "common sense."

Mel Brooks put it another way:
You've got to remember that these are just simple farmers. These are people of the land. The common clay of the new West. You know... morons.

07:32 My Life On A Plate » Bark Bark Woof Woof


Winters in northwestern lower Michigan are not for the faint of heart; they get a lot of snow there thanks to the lake effect. By December my 4x4 Jeep Wagoneer was coming in very handy, and we recorded measurable snowfall every day between Christmas and Valentine's Day. Getting to the radio station first thing every morning to do the morning news often meant being the first person to drive on a snow-covered road. But the roads were well-marked -- beanpoles every hundred yards or so marked the edge of the road, so I was not inadvertently taking off-road trips on the way to work.

By spring, however, it was pretty clear that the station was losing money. Aside from a small-town base to find advertisers, the economy of 1979 was still lagging. And there wasn't that much local news to cover; not that much happens in a small rural county. (My one big story was that in April I was invited to Washington to participate in an out-of-town news editors conference at the White House. I sat in the Cabinet Room, asked President Carter a question about ethanol, and got to interview Alfred Kahn, the White House inflation czar.) I made some friends and through one of them was asked to help with a high school production of The Music Man, and I was also included in the local Episcopal church even though the priest knew that I was a Quaker. But by June the fire had gone out of my interest in covering the news -- not helped by having to cover a traffic accident that killed two acquaintances -- and I started looking for a teaching job. The radio station laid me off when they couldn't pay me any more, and once again I moved back to my parents' place in Ohio.

I spent that July looking at schools in New England, staying with friends and relatives in Boston (and was there for the Arthur Fiedler memorial concert on the Esplanade) and New York. I came up dry, and by August was down to my last couple of school interviews. I happened to be in Chicago when a call came through from a private school in southern Indiana. An overnight trip and an interview was arranged, and out of the blue I had the job teaching middle-school English. By Labor Day I was settled into a little furnished apartment, finally doing what I thought was my life's work.

Photo by David Nicholson.

06:30 Short Takes » Bark Bark Woof Woof

A 7.1 magnitude earthquake has hit New Zealand; no deaths are reported yet.

The jobs report was not all bad news; there's some growth out there in the private sector.

What a surprise: Rick Scott sucks up to the lobbyists in Tallahassee.

Citing family needs, Marco Rubio cancels his debate with Kendrick Meek on Meet the Press.

Fidel Castro is still not dead; he gave a speech at the University of Havana.

Give her props for persistence and stay out of her way.

Tropical Update: Earl is now a tropical storm heading for the Canadian Maritimes; Fiona fizzled to a tropical depression, and Gaston is gone.

The Tigers won in K.C.

06:22 Times: Republican foes, lobbyists now flock to Scott » Sayfie Review

Times: Republican foes, lobbyists now flock to Scott

06:22 Times: Gov. Crist asks for review of French rail company, citing 'Holocaust' concerns » Sayfie Review

Times: Gov. Crist asks for review of French rail company, citing 'Holocaust' concerns

06:22 Times: Marco Rubio's father's health deteriorates; 'Meet the Press' debate postponed » Sayfie Review

Times: Marco Rubio's father's health deteriorates; 'Meet the Press' debate postponed

06:22 Times: Dog battle leaves hard feelings » Sayfie Review

Times: Dog battle leaves hard feelings

06:22 Sentinel: Scott once urged privatization of Medicare, Medicaid » Sayfie Review

Sentinel: Scott once urged privatization of Medicare, Medicaid

06:16 Palm: Florida to get federal money to help design tests to assess students' math, English skills » Sayfie Review

Palm: Florida to get federal money to help design tests to assess students' math, English skills

06:16 Tribune: Charlie Crist has had episodes of 'misspeaking' before » Sayfie Review

Tribune: Charlie Crist has had episodes of 'misspeaking' before

06:14 Post: Federal website aims to crackdown on illegal hires » Sayfie Review

Post: Federal website aims to crackdown on illegal hires

06:12 Sun-Sentinel: EPA calls for speeding up Everglades water cleanup » Sayfie Review

Sun-Sentinel: EPA calls for speeding up Everglades water cleanup

06:06 Sun-Sentinel: Rubio, Meek debate postponed » Sayfie Review

Sun-Sentinel: Rubio, Meek debate postponed

06:03 Daily News: Grady asks judge to rule complaint against Crist is a class action lawsuit » Sayfie Review

Daily News: Grady asks judge to rule complaint against Crist is a class action lawsuit

06:00 Herald Tribune: In Florida, scant oversight of private schools » Sayfie Review

Herald Tribune: In Florida, scant oversight of private schools

05:58 News-Press: State rep has first opponent since '06 » Sayfie Review

News-Press: State rep has first opponent since '06

05:57 Herald: EPA gives Florida new Everglades cleanup guidelines » Sayfie Review

Herald: EPA gives Florida new Everglades cleanup guidelines

05:56 Herald: Democratic donor seeks ethics probe of GOP candidate David Rivera » Sayfie Review

Herald: Democratic donor seeks ethics probe of GOP candidate David Rivera

05:56 Herald: Many Democrats more anti-Rubio than pro-anyone » Sayfie Review

Herald: Many Democrats more anti-Rubio than pro-anyone

05:56 Herald: Congressional District 25 candidates differ on how to fix economy » Sayfie Review

Herald: Congressional District 25 candidates differ on how to fix economy

01:14 "Meet & Greet" » The Ybor City Stogie

Mariella Smith, Linda Saul-Sena & John Dingfelder
here

Fri 03 September, 2010

23:00 New Zealand Earthquake » Why Now?

While I was watching tropical storms in the Atlantic the Kiwis around Christchurch on the South Island had an earthquake to start their Saturday morning [09/04 4:35AM in New Zealand, 09/03 11:35AM CDT]. The 7.0 tremor lasted about 40 seconds, which is an eternity, with an epicenter only 30 miles from the city. [...]

22:59 To Clarify » Pushing Rope

I wasn't aware Nancy Imperiale found our Twitter exchange so exciting. For the record: I didn't call Emily "my little soccer mom." I tweeted to Emily that Meek lacked charisma. The only way Meek would have a chance to win is if he went all Barry White on female voters.


@nimperiale I want @kendrickmeek to go all Barry White and go, "Oh baby, you know you want to vote for me. Yes you do my little Soccer Mom."


I also got shot with Emily's "internet uzi" and didn't realize it. Emily wrote this.


Now I have to get up or I fear nobody in real life would call me “my little” anything.


Seriously, I wasn't even aware I was having a Twitter fight. Emily told me Meek "rocked. I tweeted this back (with errors edited out.)


"Meek Rocks"? I'm sorry. I haven't seen his air guitar abilities to judge if he rocks.


I can't believe anyone took these tweets of mine seriously. Emily writes that she went "Real Housewives" on me with tweets such as this.


@pushingrope I can't afford to be depressed about politics. I need a leader to fight for me in Congress and am happily voting Kendrick Meek.


Emily, your candidate is running third in the polls. You should be depressed.

Emily, please don't take Twitter so seriously. I have people who have posted weird threats on public people. I have had to delete those comments. I get called stupid by conservative commenters all the time. I have learned not to take it seriously. Finally, you are safe from any perceived threats of being "my little Soccer Mom." It was a joke about Meek trying to get female voters. That is all. So relax and don't take Twitter so seriously.

22:59 New Attack Ad on Jan Brewer's Beheading Nonsense » Pushing Rope



The Terry Goddard campaign released this attack ad on Jan Brewer. The ad catches Brewer making false claims of illegal immigrants beheading bodies. The ad then shows Brewer claiming she never made such a statement. Very effective.

22:59 Full Arcade Fire Madison Garden Show » Pushing Rope



This will only be on the internet for a short time. Bootleg Enjoy it why you can.

22:59 Clergy Speaks Out Against Dove World Outreach Center » Pushing Rope

Clergy of different faiths in Gainesville came together to speak out against the Dove World Outreach Center's plan to burn the Koran on September 11th. Below is video of the press conference of clergy leaders standing together against the Koran burning.







The Rev. John Rankin correctly warned that internet imagines of Koran burning will only endanger U.S. troops and fuel anti-American sentiment. Rankin wants President Obama to condemn the Dove World Outreach Center's plans to burn the Koran. After the poll that found 1 in 5 Americans believing Obama is a Muslim, it is unlikely the President will want to step into this issue this close to the general election.

The Dove World Outreach Center has twice been denied a permit to hold an open book burning bonfire.


Under Section 10-63, "Open burning and outdoor burning are prohibited in the City of Gainesville unless otherwise specifically permitted as provided by this article."


Mayor Craig Lowe isn't about to approve a Koran burning.

Pastor Terry Jones told Hardball host he would still go ahead with the Koran burning even if President George W. Bush asked him not to. Jones told Matthews that he is doing the Koran burning on the bizarre claim to stop Sharia law from being enforced in the United States. Jones obviously has no concept that doing away with the Constitution is an extremely difficult legislative and legal hurdle. I can't think of a single Senator who would vote for Sharia law.

21:45 Republican foes, lobbyists now flock to Scott » The Buzz: Florida Politics

In the aftermath of a mean-spirited primary, supporters of vanquished Bill McCollum are eagerly boarding the Rick Scott bandwagon, especially those Tallahassee special interests Scott vilified in the primary. When McCollum got money from special interests, Scott speculated about what...

21:05 Operation Orange Tree » Smashed Frog




John Walsh is on the road pitching software used in the 2009 Operation Orange Tree sting that resulted in the arrest of 70 plus persons, aged 17-83 years.

(...)

The software can recognize child pornography and identify the sender and receiver without the sender and receiver being aware, Walsh said. He said he was not privy to the exact way it works.


(Sheriff) Kevin Walsh said after the software flags a picture as child pornography, the officers secure search warrants for both involved in the peer-to-peer exchange. The concentration will be on Onondaga County and Central New York exchanges, but on the Internet, the two involved could be anywhere.


I can't even begin to imagine the slippery slope associated with this technology.



21:05 Christine O'Donnell Against Spanking the Monkey » Pushing Rope

Delaware Tea Party darling Christine O'Donnell is anti-masturbation.


The Huffington Post reports that O'Donnell was on a Sex In The 90s special on MTV. (Remember those?) "The Bible says that lust in your heart is committing adultery. So you can't masturbate without lust," she said, adding. "The reason that you don't tell [people] that masturbation is the answer to AIDS and all these other problems that come with sex outside of marriage is because again it is not addressing the issue. You're just gonna create somebody who is, I was gonna say, toying with his sexuality. Pardon the pun."


There goes the videogamer vote.

In rated news: Redstate.com founder Erick Erickson is pulling support fro O'Donnell because of anti-gay against Republican opponent Mike Castle.


Subsequently, a number of the affiliated individuals went and worked directly for Christine O’Donnell’s campaign. A few weeks ago they left. Around that time I began hearing rumors the O’Donnell campaign was imploding.

The gang that left resurfaced at Liberty.com. The launch day spectacular at Liberty.com was to announce that Mike Castle is having a gay affair on his wife with no proof whatsoever.

When it was pointed out that all the people behind the accusation were O’Donnell campaign staffers, the response was “not any more.”

After a year of direct and indirect advocacy for Christine O’Donnell, it is pretty doggone hard to now stand apart and say “Nope, not campaign related.”

Baloney


I disagree with Erickson's statement that there is "no evidence" that Tea Party is filled with bigoted and dangerous people. You check check posts here, here, here, here, here, here and here. I am glad Erickson went after Team O'Donnell for the homophobic attacks on Castle.

21:02 Democrats for Crist? Stick with party, not polls. » Florida Progressive Coalition Blog

Citizens, Friend of “THE STORM”,Progressive Strategist and Blogger Justin Snyder will be featured in the Palm beach post this Sunday talking about the Democrats that aren’t sold on Kendrick Meek as our nominee, & planning on voting for Charlie Crist. Democrats for Crist? Stick with party, not polls. “Be as religious as you want when [...]

20:01 Marco Rubio Will Not Be on Meet the Press » Pushing Rope

Senate candidate Marco Rubio's father is ill. Rubio informed NBC and Kendrick Meek that he will have to postpone his Meet the Press debate appearance.


Rubio's campaign spokesman Alex Burgos said in a statement Friday that Mario Rubio "has significantly deteriorated in the last 48 hours." The 83-year-old suffers from emphysema and lung cancer.

Burgos said the campaign has informed NBC and Meek "and appreciate their understanding and kind words for the Rubio family during this difficult period."


Best wishes to Rubio's father.

20:01 Joel Award: Jennifer Carroll » Pushing Rope

It is time to give out the Joel Award. The award goes to any celebrity, pundit, blogger or politician that purposely contradicts himself or herself.

Florida House Rep. Jennifer Carroll has been selected as Rick Scott's running mate. Carroll had this to say about Scott's reasons for running for governor.


"He is totally committed to turning around the economic conditions of this state."


Strangely, that doesn't seem to match what Carroll had to say about Scott during the Republican primary.


“We do not need that seat to be a seat where you’re learning, to be a seat where it’s for personal gain, to be a seat where the residents and the citizens of the state of Florida will be negatively impacted because of the lack of vision.”


Congratulations to Carroll for winning the Joel award.

19:25 Don't "Blow Off" Charity » FLA Politics - Front Page

Largely unnoticed were recent press accounts that Billionaires Bill Gates and Warren Buffett urged their fellow Billionaires to pledge to donate 1/2 of their net worth to charity.  Sounds like a nice gesture, but ... Well, before you blow it off, take a look at the numbers according to various press accounts:

Number of U.S. Billionaires:  400+

1/2 of total Net Worth:  $1.2 Trillion

Number Committed:  40 (10%)

Total Philanthropy in 2009:  $600 Billion

Total Potential Giving of Just Gates and Buffett:  $600 Billion

So my point is there is great potential in U.S. made Billionaires keeping all they can spend for themselves and their families, and still "giving back" to those less fortunate.  What if their charity were strategically targeted so it could draw down other matching funds and help make a dent in our crippling federal budget deficit?  For those who are tone deaf to philanthropy, just think of how the stock market would react if Americans got their financial house in order, through the generosity of fellow Americans.  Talk about earning the Presidental Medal of Freedom. 



18:56 Quote of the Day » Pushing Rope

"I think it would be hilariously awesome if Peter Orszag devoted his NYT column to teen pop culture."

Duncan Black (aka Atrios)

Sadly, an Orszag column on teen pop culture would probably garner more readership than missives about economic policy.

18:56 Kendrick Meek Death Watch: Al Lawson Endorsement » Pushing Rope

Florida Senate Minority Leader Al Lawson has endorsed Charlie Crist. How this hurts Kendrick Meek is Lawson is one of the highest level African Americans in Florida government. The Team Crist press release on the endorsement.


"Florida desperately needs an independent Senator in Washington who will fight for good jobs and economic opportunity, a quality education for every child, and Social Security for all of our seniors regardless of what the political party bosses want," said Senator Lawson. "Charlie Crist will be exactly that Senator, and I am proud to endorse his candidacy."

“I am honored by the support of Senate Democratic Leader Al Lawson,” said Governor Crist. “Senator Lawson has been a champion for working families for his entire career, whether it be fighting for jobs, the environment, or good schools. I look forward to working with him when I’m elected to the United States Senate."


Further undercutting Meek is Crist's ad buys in Democratic-leaning television markets.


The Charlie Crist campaign has bought $517,000 to run from 9/7-9/19, we're told. All but $7000 in Tampa Bay cable time was for broadcast in the Miami (434 points), Orlando (430 points), Tampa (292 points), and West Palm beach (278 points) markets.


Hat tips to Peter and Joy-Ann.

18:51 Naming and Shaming: Labor Day winners…. » Florida Progressive Coalition Blog

And the winners are income Senate President Senator Mike Haridopolos and incoming House Speaker Dean Cannon for their reaction to the Florida Supreme Court 5-2 decision to uphold lower court decisions and keep Amendments 3, 7, and 9 off the November ballot. The Court was saying loud and clear that the legislature doesn’t seem to [...]

17:53 Joe Garcia, David Rivera and the children of God » Naked Politics

The Big Guy has been brought into the fray of the hotly contested congressional race between Democrat Joe Garcia and Republican state Rep. David Rivera. According to the Florida Democratic Party, Rivera called himself "the son of God" in a...

17:41 Crist asks for review of French rail company, citing 'Holocaust' concerns » The Buzz: Florida Politics

UPDATE: State Rep. Ellyn Bogdanoff first raised the issue to the state DOT. Her letter is here. -- Gov. Charlie Crist late Friday ordered a review of a French company competing to build a high speed rail line in the...

17:27 Doctor; Your Diagnosis. My Death » BeThink - Front Page


DrDgnssDth

copyright ? 2010 Betsy L. Angert.  BeThink.org

Dearest Doctor, I have come to my senses.  Days ago, when you offered your diagnosis, I died.  No, not literally.  Had you done me in, I would not be here to write what I hope will help inform your bedside manner.  Well, in my case only the way in which you approach a patient who merely sits in an examining room chair near you is the concern.  You may recall our time together began so innocently. We sat down to review the results of annually scheduled blood-work.  I had not felt sick all year or on that day.  You had even expressed, it had been so long since we last saw each other.  You scanned the pages, and proclaimed, that I must have returned to my bulimic ways. My spirit perished.  I had done nothing of the sort!  Yet, you said you were sure I had.
The pain you inflicted killed what could have been a relationship built on trust.  Today, I realize your proclamation was but part of a pattern.  Indeed, you reminded me that during our last consultation, a year ago, you also decided that I must be near death.  In August 2009 you insisted that I arrange for an appointment, which you openly stated, would affirm your fears. I must be seriously ill. Yet, once that test was done, it affirmed that I was as I am better, than fine.

Upon further reflection, and after the telephone conversation I initiated hours after my appointment, I thankfully, feel more serene.  No, you did not change your diagnosis nay your assertion that I must be vomiting.   Still, the talk helped me, although it seemed to alienate you.  I wonder if you now have a sense of how I felt and feel since you pronounced me dead and a liar, or do you merely believe of me, "The lady doth protest too much."

Might you ponder that my grievance is grounded.  Oh, how little you know of bulimia, and me.  In the two plus years we have had an acquaintance, I see you for maybe, ten minutes a visit.  Since only once did I come to your office for other than a check up, what you observed this week is true. I rarely visit.  When I do, you are booked.  Patients arrive back-to-back.  We chat for a bit, but not really.  All is said and done rapidly.  I wonder, might the speed of conversation and the shallow nature of a consultation affect your appraisal.  After all, you too are human; although from what you said to me today, it seems at times such as this you define yourself as a trained medical professional, more perceptive than a mere mortal.

During my most recent appointment you admitted, you did not even recall what I had shared so often; I disdain exercise.  I was never amongst the anorexic/bulimics who think they must work out endlessly. Only injuries incurred late in life took me to my current routine, a daily swim in the pool.

I know you recall that I swim, only because I often come dressed to swim.  Even that concerns you, exposure to the sun.  Do you remember that I switched to an indoor facility.  Probably not.   While the truth of the locale and my loathing exercise may not be memorable or visible in an office visit, what can be seen is a sign of bulimia.  My teeth.  

Doctor, did you notice what my Dentist and Dental Hygienist have?  My once translucent boney choppers are now denser.  The color has returned to white.  For so long, even when you and I first met, the hue was dark gray.  Other dental conditions were already on the mend when I first entered your sphere.  Deep groves, once etched into the enamel, gone.  With my tongue, or a look, I can tell, the surface is smooth once more.  As I said in our phone conversation, less than twelve hours after you declared me dead,   Charlene stated with delight, "Your teeth finally look alive."

Funny. Charlene, my dental hygienist, detects a difference in my body and being since I left bulimia behind.  Yet, you are intent on my being ill.  Charlene sees and speaks of how my life without food benders and bile has helped me be healthier.  Yet, you dear Doctor, only see standards, the stats that you think are real, more real than me.  

You do not see, hear, or open your mind to who I might be.  I marvel as recall the day Charlene had expressed a doubt.  She offered, in Dental School professors taught the conventional wisdom.  Teeth do not substantially re-mineralize.  Enamel and density loss are permanent.  However, Charlene wonders aloud.   She has come to accept that what she learned may not be valid.  Months earlier she mused, "Well" after much assessment, "I have witnessed the metamorphosis."  There is a change.  

Transformation from bulimia to health has occurred for Charlene, for me.  Then there is you, dear Doctor. Apparently, what was, will always be in your mind.  Oh, Doctor, if only you had truly engaged me in the past two years . Had you looked and listened or even spent more than a scant few minutes with me in any of our sessions, just maybe you would have learned that supposed facts and figures may not mean whatever it is medical professionals teach.  

Might you think to speak to me rather than seek the "expertise" of more and more specialists [sic] before you declare me to be on my deathbed?  I know not what to say.

I tried to talk to you, to share my reality, my family history, and myself.  My words fell on deaf ears. You so sweetly fight me at every turn.  When I worked to offer an analogous story, you scoffed.  Might I assume that you see me as less knowledgeable, credible, or just crazed.  Perchance, I might try to tell the tale again?  Perhaps, the read will help you to authentically relate.  

As I said, the day after you delivered your diagnosis I traveled to the dentist to have my teeth cleaned.  By the way, dental visits last for well over an hour and I go every few months.  Charlene and I talk the entire time.  This week, since I had just seen you and was so devastated, my exam and your evaluation were the topics of discussion.

Charlene smiled and stated she is all too familiar with Doctors such as you.  While she has had her own experiences her Mom's was most worrisome to her.  While under the care of her Doctor, Charlene's mother's organs were forever damaged.   The Doctor thought it wise to bring this adult female's blood levels to "normal."  However, with age her heredity set in.   What had been usual for the patient was no longer as it was.  

Yes Doctor, I acknowledge that you listened to this story, for seconds, and then, abruptly interjected your disregard of my attempt to share personal accounts, or the details of my family history.  Doctor, you preferred the argument, "Charlene is not a Physician."  Might you trust the words of others Physicians, those who have misdiagnosed me or correctly assessed my well-being?

Please indulge me.  Allow me to present a nonfictional narrative.  Eight years ago, after a serious automobile accident, an Orthopedic Surgeon told me I would not be able to walk for at least a half a year, probably more.  He assured me that one leg would be shorter than the other for the rest of my life.  I needed full bed rest for at least six months, maybe seven.  The specialist said he could not speak to the pain I had in my chest and ribs.  He saw nothing in the X-Rays.  Weeks later, another bone MD whom I thought it wise to consult, was shocked to discover my broken sternum and four fractured ribs.  

That Surgeon, I will call Doctor Thom, was more than a second opinion; he saved my leg, heel, my life.   Dr Thom told me that I needed to begin an exercise regime immediately!  He then showed me exactly what he wanted me to do as soon as possible.  While he concurred, I could not walk or bear even the slightest weight on my heel, I could get around on my hands and knees.  My father, relieved went to the store and purchased the best fluffy-filled cotton kneepads money could buy.

Dr Thom helped me realize that the pain in my chest was very real.  He helped me to feel safe, secure in the knowledge of what I could to.  Dr Thom spoke of a means for stability, and provided time frames.   Most importantly he attended to my needs, not as just another "patient," but as me, Betsy!

Thankful that this physician asked of my history, and accepted that two past injuries necessitated a regular daily swim, I was able to feel comforted by his care.  Indeed, months before I was authorized to walk, with a promise from me that I would not place my leg on the ground, not even in water, Dr Thom prescribed a return to the pool.  Yes Doctor, he wanted me to swim unlike you who said, stop the swim or at least cut the time in the water done to near nil.  Fifteen minutes or less a day?  Doctor, have you read the research and recommendations for minimal daily exercise? Perhaps you have no desire to do other than prove yourself right.

For me, what is right is a healthy relationship with one's body and other beings.  If only we had genuine caring, sharing exchanges.  I believe we do not.  In each of our talks, your trepidation for what you feel is my impending death, is inescapable.  It seems to shade your every diagnosis..

Doctor, I know you are not G-d. You do not have the power to give me life.  However, a professional such as you, can cause my demise.  The innumerable reports that document a patient's passing at the hands of his or her physician cannot be ignored.  

Certainly, I may have over-reacted or reacted as any healthy person would to your decree; I lie or I die, possibly both.  Imagine my surprise, I entered your office the picture of health, and was pronounced a perishable commodity.   You said, were you to review my chart in a hospital, you would order a full body transfusion.  Until you were certain why results of the blood tests were so dire, you wanted me to see four specialists and a therapist.  A therapist?  

That statement alone spoke volumes; however it was a hush in comparison to the stated accusation.  You were concerned that I had returned to the world of bulimia.  Oh had you, or most any Doctor who diagnoses, what professionals call an eating disorder, experienced the thrill of leaving that past behind, you might understand how wonderful it is to have my life back.  

For years now, days, weeks, months, decades, devoted to food do not consume me.  Close to a decade has passed since I spent more time bingeing and purging than you do sleeping or working. Can you imagine? What might you feel if you were finally free of all that constrained your very being?

Oh Doctor, I know you cannot conjure up such a connection.  Were you able to relate to my reality you would not have said and done as you did.

You dismissed my words, my truth, all that I had learned, felt, and experienced in the twenty-five years and three months that I battled with the bulimia.  More significantly, you concluded that the many years since I last vomited were null and void.  In your infinite wisdom, you decided that a Doctor knows much more about an individual than the person, his or her self, does.

With few visits in our past, and little conversation, you know what is real for me?  You think practitioners who have never met me before will assess my health more accurately.    Based on what, more standards of "normal."

Your counsel crushed any sense of a connection.  Your stated distrust of me is as a surgical knife; it cuts to the core.  When a Doctor doubts a patient, the effect is profound.  At least it has been in my experience.  However, it seems you are not truly interested in my experience or that of others.  Oh, how I wanted to explain my truth when we spoke on the telephone today.  Your response, "He, she, or I am not a trained medical Physician." may have cured me of that desire.

However, happily I was able to sneak in one thought whilst we chatted.  A Doctor I am acquainted with has often expressed, medical school is like a technical college.   Practitioners and Surgeons are analogous to Mechanics.  For each, diagnosis is the greatest challenge.  An educated guess, or "evaluation" only captures what is typical.  You offered no thought on what another Physician pronounced his truth.  Perchance, you are still of the mind that you know what you know.  

As an Educator and an observer of humanity, I share what I believe.  Knowledge is not power!  Empathy empowers.  If only you chose to be empathetic, to consider what is beyond book knowledge. Perhaps, then, people, patients, might be real to you rather than fall into one or two categories. Terminal or test-proven fit as a fiddle.

Dear reader, you may wish to peruse Chapters One through Seven. Please do. These reflective diaries discuss my life as an anorexic, bulimic, a person.

Or Similar Discussions . . .

Reference for review and reflection . . .


17:24 More Pieces » Why Now?

The Times-Picayune has a story and picture: Deepwater Horizon’s 2 drill pipes seen up close in clearest picture to date Fuzzy images taken by robotic submarines a mile under the sea showed the two pipes before. But the Marine Board panel investigating the massive April 20 accident just put out this crisp image taken after the [...]

17:04 Firefighters have TOO MUCH TIME on their hands » Tampa's Back Door Ways ... (OR...)

I forgot to link the Jacksonville stalker firefighter arsonist story so you could read the comments.

So, here it is.

So, the thing is when you consider what goes on in the dark of night AT YOUR HOME or in YOUR DRYER VENT.. who is out there with time on their hands and oh so conveniently RIGHT THERE IN YOUR BEIGHBORHOOD???

Why, the benevolent firepig of course.

WAKE UP, people.

They almost have EVERYTHING.
Truth about Tampa. Send this to everyone you know who loves the TRUTH~~!! Truth is violated by falsehood, but it is outraged by silence. - Henri Frederic Amiel Vote in the National Cheney Impeachment Poll http://www.usalone.com/blogvoices.php?Cheney%20Impeachment%3F

16:52 Scalia .... OMG... THANKS, Reagan » Tampa's Back Door Ways ... (OR...)

Holy shit... you know that scalia is bad and the other one ... what's his name?? Alito... but scalia actully looks like an old-time mobster.

Torture is NOT punishment people:
Please watch it all the way through:


WOW.

He is just a big fat baby. And, he's RIGHT. Just ask him ... (it's so old by now)
Bush v Gore... he claims that Gore brought it to court ... but no, sweetie it was BUSH who wanted it to be decided.



scalia does not belong on the supreme court.

born in 1936 ... how much longer could this go on??

THANKS, REAGAN
Truth about Tampa. Send this to everyone you know who loves the TRUTH~~!! Truth is violated by falsehood, but it is outraged by silence. - Henri Frederic Amiel Vote in the National Cheney Impeachment Poll http://www.usalone.com/blogvoices.php?Cheney%20Impeachment%3F

16:50 Brewer Will Not Debate Again » Pushing Rope

Conservatives and tea partiers say they don't want to talk to the media because it is too liberal. It actually is because conservative candidates have to explain their previous statements and policy stances. The latest case in point is Gov. Jan Brewer.

Brewer said there was a series of beheadings committed be illegal immigrants coming over the border. The problem with Brewer's statement was that no Arizona law enforcement officer or medical examiner could confirm Brewer's claim. Brewer's general election opponent Terry Goddard asked Brewer to recant to claim. Brewer dodged the question. Brewer also claimed that the state budget was balanced when Arizona is facing a revenue shortfall.

After the debate, Brewer repeatedly avoided answering questions about her claims that headless bodies were found. Brewer abruptly walked out of her own press conference. Brewer has announced she will not paticipate in another debate.


"Why would I want to give Terry a chance to redefine himself?" she said.


How about Brewer giving Arizona voters the chance to judge which candidate will be the better governor.

Politicians such as Brewer and Sarah Palin are circumventing the media so they can make questionable claims that can go unchallenged. The Fourth estate exists to give Americans information about government. The media was more worried about appearing patriotic and gaining White House access than asking hard questions about pre-Iraq war intelligence. 4,287 U.S. military personal have died in Iraq. It is unlikely these men and women would have died if the American public knew there were no weapons of mass destruction and the war was not going to be several years.

Brewer wants to be governor. The Arizona taxpayers are providing her salery. It isn't asking much to expect her to actually answer questions. People whom usually avoid explaining previous statements know they have been busted in a lie. Arizona citizens deserve a governor that is willing to have an open dialogue with constituents. Not a governor with Nixonian behavior traits.

15:57 Pam Bondi 'stole my dog' » The Buzz: Florida Politics

Before she became the Republican nominee for Florida attorney general, Pam Bondi was a familiar face as a legal analyst on CNN and the Fox News Channel. But Bondi may be best known for a custody battle over St. Bernard....

15:48 Google's Fullerine » Discourse.net

If you hurry, you can see a fun “spherical fullerene” substituting for Google's second “o” at today's Google Japan. You can actually twirl the molecule when you place your cursor over Google's second “o”. This will only be on today (Japan time) — the day when Fullerene, C60. was discovered....

15:47 Tina Dupuy Vlog On Dove World Outreach Center » Pushing Rope



Tina Dupuy has a vlog on the Dove World Outreach Center's promise to burn the Koran on the aniversary of 9/11. Gainesville Deputy Chief Tim Hayes said book burning is not allowed under local fire ordinance laws. The Dove World Outreach Center said they still plan on holding their Koran burning. Pastor Terry Jones has admitted he has never read the Koran. It might be helpful for Jones to know what he is religiously against.

Dupuy has an op-ed on the Dove World Outreach Center book burning madness.

15:25 Fanjuls hosts Rick Scott fundraiser » The Buzz: Florida Politics

Florida Crystals vice chairman José “Pepe” Fanjul and his wife, Emilia, are hosting a $10,000 VIP reception fundraiser for Rick Scott at their Palm Beach home Sept. 14. They've been backing Scott from the start, while their rival company U.S....

14:44 RPOF tries to tie Sink to Obama » Naked Politics

Here's the RGA/RPOF attack ad on Alex Sink we mentioned this morning: And here's the response from the Sink camp: "Put yourself in Rick Scott's shoes -- when you run a company that was forced to pay a $1.7 billion...

14:30 Scott ducks on Taj Mahal, Carroll on immigration » March On Politics

Two of the most commonly asked questions on Thursday’s introduction tour by Republican candidate for governor Rick Scott and his new running mate, Jennifer Carroll, were about the $48 million “Taj Mahal” courthouse in Tallahassee and an Arizone-style immigration law—and in Tampa, they blatantly ducked both.

The reasons:

Carroll…


14:25 NOM Fund Raising with Lies » Deep Something

I know it will shock you to learn that the National Organization for Marriage is running a radio ad to, among other things, raise money, with a complete stream of lies. So, are you off the floor yet (I know you fell over when you heard). So, many thanks to Matt from stop8.org who took the time to analyze their ad, statement by statement to point out the lies. I guess that old "baring false witness" thing isn't important if your fighting teh gayz. I mean some sins are worse than others, so if you have to commit one fight one, it's must be OK, because they're all Christian.

13:59 RPOF tries to tie Sink to Obama » The Buzz: Florida Politics

Here's the RGA/RPOF attack ad on Alex Sink we mentioned this morning: And here's the response from the Sink camp: "Put yourself in Rick Scott's shoes -- when you run a company that was forced to pay a $1.7 billion...

13:28 Must See Video! Florida’s New Lt. Gov. Candidate Trashes Running Mate Rick Scott » Pensito Review

The cameras rolled this week when Tea Party billionaire and fired CEO Rick Scott chose Florida Rep. Jennifer Carroll (R-Orange Park) as his running mate in his quest for governor. Fortunately, they also rolled a couple of weeks ago, when Carroll addressed her county RPOF chapter and stated all the reasons you should not support [...]

12:53 Bristol Palin’s Baby Daddy Is Almost Universally Reviled » Pensito Review

6 percent

— Share of Alaskans who have a favorable view of Levi Johnston, Sarah Palin's almost son-in-law, while 72 percent have an unfavorable view.


12:44 Verbatim » Pensito Review

To begin with, combat in Iraq is not over, and we should not uncritically repeat suggestions that it is, even if they come from senior officials. The situation on the ground in Iraq is no different today than it has been for some months ... Unless there is balancing language, our content should not refer to the end of combat in Iraq, or the end of U.S. military involvement. Nor should it say flat-out (since we can't predict the future) that the United States is at the end of its military role.

An internal Associated Press memo advising reporters not to believe President Obama's declaration of the end of combat operations in Iraq.


12:17 Rubio pulls out of Sunday’s Meet the Press debate, citing father’s declining health » March On Politics

Republican U.S. Senate candidate Marco Rubio says the Meet the Press debate with Democrat Kendrick Meek will need to be rescheduled because of his father’s declining health. (No-party candidate, Gov. Charlie Crist, had declined the invitation to debate).

Here’s the statement from campaign spokesman Alex Burgos:

“Unfortunately, the health of…


12:12 FEC Complaint Filed Against David Rivera » Florida Progressive Coalition Blog

From Barzee himself: CONTACT: WILLIAM R. BARZEE, ATTORNEY AT LAW 305-443-3269 FORMER SUPPORTER AND DONOR FILES FEC COMPLAINT AGAINST DAVID RIVERA I would like to inform you that I have filed a complaint with the Federal Elections Commission regarding David Rivera’s apparent violations of federal election laws. As a former supporter and donor to David [...]

12:11 Who Is House District 117 Candidate Michael Bileca » Florida Progressive Coalition Blog

From FPC ally Derek Newton, who I think is working for Bileca’s opponent: Republican Michael Bileca (www.bileca2010.com) won a seven-way Republican primary last Tuesday in House District 117 (open, Republican Julio Robaina). In addition to being another wealthy self-funding Republican (he spent $145,000 of personal money in the primary) Bileca is a poster-boy for the [...]

12:08 Does Jennifer Carroll Have A Fake Degree? » Florida Progressive Coalition Blog

CBS says so: (CBS) They are safety engineers at nuclear power plants and biological weapons experts. They work at NATO headquarters, at the Pentagon and at nearly every other federal agency. And, as CBS News Correspondent Vince Gonzales reports, they’re employees with degrees from phony schools. “These degrees aren’t worth the paper that they’re printed [...]

10:47 Rubio cancels "Meet the Press" to be with ailing dad » Naked Politics

From Republican Senate candidate Marco Rubio: Unfortunately, the health of Marco’s father, Mario Rubio, has significantly deteriorated in the last 48 hours. As a result, Marco plans to stay with his father and family during this time, and will be...

10:47 Obama administration swats down talk of a Cuba spy swap » Naked Politics

The State Department is denying reports that the Obama administration is considering swapping the "Cuban Five" spies in U.S. prisons for a U.S. government subcontractor jailed in Havana. The denial came a day after Cuban-Americans in Congress expressed concern over...

10:47 FEC complaint filed against David Rivera » Naked Politics

A Democratic donor from Miami has filed a complaint against state Rep. David Rivera, asking the Federal Election Commission to investigate whether the Republican congressional candidate violated campaign finance laws by "coordinating'' attacks on Democrat opponent Joe Garcia with a...

10:47 AIF welcomes Scott with open arms, and wallets » Naked Politics

Associated Industries of Florida hosted a closed-door breakfast fund-raiser with Rick Scott Friday. For more than an hour, the Republican candidate for governor talked about his agenda for creating jobs, improving schools and having a viable private insurance market in...

10:47 #FF: Rick Scott, who is making the rounds of Tallahassee lobbying offices » Naked Politics

After his morning fundraiser at Associated Industries of Florida, Republican Rick Scott continues the rounds in Tallahassee today with a $10,000 a person fundraiser at the offices of health care lobbyists Jon Johnson and Travis Blanton at 3:30 p.m. today....

10:30 AIF greets Scott with open arms and wallets » The Buzz: Florida Politics

Associated Industries of Florida hosted a closed-door breakfast fund-raiser with Rick Scott Friday. For more than an hour, the Republican candidate for governor talked about his agenda for creating jobs, improving schools and having a viable private insurance market in...

10:18 Rubio's father's health deteriorates, Meet the Press debate postponed » The Buzz: Florida Politics

Sad news from the Marco Rubio campaign: Unfortunately, the health of Marco’s father, Mario Rubio, has significantly deteriorated in the last 48 hours. As a result, Marco plans to stay with his father and family during this time, and will...

10:14 Follow Friday: Rick Scott's fundraising tour today of Tallahassee lobbying offices » The Buzz: Florida Politics

After his morning fundraiser at Associated Industries of Florida, Republican Rick Scott continues the rounds in Tallahassee today with a $10,000 a person fundraiser at the offices of health care lobbyists Jon Johnson and Travis Blanton at 3:30 p.m. today....

09:32 Religious Liberty » Stupid Enough Unexplanation

Good article by Michael Gerson over at Townhall on the Cordoba Center. He makes some salient points. He notes that plenty of those who oppose the Cordoba Center oppose all new Mosques in America, which is something some of those who oppose the Corodoba Center haven't grasped.

Gerson also notes that the Christians who are attacking this and other Islamic buildings, face much the same attacks from the left wing. Perhaps tolerance wouldn't be that un-Christian.
Christianity, as an Abrahamic faith, sets out another vision -- an assertion of human worth and dignity that transcends tribe and nation. Christianity has accommodated this belief in slow, halting, often hypocritical stages -- a history that should leave Christians tolerant of the slow, halting, hypocritical progress of other traditions. The implications of this shift within Christianity, however, are profound. In light of this belief, the purpose of social influence for Christians is not to favor their own faith; it is to serve a view of universal rights and dignity taught by their faith. It is not to advance their own creed; it is to apply that creed in pursuit of the common good. This is what turns religion into a positive social force -- a determination to defend everyone's dignity.
I kind of agree with this (at least in the political sphere), while noting that many Christians would strongly disagree with this theory. Evangelicals do, of course, feel a need to advance their on creed, and many Christians of every faith beleive it an act of charity to explain the one true way to Heaven.

Responses to the article are interesting; there are soem more libertarian Conservatives who are glad to see it, but obviousl there are also comments like these.
Mr. Gerson, you are a dhimmi, a useful shill for Islam.

Is mr. gerson a closet muslim or merely a "fellow traveler" that will sell them the rope by which to hang us??

"Muslims on our side" is a contradiction in terms.

Islam itself IS the enemy. It is the Anti-Christ of religions.

Mr. Gerson, please tell me how you, as a supposed Christian, (or anyone else, for that matter) can corroborate the claims of Muhammad?

And if you cannot, then why do you defend them?
Just a sampling. I particularly hate the one about "Muslims on our side is a contradiction in terms." Just flat out hatred. That last one just baffles me. There are all kinds of religious beliefs I can't corroborate; that doesn't mean I forbid them.

09:31 Scott accuses Sink of "socialism" » Florida Politics

"In Brandon, Orlando and Jacksonville,"
Scott and Carroll talked up the importance of creating jobs in a struggling Sunshine State and Scott criticized Democratic rival Alex Sink for supporting "the socialist policies of President Obama.''
"Scott, running mate Carroll debut as team".

If Scott had spent some time in the pokey, he might have had had the opportunity to read a book or two on, say ... political systems. Then again, baseless name calling is a good way to rile up the RPOF's teabagger base.


"Historic" laff riot

"Scott: 'Historic day' in choice of state Rep. Carroll as running mate".

"As Republican gubernatorial candidate Rick Scott officially announced state Rep. Jennifer Carroll as his running mate Thursday, questions about when he chose the Fleming Island legislator and the experience she feels she brings to the ticket were left largely unanswered."

Touted for her legislative experience, Carroll would not give many specifics about her time in the state House. When asked about some of her proudest moments as a lawmaker, she encouraged a reporter to do some research.

"I don’t only have one," she said. "I have many, and you can certainly look up my resume."

When pressed on her tenure as a member of the Legislature, Carroll cited her work as chair of the House Economic Development Committee.

"There have been many measures that we put in place that created jobs, that reduced tax burden, reduced regulations on many companies to enable them to stay afloat," she said, without giving specifics.

Scott tried to characterize Carroll as the opposite of a career politician, although she has been a legislator in Tallahassee since her election in 2003 and was the head of Florida’s Veterans Affairs Department before that.
"Many questions surrounding Scott-Carroll ticket go unanswered".


Lawson disses Meek

"State Sen. Al Lawson endorsed Gov. Charlie Crist for the U.S. Senate Thursday, saying "Charlie's always been there for us" when state employees, rural counties and universities needed help." "State Sen. Al Lawson endorses Charlie Crist for US Senate".


Crist releases internal poll

Daily Kos:

Given where public polling was on this race as recently as three weeks ago, it is hard to get a lot of confidence for Independent Charlie Crist based on the release of his own internal polling by Keith Fredrick. The new poll gives Crist a lead of just a single point, with Crist at 35%, Rubio at 34%, and Kendrick Meek well behind the pack at 17%. Crist did get some welcome news today, as he locked in a surprising endorsement in the form of state senator Al Lawson. Lawson just finished with a closer-than-expected primary challenge to Congressman Allen Boyd, one in which he challenged Boyd to his left. Lawson's defection is particularly notable, given that he is an African-American Democrat who is choosing Crist over Kendrick Meek, who is seeking to be the first African-American member of the U.S. Senate ever from the state of Florida.
"FL-Sen: Crist internal gives him (narrow lead), as he gains Dem nod".


Chiles will help Sink

Kevin Derby: "Lawton 'Bud' Chiles III made it official Thursday, pulling the plug on his gubernatorial campaign and endorsing Democratic gubernatorial candidate Alex Sink." "Endorsing Alex Sink, Bud Chiles Exits Gubernatorial Race". See also "Bud Chiles will help Alex Sink's campaign for governor".


Population growth

"Florida's population grew slightly in 2009 after a one-year decline broke a steady string of growth dating to the end of World War II, according to preliminary estimates released Thursday. The University of Florida reported the state added an estimated 21,000 residents in the last year, bringing the state's population to 18,771,768. From 2008 to 2009, the state lost more than 56,000 people." "After a year of decline, Florida's population sees a slight amount of growth".


Entrepreneurs in action

"Hallmark Industrial Services, a company dogged by allegations of immigration and worker safety wrongdoing, had been working on oil spill cleanup operations in Florida". "Oil spill contractor with immigration, labor woes was involved in Florida cleanup".


Labor Day Insult in the Works

Hilda Solis is "Fighting for Workers This Labor Day".

In the meantime, we will be preparing the latest edition of the "Annual Labor Day Insult". Previous editions are here, here and here.


Rivera allegations

"A Democratic donor from Miami has filed a complaint against state Rep. David Rivera, asking the Federal Election Commission to investigate whether the Republican congressional candidate violated campaign finance laws by 'coordinating' attacks on Democrat opponent Joe Garcia with a political committee intended to remain independent."

The complaint, submitted by criminal defense attorney William Barzee, alleges there is a link between Rivera's campaign and a group named Voters Response. The link, Barzee says, is Rivera spokeswoman Sarah Bascom, of Tallahassee-based Bascom Communications & Consulting.

Federal campaign finance reports show Rivera's campaign has not made any payments to Bascom.

Voters Response, a Florida electioneering committee that has sent out fliers attacking Garcia in the hotly contested race, has twice made payments totaling $3,000 to Bascom Communications, according to the reports.

"It's outside the rules,'' said Barzee. "It's wrong and it's avoiding accountability.''

Unlike Florida law, federal campaign-finance law prohibits candidates from coordinating their campaign efforts with third-party groups.

But Bascom and David Ramba, who heads Voters Response, said the committee is not working with Rivera.
"Democratic donor seeks ethics probe of GOP candidate David Rivera".


Bomb scare

"Miami Airport Evacuated After Bomb Scare".


"Suspicious financial arrangement"

The Tampa Tribune editors: "State Rep. Kevin Ambler's lawsuit may not undo his Republican primary loss to Hillsborough County Commissioner Jim Norman in the state Senate District 12 race. It may forever cast him as a sore - and litigious - loser."

Yet the effort could benefit the public if it serves to cast light on a suspicious financial arrangement that allowed Norman's wife to pay cash for a $435,000 lakefront home in Arkansas.

Norman says there are other investors in the house, and they want to stay out of the limelight. But no investors are listed on the deed, which is highly unusual for a real estate investment.

The 2006 transaction has been subject to all sorts of rumors, and Norman blames the accusations on dirty politics.

But he has refused to provide the specifics that could quickly put an end to the matter.
"A sore loser with good questions".


Right wing poll puts Scott on top

Daily Kos: "Team Ras-sie put both Rick Scott (FL-Gov) and Dino Rossi (WA-Sen) out in front today. The only poll that can come close to being construed as positive for Dems is the relatively small lead for GOP incumbent Sean Parnell in Alaska."

FL-Gov: Rick Scott (R) 45%, Alex Sink (D) 44%
"THE RAS-A-POLL-OOZA". The poll: "Election 2010: Florida Governor".


Florida bankruptcies up

"Bankruptcies in South Florida up 5.7% in August".


Campaign roundup

"Chiles endorses Sink as he bows out, Scott barely leads Sink in new poll, Crist won't say who should be the next governor." "Campaign roundup for Thursday".


"Unlike other schemes, this one's legal"

The Orlando Sentinel editors: "Unlike other schemes to disenfranchise voters, this one's legal. That doesn't make it any less outrageous. And it doesn't excuse legislators for allowing it."

In 1998, Florida voters, by nearly 2-1, amended the state constitution to open primary contests to all voters, regardless of registration, when the winner would not face opposition in the general election. The intent was to ensure that all voters could have a say in choosing their elected representatives.

But two years later, the state Division of Elections issued an advisory opinion that upended the amendment. The opinion said a single candidate entering a race as a write-in would be enough to limit the primary to one party's voters — even though write-ins don't have to pay a filing fee or collect signatures like other candidates, and don't even appear on the ballot.

Republican or Democratic candidates who have little appeal outside their parties would rather run in closed contests. And in the years since the Elections Division cleared the way, scores of primaries around the state have been closed thanks to write-ins.

Usually these candidates don't even bother to campaign. They have no hope or intention of winning. There's no obvious motive for them to run other than to close a primary. State Sen. Dave Aronberg, a South Florida Democrat who tried for years to close the loophole, said write-ins usually are registered with the party whose primary they wind up closing.
"Close primary election loophole".


"Legislature lavishes tax dollars on an influential few"

The Tampa Tribune editorial board: "An opulent $48 million courthouse being built for the 1st District Court of Appeal in Tallahassee highlights the hypocrisy of a Legislature that purports to be fiscally conservative but lavishes tax dollars on an influential few." "In contempt of state taxpayers".


Wingnuts go after Grayson and Kosmas

"For those few Florida voters unfamiliar with attacks ads, the latest TV spot by the conservative Americans for Prosperity offers a classic take on the genre."

It features ominous music, testimony from everyday people and unflattering pictures of its targets: Democratic U.S. Reps. Alan Grayson of Orlando and Suzanne Kosmas of New Smyrna Beach.

"Both supported Nancy Pelosi's liberal agenda," one grandmotherly woman tells the camera, moments before the ad condemns their support of the $787-billion stimulus bill.

Americans for Prosperity paid about $420,000 to run the 30-second commercial for two weeks on Central Florida over-the-air and cable stations. The ad is part of a nationwide campaign by the Republican-Libertarian group – underwritten in part by New York billionaire David Koch -- and marks the opening salvo in what's expected to be a barrage of spending by outside organizations in Florida before the Nov. 2 general election.
"Out-of-state groups to pour millions into U.S. Senate, congressional races".


Fl-oil-duh

The Miami Herald editors: "Lift liability cap for oil spills". Related from Paul Flemming: "BP payments remain a mystery". Meanwhile, "Gulf Blowout II Ripples Across Florida". See also "New oil rig explosion causes political firestorm in Florida".


08:41 Charlie's positions on the federal health care bill » The Buzz: Florida Politics

Marco Rubio claims that Charlie Crist has six or seven positions on the federal health care bill. PolitiFact Florida takes out the calculators and offers its analysis.

08:40 Does Alex Sink want to cut Medicare? » The Buzz: Florida Politics

Republican gubernatorial candidate Rick Scott says his opponent Alex Sink wants to cut Medicare benefits for the country's seniors. Sink says Scott is making that up. Enter PolitiFact Florida. The back-and-forth started on Sept. 1, 2010, when Scott issued a...

08:31 Florida Political News: Sept. 3, 2010 » FLA Politics - Front Page

Our digest of, and commentary on today's Florida political news and punditry.


Scott accuses Sink of "socialism"

"In Brandon, Orlando and Jacksonville,"

Scott and Carroll talked up the importance of creating jobs in a struggling Sunshine State and Scott criticized Democratic rival Alex Sink for supporting "the socialist policies of President Obama.''
"Scott, running mate Carroll debut as team".

If Scott had spent some time in the pokey for fraud, he might have had had the opportunity to read a book or two on, say ... political systems. Then again, baseless name calling is a good way to rile up the Scott's teabagger base.

 

"Historic" laff riot

"Scott: 'Historic day' in choice of state Rep. Carroll as running mate".

"As Republican gubernatorial candidate Rick Scott officially announced state Rep. Jennifer Carroll as his running mate Thursday, questions about when he chose the Fleming Island legislator and the experience she feels she brings to the ticket were left largely unanswered."

Touted for her legislative experience, Carroll would not give many specifics about her time in the state House. When asked about some of her proudest moments as a lawmaker, she encouraged a reporter to do some research.

"I don’t only have one," she said. "I have many, and you can certainly look up my resume."

When pressed on her tenure as a member of the Legislature, Carroll cited her work as chair of the House Economic Development Committee.

"There have been many measures that we put in place that created jobs, that reduced tax burden, reduced regulations on many companies to enable them to stay afloat," she said, without giving specifics.

Scott tried to characterize Carroll as the opposite of a career politician, although she has been a legislator in Tallahassee since her election in 2003 and was the head of Florida’s Veterans Affairs Department before that.
"Many questions surrounding Scott-Carroll ticket go unanswered".

 

Lawson disses Meek

"State Sen. Al Lawson endorsed Gov. Charlie Crist for the U.S. Senate Thursday, saying "Charlie's always been there for us" when state employees, rural counties and universities needed help." "State Sen. Al Lawson endorses Charlie Crist for US Senate".

 

Crist releases internal poll

Daily Kos:

Given where public polling was on this race as recently as three weeks ago, it is hard to get a lot of confidence for Independent Charlie Crist based on the release of his own internal polling by Keith Fredrick. The new poll gives Crist a lead of just a single point, with Crist at 35%, Rubio at 34%, and Kendrick Meek well behind the pack at 17%. Crist did get some welcome news today, as he locked in a surprising endorsement in the form of state senator Al Lawson. Lawson just finished with a closer-than-expected primary challenge to Congressman Allen Boyd, one in which he challenged Boyd to his left. Lawson's defection is particularly notable, given that he is an African-American Democrat who is choosing Crist over Kendrick Meek, who is seeking to be the first African-American member of the U.S. Senate ever from the state of Florida.
"FL-Sen: Crist internal gives him (narrow lead), as he gains Dem nod".

 

Chiles will help Sink

Kevin Derby: "Lawton 'Bud' Chiles III made it official Thursday, pulling the plug on his gubernatorial campaign and endorsing Democratic gubernatorial candidate Alex Sink." "Endorsing Alex Sink, Bud Chiles Exits Gubernatorial Race". See also "Bud Chiles will help Alex Sink's campaign for governor".

 

Population growth

"Florida's population grew slightly in 2009 after a one-year decline broke a steady string of growth dating to the end of World War II, according to preliminary estimates released Thursday. The University of Florida reported the state added an estimated 21,000 residents in the last year, bringing the state's population to 18,771,768. From 2008 to 2009, the state lost more than 56,000 people." "After a year of decline, Florida's population sees a slight amount of growth".

 

Entrepreneurs in action

"Hallmark Industrial Services, a company dogged by allegations of immigration and worker safety wrongdoing, had been working on oil spill cleanup operations in Florida". "Oil spill contractor with immigration, labor woes was involved in Florida cleanup".

 

Labor Day Insult in the Works

Hilda Solis is "Fighting for Workers This Labor Day".

In the meantime, we will be preparing the latest edition of the "Annual Labor Day Insult". Previous editions are here, here and here.

 

Rivera allegations

"A Democratic donor from Miami has filed a complaint against state Rep. David Rivera, asking the Federal Election Commission to investigate whether the Republican congressional candidate violated campaign finance laws by 'coordinating' attacks on Democrat opponent Joe Garcia with a political committee intended to remain independent."

The complaint, submitted by criminal defense attorney William Barzee, alleges there is a link between Rivera's campaign and a group named Voters Response. The link, Barzee says, is Rivera spokeswoman Sarah Bascom, of Tallahassee-based Bascom Communications & Consulting.

Federal campaign finance reports show Rivera's campaign has not made any payments to Bascom.

Voters Response, a Florida electioneering committee that has sent out fliers attacking Garcia in the hotly contested race, has twice made payments totaling $3,000 to Bascom Communications, according to the reports.

"It's outside the rules,'' said Barzee. "It's wrong and it's avoiding accountability.''

Unlike Florida law, federal campaign-finance law prohibits candidates from coordinating their campaign efforts with third-party groups.

But Bascom and David Ramba, who heads Voters Response, said the committee is not working with Rivera.
"Democratic donor seeks ethics probe of GOP candidate David Rivera".

 

Bomb scare

"Miami Airport Evacuated After Bomb Scare".

 

"Suspicious financial arrangement"

The Tampa Tribune editors: "State Rep. Kevin Ambler's lawsuit may not undo his Republican primary loss to Hillsborough County Commissioner Jim Norman in the state Senate District 12 race. It may forever cast him as a sore - and litigious - loser."

Yet the effort could benefit the public if it serves to cast light on a suspicious financial arrangement that allowed Norman's wife to pay cash for a $435,000 lakefront home in Arkansas.

Norman says there are other investors in the house, and they want to stay out of the limelight. But no investors are listed on the deed, which is highly unusual for a real estate investment.

The 2006 transaction has been subject to all sorts of rumors, and Norman blames the accusations on dirty politics.

But he has refused to provide the specifics that could quickly put an end to the matter.
"A sore loser with good questions".

 

Right wing poll puts Scott on top

Daily Kos: "Team Ras-sie put both Rick Scott (FL-Gov) and Dino Rossi (WA-Sen) out in front today. The only poll that can come close to being construed as positive for Dems is the relatively small lead for GOP incumbent Sean Parnell in Alaska."

FL-Gov: Rick Scott (R) 45%, Alex Sink (D) 44%
"THE RAS-A-POLL-OOZA". The poll: "Election 2010: Florida Governor".

 

Florida bankruptcies up

"Bankruptcies in South Florida up 5.7% in August".

 

Campaign roundup

"Chiles endorses Sink as he bows out, Scott barely leads Sink in new poll, Crist won't say who should be the next governor." "Campaign roundup for Thursday".

 

"Unlike other schemes, this one's legal"

The Orlando Sentinel editors: "Unlike other schemes to disenfranchise voters, this one's legal. That doesn't make it any less outrageous. And it doesn't excuse legislators for allowing it."

In 1998, Florida voters, by nearly 2-1, amended the state constitution to open primary contests to all voters, regardless of registration, when the winner would not face opposition in the general election. The intent was to ensure that all voters could have a say in choosing their elected representatives.

But two years later, the state Division of Elections issued an advisory opinion that upended the amendment. The opinion said a single candidate entering a race as a write-in would be enough to limit the primary to one party's voters — even though write-ins don't have to pay a filing fee or collect signatures like other candidates, and don't even appear on the ballot.

Republican or Democratic candidates who have little appeal outside their parties would rather run in closed contests. And in the years since the Elections Division cleared the way, scores of primaries around the state have been closed thanks to write-ins.

Usually these candidates don't even bother to campaign. They have no hope or intention of winning. There's no obvious motive for them to run other than to close a primary. State Sen. Dave Aronberg, a South Florida Democrat who tried for years to close the loophole, said write-ins usually are registered with the party whose primary they wind up closing.
"Close primary election loophole".

 

"Legislature lavishes tax dollars on an influential few"

The Tampa Tribune editorial board: "An opulent $48 million courthouse being built for the 1st District Court of Appeal in Tallahassee highlights the hypocrisy of a Legislature that purports to be fiscally conservative but lavishes tax dollars on an influential few." "In contempt of state taxpayers".

 

Wingnuts go after Grayson and Kosmas

"For those few Florida voters unfamiliar with attacks ads, the latest TV spot by the conservative Americans for Prosperity offers a classic take on the genre."

It features ominous music, testimony from everyday people and unflattering pictures of its targets: Democratic U.S. Reps. Alan Grayson of Orlando and Suzanne Kosmas of New Smyrna Beach.

"Both supported Nancy Pelosi's liberal agenda," one grandmotherly woman tells the camera, moments before the ad condemns their support of the $787-billion stimulus bill.

Americans for Prosperity paid about $420,000 to run the 30-second commercial for two weeks on Central Florida over-the-air and cable stations. The ad is part of a nationwide campaign by the Republican-Libertarian group – underwritten in part by New York billionaire David Koch -- and marks the opening salvo in what's expected to be a barrage of spending by outside organizations in Florida before the Nov. 2 general election.
"Out-of-state groups to pour millions into U.S. Senate, congressional races".

 

Fl-oil-duh

The Miami Herald editors: "Lift liability cap for oil spills". Related from Paul Flemming: "BP payments remain a mystery". Meanwhile, "Gulf Blowout II Ripples Across Florida". See also "New oil rig explosion causes political firestorm in Florida".



08:29 RGA sends Florida GOP another $2 m check, Democrat governors answer » The Buzz: Florida Politics

The Republican Party of Florida is pretty broke but today the money is flowing. The party found $1,302,720 million to buy ads yesterday, another round of attack ads aimed at Democrat Alex Sink. According to The Fix, the cash is...

08:26 Little Florida Secret » Morning Martini

Have you noticed this year that the future hurricane storms coming off the coast of Africa are turning up to the north before they hit Florida? Have you wondered why the cone of uncertainty suddenly turns northward? Okay here’s the scoop. The state of Florida is flying a plane out into the storms while they are crossing the Atlantic Ocean and seeding the clouds of the storms with Viagra. So far, so good.

08:26 Scott returns to AIF, RGA reloads RPOF for attack ads, Dems answer » Naked Politics

The Republican Party of Florida is pretty broke but today the money is flowing. The party found $1,302,720 million to buy ads yesterday, another round of attack ads aimed at Democrat Alex Sink. According to The Fix, the cash is...

08:14 Verbatim » Pensito Review

I already have the votes to be re-elected as Republican leader, and will be re-elected.

— Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY), in an interview with ABC News, insisting he will not be challenged for his leadership post next year.


07:55 Question of the Day » Bark Bark Woof Woof

Labor Day is the traditional end of the summer -- although here in Florida it just means we're getting close to the height of the you-know-what season. When I was a kid, it meant back to school. Heh. Little did I know....
What are your plans for the holiday weekend?
Not much here at Chez BBWW; just some puttering around the house and enjoying the time to relax.

07:45 Tropical Storm Earl – Day 10 » Why Now?

Position: 40.0N 69.7W [10 PM CDT 0300 UTC]. Movement: Northeast [035°] near 25 mph [41 kph]. Maximum sustained winds: 70 mph [110 kph]. Wind Gusts: 85 mph [135 kph]. Tropical Storm Wind Radius: 205 miles [335 km]. Minimum central pressure: 958 mb ↓. Currently about 90 miles [150 km] South-Southeast of Nantucket, Massachusetts. Earl continues to weaken over [...]

07:30 Tropical Depression Fiona – Day 5 » Why Now?

Position: 31.4N 64.9W [10 PM CDT 0300 UTC]. Movement: North-Northeast [020°] near 16 mph [26 kph]. Maximum sustained winds: 30 mph [ 55 kph]. Wind Gusts: 40 mph [ 80 kph]. Minimum central pressure: 1013 mb. Currently about 60 miles [100 km] South of Bermuda. All Watches and Warnings canceled as Fiona weakens to a remnant low. [...]

03:10 Short Takes » Bark Bark Woof Woof

There was an oil rig explosion and fire in the Gulf, but no one was killed and very little oil leaked. Still....

Hurricane Earl starts whipping up the wind and waves on the Outer Banks.

Mideast peace talks get underway in Washington.

The Justice Department is suing Arizona Sheriff Joe Arpaio over failure to cooperate.

The Mexican drug war continues to claim lives.

Miami International Airport evacuated four of the six terminals and TSA has a man in custody after spotting a suspicious package in his checked luggage.

Tropical Update: TS Fiona won't come near land, and TD Gaston is moving slowly toward the west.

The Tigers win in extra innings against the Twins.

03:10 Old Times There Are Being Forgotten » Bark Bark Woof Woof

Mississippi Gov. Haley Barbour would like rewrite a little history and make it sound like it was the Republicans who brought peace and racial harmony to the South in the 1960's.

Visit msnbc.com for breaking news, world news, and news about the economy


I'm a few years younger than Mr. Barbour and I grew up in Northwest Ohio, so I can't speak to his experiences of brotherhood and comity growing up in Mississippi and going to schools and universities where they didn't think twice about integration. I can say that some of my first memories of watching the news when I was a kid was the coverage of the Freedom Marchers in Selma, Alabama, Sheriff Bull Connor, and Alabama Gov. George Wallace proclaiming "Segregation forever!" So either Mr. Barbour was completely blind to what was going on in or he's just making stuff up.

No one denies that the Southern Democrats were the party of the segregationists back at the time of Reconstruction. And no one denies that they started to abandon the party starting in 1948 with Strom Thurmond and the Dixiecrats and culminating with the Nixonian Southern Strategy in 1968, taking advantage of the passage of the Voting Rights Act and the civil rights movement. Yes, a lot of Republicans supported racial equality back then. And today, those moderate to liberal Republicans are about as welcome in the GOP as a wet dog at a wedding. (And as Eugene Robinson noted, how many black people in the South are Republicans?)

Steve Kornacki at Salon sums it up:
It's understandable why Barbour doesn’t like to talk about this -- and why most national Republicans would rather ignore it. The South is critical to them, and their support in that region comes almost exclusively from white voters. But to be a national party -- and to win the White House -- requires votes from educated suburbanites outside the South who have a strong distaste for racial politics. Thus, the party takes pains every four years to showcase as many black Republicans as it can at its national convention -- a message not so much to black voters but to white suburbanites who want reassurance that they're not voting for a Goldwater party.

This balancing act is especially critical to Barbour, who knows the suspicions he'll face from those suburban swing voters if he ends up challenging Obama in '12. If he can get them to believe his whitewashed version of history, it'll be a lot easier to win them over.
To co-opt an old bumpersticker I used to see with a tattered Confederate flag: "Hell, no, I ain't forgettin'!"

03:10 Friday Blogaround » Bark Bark Woof Woof

September already? Let's see how the LC slipped into the month.
- A Blog Around The Clock: the majestic plastic bag.
- Bark Bark Woof Woof: the real cost of war.
- Bloggg: Go Bug! You are awesome.
- Dohiyi Mir: hat boy.
- Echidne Of The Snakes: vote or not?
- Florida Progressive Coalition Blog: Oh, Crist...
- The Invisible Library: evil or stupid?
- Left Is Right: ...and that's the news.
- Pen-Elayne on the Web makes me think of the classic Honda ad... or Mousetrap!
- Rook's Rant is about firing Alan Simpson.
- rubber hose: I'll drink to that?
- Scrutiny Hooligans: thanks, East Asheville.
- Stupid Enough Unexplanation: maybe he is a Muslim.
- The Yellow Something Something
- WTF Is It Now?? -- no thanks to Bush.
Are the Republicans cruising Teh Gayz?

03:10 Deer:Headlights » Bark Bark Woof Woof

In a debate the other night, Arizona Gov. Jan Brewer turned her opening statement into what some would call a stump speech.


In theatre, it's called "going dry" or "going up on your lines." The follow-up interview, where she was asked about beheaded bodies in the Arizona desert, was even more painful.

Well, her supporters can say that she's not full of canned soundbites and she doesn't work off a Teleprompter. Oh, okay.

02:16 Weekend Zen » Talk to Me


blog post photo


Little darling, the smiles returning to the faces
Little darling, it seems like years since it's been here
Here comes the sun.

The Beatles.

Here Comes the Sun.








00:06 Friday Cat Blogging » Why Now?

What Now? Do you have to do that? [Editor: Tonto is a bit annoyed because her kitten is not picking up on the weaning process and now I'm using the camera. This is the kitten that was sleeping in the gutter erosion guard last week. Not a Mensa candidate. Friday Ark

00:02 Twitter Weekly Updates for 2010-09-03 » Deep Something

An Oldie-: What Just Happened – A Movie Review http://bit.ly/9IzJU1 # * "Leonard:You have paid into Social Security, but you are NOT saving money for yourself exactly. Social Securi…" http://bit.ly/d0FQZZ # An Oldie-: Why Are We Talking Torture http://bit.ly/cMJ8JI # Powered by Twitter Tools Related posts Spiffing up Deep Something a Little (0) Twitter Weekly [...]

00:01 Friday Catblogging » Bark Bark Woof Woof

"What's Yiddish for 'bedbug'?"

vants

00:00 More Bad News for David Rivera » Discourse.net

The Reid Report: Former donor files FEC complaint against David Rivera. Previously: This Could Be an Interesting Lawsuit (7/28/10)....

Thu 02 September, 2010

22:59 Jim Says Vote Yes » The Ybor City Stogie



Jim lives in Tampa and sees a real need to improve transportation choses in Tampa. There are many residents throughout Hillsborough County who are in need of alternitive transportation.

22:58 John Bolton For President » Pushing Rope

Every field as one candidate who is delusional enough to think he can be president. 2008 had Rudy Giuliani representing the Republicans and Dennis Kucinich for the Democrats. Giuliani goes around in drag and Kucinich as seen UFOs. It doesn't help that both men could play hobbets in the Lord of the Rings series.

An early contender for candidate with no hope for winning is John Bolton. He hinted to The Daily Caller that he might run.


“[I]t is a very great honor that anybody would even think of asking. I’m obviously not a politician. I’ve never run for any federal elective office at all and, you know, it is something that would obviously require a great deal of effort,” he said. “What I do think, though, and what concerns me, is the lack of focus generally in the national debate about national security issues. Now, I understand the economy is in a ditch and people are concerned about it, but our adversaries overseas are not going to wait for us to get our economic house in order.”

When pressed as to whether that means he would consider a run, Bolton seemed to suggest that he might do it, at the very least to help put national security issues at the top of the debate agenda.

“In the sense that I want to make sure that not only in the Republican Party, but in the body politic as a whole, people are aware of threats that remain to the United States. You know, as somebody who writes op-eds and appears on the television, I appreciate as well as anybody that…there is a limit to what that accomplishes,” he said. “Whereas, some governor from some state in the middle of the country announces for president they get enormous coverage even if their views are utterly uninformed on major issues.”


Imagine this man as President.

John Bolton

22:58 Divine Horsemen - Tenderest Kiss » Pushing Rope



I felt like posting another Divine Horsemen song. Check out the previous post.

22:29 Stalking, Arson, Stalking, Threats, More arson .... he still has his fireman job » Tampa's Back Door Ways ... (OR...)

Jacksonville Firefighter Arrested, Jailed for Stalking
JACKSONVILLE, Fla. -- A Jacksonville firefighter is in jail facing stalking charges after a woman told police someone harassed her and set fire to her car.
Bruce Edward Jones, 30, is accused of violating his probation against domestic violence and stalking. He was arrested Wednesday after investigators found evidence in his home that tied him to the victim's accusations.
Jones is an engineer and paramedic with Jacksonville Fire Station 50 on Beach Boulevard. A spokesperson for Jacksonville Fire and Rescue said Jones has worked for the department for five years.
According to a police report, Jones was arrested in June 2009 for stalking; the judge issued him a "no contact" order with regard to the victim.
On March 21, a friend of Jones told police the firefighter paid him to paper several cars in the parking lot of the victim's church with sexually explicit photos of the victim.
Less than a month later, the victim and her parents' cars were burned when a flammable liquid was poured onto them and lit.
On April 17, the victim found numerous mail-out cards discouraging businesses from working with her. In the police report, a witness referred to the action as "retaliation for pending and past court actions."
After investigating, police searched Jones' home and found similar mailers. Jones was arrested and is in the Duval County Jail on $125,000 bond.
Tom Francis, spokesperson for the JFRD, said Jones will be reassigned to an office job pending his release from jail and the outcome of his case. The JFRD is well aware of the trust that must exist between firefighters and the community, he said.
Jones will have no contact with the community in a public service role unless the case is adjudicated, he said.

WTF?????????

WTF???????

In tampa they just DISAPPEAR the cases and then the firefighters' daddies buy them condos downtown.

Makes for a swell neighborhood.
Truth about Tampa. Send this to everyone you know who loves the TRUTH~~!! Truth is violated by falsehood, but it is outraged by silence. - Henri Frederic Amiel Vote in the National Cheney Impeachment Poll http://www.usalone.com/blogvoices.php?Cheney%20Impeachment%3F

21:56 Stogie Recommends » The Ybor City Stogie

3 Days In September
The Beslan school hostage crisis was a three day hostage-taking of over 1,100 people which ended in the deaths of over 300. It began when a group of armed mostly Muslim Ingush and Chechen terrorists took more than 1,100 people (including 777 children) hostage on 1 September 2004, at School Number One (SNO) in the town of Beslan, North Ossetia.

Narrated by Julia Roberts

21:56 How To Hear Tampa’s Sound » The Ybor City Stogie

Many members of Tampa’s musician collective have been able to gain enthusiastic followers, but these fans hadn’t heard them on the radio or read about them in Rolling Stone. Instead, local artists have devised ways to market, advertise and introduce themselves within the busy Tampa Bay music scene.
here

21:56 Did Ralph Hughes Bankroll Jim Norman's Home? » The Ybor City Stogie

In the past two weeks, both a lawsuit and an ethics complaint have alleged that the late businessman Ralph Hughes bankrolled an Arkansas home for Hillsborough County Commissioner Jim Norman.
here

21:55 Rick Scott's Hysterical Medicare Attack » Pushing Rope

Rick Scott proved in the primary he is willing to use any baseless attack against his opponent. Scott sent out a mailer accusing Bill McCollum of being pro-choice and support gay rights.


"McCollum endorsed pro-abortion and pro-homosexual rights candidate Rudy Giuliani for president in 2008 and was a Giuliani campaign leader in Florida."


McCollum is many things. Being progressive on abortion and gay rights are not one of them.

Scott latest attack is Alex Sink wants to cut Medicare. I cannot even recall Sink ever making a statement on Medicare.


"This will be a contest which presents a clear choice between a conservative outsider with business experience and a specific plan to create 700,000 jobs and another liberal Obamacrat who wants to raise taxes, cut Medicare, and supports Obama’s failed stimulus."


I like to know how as governor Sink would have the power to cut a federal program like Medicare. Medicaid requires states to pay part of the cost. Medicare is federally funded. Unless the Florida constitution gives the governor power over the United States Constitution then Scott is just making this up. Politifact rated Scott's attack false. Scott is just gonna tar opponents with whatever will stick.

Scott also said he will make the extending the Bush tax cuts a campaign issue against Sink.



Does Scott realize the Florida governor does not have a congressional vote or the presidential authority to sign a tax cut extension. Scott is attacking Sink on utter nonsense. The only logical reasoning for these attacks is Scott has such a lack of policy knowledge on state issues that he has to attack Sink on something he knows. We haven't seen Scott attack Sink on collecting BP claims, water management issues, Kidcare, sales taxes or other issues that Florida's next governor would deal with. Does Scott even know what Florida's governor does?

Side note: considering Scott's former health care company Columbia/HCA was forced to pay 1.7 billion to the federal government for Medicare fraud; I don't think he should be attacking Sink on the issue of Medicare.

21:55 Meek's 'Meet the Press' trash talk » Naked Politics

Campaigning tonight in Delray Beach, Democratic Senate candidate Kendrick Meek raised the stakes for his debate Sunday against Republican rival Marco Rubio on NBC's "Meet the Press." "A lot of people running around here with low expectations, 'Oh my God,...

21:18 Video: Rick Scott and Jennifer Carroll meet the press » The Buzz: Florida Politics

Republican gubernatorial candidate Rick Scott may be a political rookie, but he's a pro at sticking to talking points and dodging questions he doesn't like. His new running mate, Jennifer Carroll, is pretty effective too. Check out their response to...

20:50 Kendrick Meek Death Watch: No Meek Bounce » Pushing Rope

The Crist campaign sent internal polling numbers showing Crist in the lead. Peter Schorsch and Joy-Ann Reid received the poll. The polling firm is Frederick Polls. The firm has Democratic politicians and unions as clients.

Charlie Crist 35%
Marco Rubio 34%
Kendrick Meek 17%
Undecided 14%

Reid notes the breakdown Florida Democratic jedi master Steve Schale said Crist needs to win in the general election.


33% of the Democratic vote
33% of the Republican vote
50% of the NPA vote.


I found Schale's post to be pure spin for Kendrick Meek. Schale is a smart guy. However, he is a Meek supporter and should be taken with a grain of salt.

Democrats turned out in a less than stellar numbers for the Meek/Greene primary. Marco Rubio received more primary votes than Meek and Jeff Greene combined. Meek cannot get enough Democratic voters to turn out to defeat Meek. The poll shows Crist at 55 percent with independent voters. Crist can also pull conservative Democrats in the Panhandle. The Panhandle is a lost cause for Meek.

Meek also has less money than Crist or Rubio. According to OpenSecrets.org, Crist has $8,039,870 on hand. Rubio follows with $4,494,981on hand. Meek trails with $2,644,511 on hand. The Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee isn't going to drop money bombs on Meek. They know this is a Rubio-Crist race and are going to spend money on protecting Harry Reid's seat and races they can win.

The most damning finding from the poll.


Kendrick Meek appears to have gotten little to no bounce from the Democratic Primary.


Team Meek loves to tell people that Meek win get hot any day now. It is September and he still trails Crist and Rubio. How is this different than January poll numbers?. The answer is Meek's poll numbers are worse. I like to hear Schale and Team Meek explain that.


20:13 There's a Story Here Somewhere » Discourse.net

These two emails were sent about two hours and twenty minutes apart. I could have endured a little bit more explanation in the second one. Email #1: from UM Police reply-to UM Police to CG_ALL@listserv.miami.edu date Thu, Sep 2, 2010 at 4:41 PM subject CRIME ALERT - University of Miami Police - Coral Gables Campus DO NOT REPLY TO THIS E-MAIL     Crime Alert CORAL GABLES CAMPUS September 2, 2010   On September 2, 2010 at approximately 1:15 P.M. two black males attempted to rob the Sbarro's at the University Center, 1306 Stanford Drive.  No weapons were displayed.  The subject fled without any property.    Subject 1:  RACE:  B            SEX:  M          AGE:  Early 20's. WEIGHT:  6' 0'     HEIGHT:  190                        EYES:  Brown   HAIR: Black Last Seen Wearing: Black T-shirt, White shorts with dark blue stripe and light blue trim, black sock and white sneakers.   Subject 2: Race:  B   SEX:  M          AGE:  Early 20's WEIGHT:  5'8"      HEIGHT:  140                        EYES:  Brown   HAIR: Black Last Seen Wearing:  Black cap, black tank top shirt, long dark shorts, black sneakers with light blue trim.   - Report all emergencies immediately by calling 911. - Report all suspicious activity immediately by calling (305)...

19:49 Out and About: Democrats Get Spun (Again) » The Spencerian

This week at work has been just insane, and next week is going to be pretty far out, too, so just get used to lighter posting than usual for a few days. On top of it, we're packing the kid...

19:48 Jan Brewer's Debate Meltdown » Pushing Rope

Arizona county coroners told the Arizona Guardian they cannot back up Gov. Jan Brewer's claims that there have been a rash of beheaded bodies. Brewer claimed illegal immigrants have come over the border and beheading Arizona citizens. Brewer spokesman Paul Senseman could not say where Brewer got her information on beheadings. The whole beheading story seems to be something Brewer made up to justify signing the ID bill.

In a debate, Democratic opponent Terry Goddard asked her to recant her statement that beheadings took place. Brewer side-stepped the question. After the debate, the media asked Brewer why she didn't recant her statement on the beheadings. She was also asked if she believed that the beheadings occurred. Brewer refused to answer both questions and abruptly walked out of the debate. Brewer had a Sharron Angle-style meltdown.



Almost as bad is Brewer's opening statement from the debate. I truly thin she was ad-libbing and had no idea what to say.



Arizona has a $700 million deficit going into the next budget session. Brewer is being disingenuous by proclaiming the budget balanced. Each new legislative session presents new budget challenge. If Arizona had a surplus then Brewer would have a right to brag.

Update: Brewer will not debate again.

19:48 Food For Thought » Bark Bark Woof Woof


Would you like to see that at your Labor Day picnic?

Photo by Balla Tamas.

19:33 Crist preparing new TV buy - mostly for Dems » The Buzz: Florida Politics

The Charlie Crist campaign has bought $517,000 to run from 9/7-9/19, we're told. All but $7000 in Tampa Bay cable time was for broadcast in the Miami (434 points), Orlando (430 points), Tampa (292 points), and West Palm beach (278...

19:20 Nightline is Coming to Talk to Me » Discourse.net

In a sign either that I'm getting stronger or that I'm nuts, I've agreed to be interviewed on camera by a crew from ABC's Nightline tomorrow a bit after class. They want to know about when it's OK to film and record people in public (and sometimes put it on YouTube). Many states — including Florida — have two-party consent laws requiring that speakers agree to be recorded (one-party consent laws only require that the person doing the recording consent). Oddly, most of those states don't use a similar rule for photos or videos, most likely because many of these laws were drafted with wiretapping/phone recording in mind as the evil to be controlled; state public policy is/was that citizens have a reasonable expectation of privacy in their telephone communications. But no one was thinking about videos, perhaps because video equipment was exotic and expensive; allowing photos in public is also consistent with the “plain view” doctrines that apply in the context of police investigations. But even on its own terms, the two-party consent rule runs into the First Amendment if the conversation is in a public place, and even more so if it is with a public official …...

18:47 Jennifer Carroll: Worse Running Mate Pick Ever » Pushing Rope

Rick Scott's running mate Jennifer Carroll has to be one of the dimmest office holders in Florida government. Carroll incorrectly filed that her financial worth was $202 million. Carroll was later forced to refile her worth being $2.02 million. Carroll forgot to add a period. Sadly it gets worse.

Carroll went to the Kensington University in California. The school is non-accredited; meaning their degree is a worthless piece of paper. The bogus university has no classrooms. All classes are taken online. The Los Angeles Times reported that in 1996 state regulators investigated KUC for committing "fraud on the public."


The school's first state review in 1994 found many problems, including routine acceptance of below-par student work, awarding inflated credit for so-called "life experience," and not having enough faculty.

In one case, reviewers found that the school awarded a doctoral candidate in psychology credit for reading magazine articles and doing about a dozen short reaction papers. A later report said the school also awarded doctoral degrees after as little as four months' work.


Carroll was forced to take her less than prestigious KUC degree off Florida House her bio.


``This causes me great concern,'' Carroll told the Florida Times-Union in 2004. ``It's a lot of time, effort and money poured into a university I thought was a viable program.''


Carroll didn't have the foresight to research KUC before she enrolled. Her stupidity is absolutely staggering.

17:44 FPL seeks to disqualify Commissioner Skop from their cases » Naked Politics

In the continuing saga between Florida Power & Light and the Public Service Commission, the Juno Beach-based company has filed a motion today asking that Commissioner Nathan Skop remove himself from any remaining cases in which they are involved. The...

16:55 Rick Scott looks to consolidate Tampa Bay insiders » The Buzz: Florida Politics

Rick Scott convened a private meeting Sunday of some of Tampa Bay's political leaders and insiders, a sign he's trying to extend his campaign strategy beyond television. Sitting around the conference table at the Hyatt in downtown Tampa were: Pasco...

16:49 FPL wants Skop removed from all of their cases at the PSC » The Buzz: Florida Politics

In the continuing saga between Florida Power & Light and the Public Service Commission, the Juno Beach-based company has filed a motion today asking that Commissioner Nathan Skop remove himself from any remaining cases in which they are involved. The...

16:41 Sink touts her 'detailed plan' for Florida economy in new ad » Naked Politics

In a new television ad airing on Florida's Panhandle, Democrat Alex Sink say that while we're fighting the oil spill we "have to diversify our economy starting right now." She says in the 30-second spot that she has a "detailed...

16:20 Borders CEO LeBow gives big to Crist 527 » The Buzz: Florida Politics

Bennett LeBow, a corporate raider who recently became CEO of ailing bookseller Borders, contributed $20,000 to the 527 political committee backing Charlie Crist's independent bid for U.S. Senate. Friends for Freedom and Prosperity also collected $20,000 from Robert Stork, a...

16:16 Focus on Your Family Wants to Maintain Right to Beat Up Gay Kids » Deep Something

That's right folks. The good christian people at Focus on the Family don't want schools to have effective anti-bullying campaigns because they want to be sure their kids can continue to beat up kids who are or are perceived to be gay. Oh they try to dress it up in nice words saying they want safe schools for everyone, but if you go around and tell kids it's not OK to beat up the gay kids, then you're teaching them that being gay is OK.

16:13 Sink airs new TV ad in Panhandle » The Buzz: Florida Politics

In a new television ad airing on Florida's Panhandle, Democrat Alex Sink say that while we're fighting the oil spill we "have to diversify our economy starting right now." he says in the 30-second spot that she has a "detailed...

15:38 GOP unlikely to remove Tea Party candidate from legislative race » Naked Politics

UPDATED: In a Leon County courtroom, the Republican Party of Florida made a last minute attempt to remove a tea Party candidate from the ballot in a Central Florida state legislative race. But time was an issue because the ballot...

15:38 Atwater to Feinberg: Don't compound problem with ineptitude » Naked Politics

In a harshly worded letter to the federal government's BP claims czar Kenneth Feinberg, Senate President Jeff Atwater bascially tells him: don't screw up. "I have become increasingly troubled by reports of delays in the claims process, artificial and capricious...

15:07 GOP makes last ditch effort to remove tea party candidate » The Buzz: Florida Politics

UPDATED: In a Leon County courtroom, the Republican Party of Florida made a last minute attempt to remove a tea Party candidate from the ballot in a Central Florida state legislative race. But time was an issue because the ballot...

14:51 Jeff Atwater adds to complaints about BP claims czar Kenneth Feinberg » The Buzz: Florida Politics

In a harshly worded letter to the federal government's BP claims czar Kenneth Feinberg, Senate President Jeff Atwater bascially tells him: don't screw up. "I have become increasingly troubled by reports of delays in the claims process, artificial and capricious...

13:32 Video: Bud Chiles endorses Alex Sink » Naked Politics


13:32 Sabato: Expect GOP take over of Congress, loss of 8 governorships » Naked Politics

The Democrats are likely to lose 47 seats and control of the House of Representatives in November's elections, a top political analyst says in a new forecast Thursday. Larry Sabato, a political scientist at the University of Virginia, also says...

13:32 Crist gets support from state Sen. Lawson » Naked Politics

Charlie Crist just picked up an interesting endorsement in his bid for U.S. Senate: state Senate Minority Leader Al Lawson of Tallahassee. Lawson, who just narrowly lost a primary race against Congressman Allen Boyd, would be the most high-profile Democrat...

13:22 Charlie Crist gets support from Democratic state Sen. Al Lawson » The Buzz: Florida Politics

Charlie Crist just picked up an interesting endorsement in his bid for U.S. Senate: state Senate Minority Leader Al Lawson of Tallahassee. Lawson, who just narrowly lost a primary race against Congressman Allen Boyd, would be the most high-profile Democrat...

13:13 Another Offshore Oil Platform in the Gulf of Mexico Explodes » Political Bloviation

Offshore Oil Platform in the Gulf of Mexico Explodes – NYTimes.com. Yup, they’re ever so safe. No need for any drilling moratoriums. After all that might cost some money.

13:13 Nonpartisan analyst predicts GOP wins back Congress, 9 Senate seats, 8 governor races » The Buzz: Florida Politics

The Democrats are likely to lose 47 seats and control of the House of Representatives in November's elections, a top political analyst says in a new forecast Thursday. Larry Sabato, a political scientist at the University of Virginia, also says...

13:04 Verbatim » Pensito Review

"And if I decide to run for president, I won't know what the answer is, either. But I will know this: if I run for President, what you see is what you get, and I am from Mississippi, I do have a Southern accent. I was a lobbyist and a pretty damned good one. ... And I will tell you this — the next president of the United States on January 21, 2013 — is going to start lobbying. He's going to be lobbying Congress, he's going to be lobbying other countries. He's going to be lobbying the business community. He's going to be lobbying the labor unions, the governors, because that's what Presidents do, and I feel like it's an advantage for me to have the chance to do that.

— Mississippi Gov. Haley Barbour (R), addressing how he'll handle questions about his former profession if he decides to run for president in 2012, according to GOP 12.


12:55 Chiles says he'll campaign for Alex Sink » The Buzz: Florida Politics


12:45 firefighters and drug lords » Tampa's Back Door Ways ... (OR...)

and look !! His daddy own(s)(ed) a bar, JUST LIKE YOU, COLIN.

Poire, the security spokesman, said Valdez maintained ties to drug gangs operating in the United States and Central and South America, and a series of arrests during the day in Colombia appeared to bear out that claim.
Valdez grew up in a middle-class subdivision of Laredo popular with Border Patrol agents, police officers and firefighters. His father was a nightclub and bar owner.
The former Laredo United High School linebacker became a small-time street dealer as a teen. His first arrest came at 19 in Texas, where he was charged with criminally negligent homicide for allegedly running over a middle school counselor in his truck while speeding down a Laredo street. He was never indicted.
Valdez later moved to Mexico City, where in 1998 he met Arturo Beltran Leyva, a drug lord working for the Sinaloa cartel, according to the federal police's counternarcotics chief, Ramon Pequeno.
As the Texan worked his way up the criminal chain, first in Nuevo Laredo along the border, then starting in 2004 in the Pacific Coast resort of Acapulco, he nurtured a reputation for extreme violence, including frequent beheadings of the Beltran Leyva group's enemies, Pequeno said.
By 2007, Valdez ranked
Truth about Tampa. Send this to everyone you know who loves the TRUTH~~!! Truth is violated by falsehood, but it is outraged by silence. - Henri Frederic Amiel Vote in the National Cheney Impeachment Poll http://www.usalone.com/blogvoices.php?Cheney%20Impeachment%3F

12:29 RPOF: Sink's hands aren't fully clean on 'Taj Mahal' » Naked Politics

UPDATE: As the two CFO candidates try to make an issue out of the courthouse, it's worth noting that Jeff Atwater voted for the bill and Loranne Ausley voted against it (she acknowledged to the Times that she didn't know...

12:29 Herald political reporter Beth Reinhard moving to Washington's National Journal » Naked Politics

Metro editor Jay Ducassi just announced this, Florida's loss but the nation's gain: Beth Reinhard, a Herald veteran whose stellar performance as our political writer for the past four years has earned the respect of her peers nationally, has decided...

12:26 Be Bold, Not Meek » FLA Politics - Front Page

Yeah, I know, it's a pretty stinky pun. But Kendrick Meek's lackluster, unimaginative campaign put's me out of sorts.
Steve Schale recently wrote a column (and followup) explaining that since Meek won the US Senate Democratic primary it was now impossible for Gov. Crist to win the three way race between the two of them and Marco Rubio.

The on-line Weekly Standard (along with others) quickly pointed out that this was a bit of wishful thinking by FDP true believers.

Their argument is that if right before the election Rubio and Crist are polling close together in the 30's and Meek is still down around 20, then you're going to see a shift in support going to Crist in order to stop Rubio from winning.

Meek seems to think that all he has to do is expose Crist's voting record and show that he's the real Democrat and everything will be hunky-dory.

This is ridiculous. We all know that Crist doesn't have a principled bone in his body, but his populist good manners still make him an appealing choice to stop Rubio.

What it comes down to is "Who cares if you're the REAL Democrat?"

Look, Bill McCollum was the REAL Republican, but he lost. Why? It rained on election day and that kept his supporters from the polls.

They just weren't that motivated.

Compare this with 2008 when people waited in line for hours in bad weather to vote for Obama. This is what I'm talking about.

Kendrick, if you don't engage people emotionally and motivate them to vote, you're gonna lose.

Quit talking about issue positions. Hire someone who understands marketing.

A recent poll showed support for Healthcare Reform dropped to 43%. In a two-way race that percentage is a disaster. In a three way it's a landslide!

But just saying you support healthcare reform isn't going to get that 43% to walk out the door and vote for you.

For that, you have to engage them emotionally. Or to put it in Rovian terms, you've got to get them pissed off!

How? This is what you say:

In 2008 we voted for Change. But rich billionaires want to keep their tax cuts and special favors. These thugs use their money to spread LIES about OUR president.

They have invested in fighting against the change that President Obama has been working to bring us, with Healthcare Reform and new Financial Regulation laws.

We can't let these fat cat bullies drag us back into the mess that the Republicans left us with. Don't let these goons mug OUR president. He needs people in Washington who've got his back!

Send a REAL Democrat to congress.

And stay off the Sunday morning news shows until you've got your new talking points down. Get out of your comfort zone. Go on Jon Stewart's show, inspire young people.

It's great you've got Alan Grayson supporting you. But YOU need to start acting like him. Don't forget, Jeb Bush's charisma couldn't save McCollum.

Don't just post HIS testimonials -- speak like that yourself!

Maybe then YOU can receive million dollar money bombs too.

Connect up with the MoveOn.org people. It's the activist white liberals you need to reach. Use some imagination.

Bill Clinton was fine for the primary, but for the general you need to get out from under his shadow and become your own person.

You don't want people to still be talking about your mother. You want them talking about YOU.

The way to do that is be BOLD. Develop an emotion filled, market driven campaign that engages and excites people.

Don't be another career politician chump who loses simply because the weather's bad on election day.

Get your people FIRED UP, and READY TO GO.


12:02 Arizona Gov. Jan Brewer (R): ‘We Have Did What Was Right for Arizona’ » Pensito Review

New York Times: [It] was 13 seconds or so of silence that is being talked about more than anything else. During her opening statement, Ms. Brewer began by defending her stewardship: “I have, uh, done so much and I just cannot believe that we have changed everything since I have become your governor in the last 600 [...]

11:34 Beth Reinhard heading to National Journal » The Buzz: Florida Politics

Very sad news: The Miami Herald's Beth Reinhard, a great reporter and terrific person, is moving to National Journal after this crazy election wraps up. Despite her penchant for inappropriate, off-color jokes, I'll miss her a ton. "For twelve years,...

11:30 State GOP says Alex Sink's hands aren't fully clean on 'Taj Mahal' » The Buzz: Florida Politics

UPDATE: As the two CFO candidates try to make an issue out of the courthouse, it's worth noting that Jeff Atwater voted for the bill and Loranne Ausley voted against it (she acknowledged to the Times that she didn't know...

11:27 Let's Check in with Ann Coulter » Stupid Enough Unexplanation

After all it's been ages since I did one of Ann's columns (almost a year). Lets check out her latest; how bad could it be?
Liberals say conservatives don't believe in civil rights. I say liberals are godless traitors. Why is one statement debatable and the other not?

. . . All liberals are atheists. Only the ones who have to stand for election even bother pretending to believe in God.

Not being acquainted with any actual Christians, they aren't particularly good bluffers.
Oh, now I remember why I don't bother with Ann Coulter. She's insane. She is, if she believes this stuff, certifiable. The larger question is why someone so clearly delusional is a prominent voice in the Conservative movement (although her star has been slipping for some time, she's still up there).

Alternatively she doesn't believe this stuff, but knows what her audience likes to hear. Which I have to admit is at least as likely.

11:26 Chiles, Sink now on the same team » Naked Politics

After three months of being rivals, Bud Chiles and Alex Sink are on the same team. Chiles endorsed Sink this morning at a press conference in Tallahassee. In a quick speech, Sink said she and Chiles shared common goals, including...

11:25 Marco Rubio going cruising with CPAC » The Buzz: Florida Politics

Marco Rubio will be a featured speaker during a seven-day cruise in December put on by the American Conservative Union and Conservative Political Action Conference. Also featured is Luis Fortuno, governor of Puerto Rico, Steve Moore of the Wall Street...

11:14 Recalling Rick Scott's pursuit of Tampa General Hospital » The Buzz: Florida Politics

Business writer Robert Trigaux's column today: Courtesy of ad nauseam campaign ads, many Floridians are familiar with candidate Rick Scott's denials of wrongdoing over Columbia/HCA's Medicare/Medicaid fraud (and the subsequent $1.7 billion fine) when he was CEO of the hospital...

11:04 Chiles’ exit evens the race, Rasmussen poll shows » March On Politics

A new poll from Rasmussen Reports shows that with Bud Chiles out of the governor’s race—a development announced yesterday but made official this morning—Sink and Scott are running dead-even statistically, with Scott leading 45 percent to 44 percent.

That’s well within the margin of error…


10:52 Alex Sink, Bud Chiles now on the same team » The Buzz: Florida Politics

After three months of being rivals, Bud Chiles and Alex Sink are on the same team. Chiles endorsed Sink this morning at a press conference in Tallahassee. In a quick speech, Sink said she and Chiles shared common goals, including...

10:43 Scott picks Jennifer Carroll for LG; Sink says voters look past gender/race » March On Politics

GOP gubernatorial candidate Rick Scott this morning named state Rep. Jennifer Carroll as his running mate.

Carroll is a 51-year-old U.S. Navy veteran who hails from the Jacksonville area, and the first black Republican woman elected to the Legislature. If successful in November, she would be the first black woman…


10:41 Joe Garcia Leading in Early Poll » Discourse.net

Joe Garcia's campaign (FL-25) just sent an email blast out touting the results of their latest poll: We just got the results in from our pollster, and it's great news for Joe. We are beating David Rivera by 4 points. No word on the actual percentages or the number of undecided, though. Campaign polls are always a little suspect compared to neutrals, but this can only be a sign of a likely Democratic pickup … maybe one of the few in the nation. Does the Rivera campaign have a counter-poll it is willing to release? Earlier: Joe Garcia Hits the Ground Running (8/25/10) David Rivera - Candidate as Demolition Derby Driver (8/18/10) More Dirt on David Rivera (8/6/10)...

10:37 Crist internal poll: Senate race a 2-way tie » March On Politics

The Charlie Crist U.S. Senate campaign is releasing an internal poll that shows the race a two-way tie between Crist and Marco Rubio, with Kendrick Meek trailing.

The numbers: Crist 35 percent, Rubio 34 percent, Meek 17 percent and undecided 14 percent.

The poll shows Crist and Meek splitting the…


10:11 Peter Claudio and the things he passes on » Tampa's Back Door Ways ... (OR...)

Mr. Claudio,

the one thing I have notice you give your child: When he stalks my cousin for you and Mr. Tome////
he walks like he has shit in his pants.

Just like you.

Imagine what a loser you are.

That you want your INNOCENT CHILD
to grow up the same small piece of shit that you are.

Everyone knows it's not cock of the walk.

Just so you know.

And you are a pathetic asshole.
Truth about Tampa. Send this to everyone you know who loves the TRUTH~~!! Truth is violated by falsehood, but it is outraged by silence. - Henri Frederic Amiel Vote in the National Cheney Impeachment Poll http://www.usalone.com/blogvoices.php?Cheney%20Impeachment%3F

09:59 A job for firepig OWNED DELINTZ » Tampa's Back Door Ways ... (OR...)

Why not take your buddy across the way, Chris Artigas along??? Oh, that's right .. you can't. He was murdered along with the ginas. How's his family feel about what you did to him? No one ever checked george bello's cellphone to see who directed him to that house while chris was there/??

Clothes dryer lint causes $60,000 house fire in North Tampa
By Danny Valentine, Times Staff Writer Posted: Sep 01, 2010 02:49 PM
There are 13 comments Oldest First Newest First Top Rated

WA wrote:
Must have been a heck of a lint ball, thats why they have to be emptied.
Sep 1, 2010 3:19 PM
2 0 Report Abuse

LePetomane wrote:
No such thing as a "set it and forget it" clothes dryer. Coincidentally, vacuum cleaners also have to be emptied.
Sep 1, 2010 3:40 PM
2 1 Report Abuse

kimmy wrote:
Wow wonder if she has ever checked it? I even go outside and stick a coat hander up in it to get lint out that sticks to the exhaust. Keeping the lint screens clean cuts down on the time it takes to dry your clothes also. Guess she doesn't have to worry about that load. Good she and the children escaped and no one was injured.
Sep 1, 2010 3:53 PM
1 0 Report Abuse

adumbyankee wrote:
her kids are probably morons also
Sep 1, 2010 4:02 PM
1 3 Report Abuse

willie_from_penniless_park wrote:
dryer lint and vaseline makes for good fire starters when camping
Sep 1, 2010 4:18 PM
1 0 Report Abuse

RocLob wrote:
I am still amazed reading these type of stories. Almost want to condone testing IQ's and start segregating the people who do not understand the basic concepts of life such as cleaning lint filters, turning off stoves, blowing out candles, feeding animals, etc.......
Sep 1, 2010 4:54 PM
2 0 Report Abuse

FL Cracker wrote:
I'll bet that 70 percent of dryer vent pipes are clogged with lint. it's a wonder more don't catch fire. people clean the filter by the dryer door, but don't even think about the vent pipe thing from the back of the dryer. who cleans that out? hardly anyone.
Sep 1, 2010 5:41 PM
0 0 Report Abuse

itsallpoo wrote:
Dryer lint is great for starting camp fires..but what's the vaseline for? I thought you put that on the door knobs when mommy and daddy are in the bedroom making the next addition to the family. Ducts should be cleaned occasionally, always stupid to run the dryer with no lint trap but you'd be amazed how many do. Kinda surprised I haven't had a problem yet since my vent tube doesn't go straight outside it snakes around the wall then outside. Just not something you think about until it happens to you I suppose.
Sep 1, 2010 5:45 PM
0 0 Report Abuse

Fugilebrity wrote:
$60k damage? Looking at the house at that address on Google maps, it would be a total loss, plus burn down half the neighbor's house.
Sep 1, 2010 5:52 PM
0 0 Report Abuse

fish wrote:
LET ME GUESS.....4 kids, no husband and poor domestic skills....Home ownership 101 tells you to keep your dryer free of lint and to clean the vent out a couple times of year...I bet this woman makes out on this deal through her landlords insurance. Also gets a free hotel for her and her 4 rats through the red cross....
Sep 1, 2010 6:21 PM
1 2 Report Abuse

MentosMan727 wrote:
DAMN!!! MY MOM WAS RIGHT
Sep 1, 2010 6:29 PM
0 0 Report Abuse

palinsbackporch wrote:
oooohhh they needs to call DELINTS it's a FIREPIG business run out of property that was code-enforced out from under the owner. Like most firefighter owned property. Coerced one way or another. Why doesn't it bother you people how much they OWN???
Sep 2, 2010 10:54 AM
0 0 Report Abuse

palinsbackporch wrote:
kimmy, by that same toke fireman spence roberts pours accelerants into hood vents for kitchen ranges. Next time you use your hood vent; WHOOSH flames shooting from the roof. So ... think of what one of these animals could cram in there to start a fire. It's just not within the realm of reality ..... someone helped it. Unfortunately there IS NO ARSON investigation in tampa florida which is why the firemen were shot by d'arcangelo. They were burning down peoples' houses. Ask around. They've just gotten worse. Google d'arcangelo. he wasn't a disgruntled ex-employee. He shot them because they would not stop burning down houses. I know the survivor.
Sep 2, 2010 10:57 AM
Truth about Tampa. Send this to everyone you know who loves the TRUTH~~!! Truth is violated by falsehood, but it is outraged by silence. - Henri Frederic Amiel Vote in the National Cheney Impeachment Poll http://www.usalone.com/blogvoices.php?Cheney%20Impeachment%3F

09:56 Rasmussen poll gives Rick Scott 45-44 lead over Alex Sink » The Buzz: Florida Politics

Rasmussen Reports: The latest statewide telephone survey of likely voters shows Scott picking up 45 percent of the vote while Sink draws support from 44 percent. Nine percent prefer some other candidate and two percent are undecided. Scott and Sink...

09:33 Crist campaign poll: Charlie Crist at 35 percent, Marco Rubio 34, Kendrick Meek 17 » The Buzz: Florida Politics

An Aug. 28-31 internal poll (with a margin of error of plus or minus 4.4 percent) for the Charlie Crist campaign points to a two-man race - Crist vs. Marco Rubio, who are virtually tied - while Meek remains an...

09:20 The best Scott can do? » Florida Politics

"Republican nominee for governor Rick Scott is set to name State Rep. Jennifer Carroll as his running mate. ... The 51-year-old Carroll served in the U.S. Navy for 20 years and was elected to the Florida Legislature in 2003. She would become the state's first black woman to be a candidate for lieutenant governor." "Scott will name running mate".

See also "Rick Scott's likely No. 2: Navy vet", "Scott to name Carroll as his running mate", "Rick Scott to name Jacksonville-area lawmaker as running mate" and "Rick Scott's No. 2 expected to be Rep. Jennifer Carroll".

We look forward to Carroll trying to debate Rod Smith, a tough lawyer who spent decades in the trenches of labor and civil rights law.


Oil? What oil?

"Republican House Speaker Larry Cretul shot down a special legislative session to study oil spill remedies, saying no urgent action was needed." "House speaker nixes special legislative session on oil spill". See also "Legislative Leaders Pull Plug on Special Session" and "Florida leaders kill plan for fall special session on oil".


The Cuba thing

"In a year when the political refrain is jobs, neither candidate wants to risk being seen as out-of-touch by emphasizing an issue that affects a vocal minority in the sprawling, diverse 25th congressional district, which stretches from Homestead and Doral and across the Everglades to near Naples."

Yet Cuba is a passionate point of contention in the fiery race between Rivera, a Republican, and Garcia, a Democrat. The two Cuban Americans -- who at different times each worked for the same powerful Cuban-exile group -- back the trade embargo and a ban on U.S. tourist travel, but are otherwise at odds on greater engagement with the island.
"House candidates David Rivera, Joe Garcia can't escape Cuba factor".


Scott's "steroidal disdain for the press"

The Orlando Sentinel editorial board: "If Mr. Scott really wants to get to work as Florida's next governor, ducking appearances and having his mother speak on his behalf is the wrong way to go about it."

The electorate deserves candidates for the state's highest office who won't just advertise but who also defend their policy positions in public. Instead, Mr. Scott has shown a disdain for debate and public forums that include his opponents. And he has exhibited a steroidal disdain for the press which, if it had the chance, would simply challenge Mr. Scott face-to-face in much the same way the public would.
"Rick Scott wants it his way".


"Goodbye, Charlie"

Rubio lapdog, Mike Thomas says "Goodbye, Charlie. Enjoy the time you have left." "Charlie is flipping, flopping, fumbling and losing".


Chiles effect is "not cut and dry"

TPM: "So what should we make of the withdrawal of independent candidate Bud Chiles from the Florida gubernatorial race, and his endorsement of Democratic nominee Alex Sink? At first glance, it would seem that this is a pure plus for Dems -- but a closer look shows that it's not so totally cut and dry." "Will Indy Chiles Dropping Out Help Dem In FL-GOV Race?".

Related: "Chiles drops out of governor race, throws support to Sink", "Bud Chiles to endorse Democrat Alex Sink for Florida governor" and "Chiles throws support to Sink in Fla. gov's race".


"Some pretty rough neighborhoods"

"If U.S. Rep. Kendrick Meek expects to win Florida's U.S. Senate race, his road to victory will run through some pretty rough neighborhoods."

Meek, who is polling a distant third in a three-way race with Republican Marco Rubio and independent Charlie Crist, finished behind Jeff Greene in 34 of 67 counties in the Democratic primary. In 20 counties, Greene garnered an outright majority in the four-candidate contest.

While Meek racked up landslide margins in his home base of Southeast Florida, the rest of the state proved problematic for the Miami congressman. If Meek has any hope of winning this fall, or even being competitive, he will have to dial far beyond his 305 area code.

A Sunshine State News analysis suggests that Greene voters won't necessarily come home for Meek in those counties. Even if the congressman stumps through Florida's rural counties where he performed poorest, he will face gale-force headwinds.
"Meek's Road to Victory Littered with Land Mines".


Party boy

"The Republican Party is supplying $2.5 million in advertising support to Marco Rubio's Senate campaign in Florida, a sizable commitment to a candidate the party once tried to push out of the contest."

The money from the National Republican Senatorial Committee is the maximum the party can spend in coordination with Rubio. A party official said the money will be devoted to television ads at a time that is agreeable to Rubio's campaign.
"GOP to pump $2.5 million to help Rubio in Florida".


"Hot issues in November’s election"

"The two major party nominees in the race for governor threw some jabs at education Wednesday, setting the stage for what will be one of the hot issues in November’s election." "Primaries Done, Statewide Candidates Focus on Education".


Teabaggers = RPOF

"Leaders of the Florida TEA ('Taxed Enough Already') Party chose Tallahassee Wednesday to promote their 21 candidates across the state and to endorse Rick Scott, the Republican gubernatorial candidate." "TEA Party Backs Rick Scott for Governor in November".



FCAT follies

"How FCAT will change".


Marco's "huge taxpayer rip-offs"

The Saint Petersburg Times editors: "Since St. Petersburg Times senior correspondent Lucy Morgan detailed the evolution of this palatial building, the Republican legislative leaders with their fingerprints all over it have been pointing away from themselves. U.S. Senate candidate Marco Rubio was House speaker when money for the new courthouse was approved. He claims that the project was a Senate, not a House, priority. That's not how everyone remembers it."

Intense lobbying for the building came from 1st District Court of Appeal Chief Judge Paul Hawkes and Judge Brad Thomas — Republican insiders with friends in high places. Hawkes is a former legislator from Crystal River, and both men are former staff members for the Legislature and former Gov. Jeb Bush.

Sen. Charlie Dean, R-Inverness, who was chairman of the House committee that oversaw court expenditures, said after he refused to fund the courthouse, Hawkes and Thomas enlisted help from Richard Corcoran, then Rubio's chief of staff, and from Hawkes' son Jeremiah, who was Rubio's general counsel. Dean says that the decision about the money was left to Rubio and his budget chief, Rep. Ray Sansom, and the final budget included $7.9 million to start work on the building.

Rubio is campaigning for the Senate as a fiscal conservative, yet his tenure as House speaker features two huge taxpayer rip-offs that rewarded political friends and associates: One is the $6 million set aside by Sansom for an airplane hangar for a friend and political contributor. Sansom now faces grand theft charges for that arrangement. The other is this unnecessary and luxurious courthouse that was originally slated to provide each judge on the appellate court with a 60-inch flat screen television and individual kitchens — accoutrements that have disappeared since the public attention.
"The palace and its parents".

The Tampa Tribune editorial board: "Alex Sink, the state's chief financial officer and Democratic nominee for governor, is rightly auditing the project. A preliminary review suggests the state may have tapped money originally intended for other uses, including $16 million from the Workers' Compensation Trust Fund." "In contempt of state taxpayers".


Stem cells

"Area lawmakers urge Congress bypass judge, pass law allowing embryonic stem cell research".


Send the check, just don't hug me

"Despite fierce opposition from GOP leaders, state agencies are seeking federal help." "Florida is going after millions tied to health care reform".


Outa here

"The threat of illegal immigration may have been a political flashpoint in the recent Florida primaries, but a new study suggests that fewer undocumented immigrants call the state home. The analysis by Pew Hispanic Center in Washington, D.C., found that more illegal immigrants have been leaving Florida than have moved in during the past few years. A small percentage have become legalized." "Florida's illegal immigrants have fled state".


Not enough

"In the wake of a rash of fish and bird deaths likely due to toxic blue-green algal blooms in the St. Johns River, there are renewed calls for standards that dictate how much nutrient runoff citizens and businesses can dump into Florida’s fresh water. The recent gulf oil spill brought to light the fragility and importance of waters on the state’s economy and ecology, but the ocean isn’t our only at-risk body of water."

The St. Johns has long suffered the effects of nutrient pollution, but the past several months have been undoubtedly worse than usual. Those fish and bird deaths, plus the sudden appearance of a bizarre foam, are just a few of the symptoms of nutrient overload, and it is becoming apparent that the agencies governing Florida’s water bodies need to accelerate the adoption of a stringent set of rules to protect them.
"FDEP workshop suggests the agency will recommend ineffective water quality standards".


Probably not a contingency fee arrangement

"Palm Beach billionaire Jeff Greene accused The Miami Herald and St. Petersburg Times in a libel lawsuit filed Wednesday of orchestrating a "plan to assassinate [his] character'' that cost him the Democratic primary for the U.S. Senate in Florida."

Greene, who lost to Miami U.S. Rep. Kendrick Meek by 26 percentage points, said the newspapers published stories about his real estate dealings in California and his 145-foot yacht Summerwind that were "knowingly based on false information.''

"Defendants . . . published the articles with the goal of destroying the personal, business and political reputation of Greene,'' the suit claims.
"Jeff Greene sues Miami Herald, St. Petersburg Times over coverage". See also "Losing Senate candidate sues St. Pete Times, Miami Herald for libel".


Fl-oil-duh

"BP oil spill claims czar Ken Feinberg has overpromised and underdelivered, Florida officials and others said Wednesday. Feinberg's new claims process, called the "Gulf Coast Claims Facility," isn't any more popular than the maligned BP process it replaces, members of Gov. Charlie Crist's Oil Spill Economic Recovery Task Force learned Wednesday, as they heard a litany of complaints from Panhandle claimants." "Despite critics, Feinberg says he's paid $17 million in 3,000 emergency oil-spill checks".


"Alternative parties hold some sway"

"If they voted as a bloc, Florida's third-party members could have a decisive impact on close races throughout the state, including some in Central Florida. More than 350,000 Florida voters are registered as members of political parties other than the Republican Party of Florida or the Florida Democratic Party, records show." "Alternative political parties hold some sway in Florida".


Ambler wants election voided

"Hillsborough County Commissioner Jim Norman has refused to discuss who helped his wife buy a $435,000 lakefront home in Arkansas, but a lawsuit by his political nemesis claims conservative activist Ralph Hughes was the source of the money."

The lawsuit, filed by state Rep. Kevin Ambler, charges that Hughes loaned Norman $435,000, which Norman never disclosed nor paid back.

Ambler, defeated by Norman in last week's Republican primary for state Senate District 12, wants the results of the election voided and election officials to declare him the nominee. Ambler argues that Norman was not a legally qualified candidate because he didn't disclose the loan from Hughes or ownership of two boats purchased in conjunction with the Arkansas home.

The Tampa Tribune has also learned from sources at two government agencies that the FBI has begun investigating Norman's finances in relation to the Arkansas house purchased by his wife, Mearline, in 2006. The sources requested anonymity.

Spokesmen for the FBI and the U.S. Attorney's office said they could not confirm or deny an ongoing investigation.
"Ambler claims activist Hughes loaned Norman $435,000 for house".


"Legislature’s deceptive efforts ... to amend the state Constitution"

The Saint Petersburg Times editorial board: "The Florida Supreme Court has properly responded to the Legislature’s deceptive efforts to get voters to amend the state Constitution to suit its political purposes." "Florida’s high court stands up for voters".


09:16 The Thing about White TRASH » Tampa's Back Door Ways ... (OR...)

They are like the other woman.

Always THE LAST TO KNOW.

Despite obvious indicators of : It SCREAMS IT when you walk by. LOL

Gurlz, you is nasty white trash.

Everbody BUT you ... knows it.

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jump to: navigation, search
For other uses, see White trash (disambiguation).
White trash or poor white trash is an American English pejorative term referring to poor white people in the United States, suggesting lower social class and degraded living standards. The term suggests outcasts from respectable society living on the fringes of the social order who are seen as dangerous because they may be criminal, unpredictable, and without respect for authority whether it be political, legal, or moral.[1] It is usually used, especially by blacks,[2] as a slur, but may also be used self-referentially by whites of higher socio-economic status to jokingly describe their origins.[3] In common usage it is similar in meaning to cracker (especially in Georgia and Florida), hillbilly (especially in Appalachia) and redneck.[4] "Redneck" applied originally to politically active poor white Southern farmers and by extension is today used to denigrate Southern conservatives.[5]
Contents[hide]
Truth about Tampa. Send this to everyone you know who loves the TRUTH~~!! Truth is violated by falsehood, but it is outraged by silence. - Henri Frederic Amiel Vote in the National Cheney Impeachment Poll http://www.usalone.com/blogvoices.php?Cheney%20Impeachment%3F

09:15 Florida Political News: Sept. 2, 2010 » FLA Politics - Front Page

Our digest of, and commentary on today's Florida political news and punditry.


The best Scott can do?

"Republican nominee for governor Rick Scott is set to name State Rep. Jennifer Carroll as his running mate. ... The 51-year-old Carroll served in the U.S. Navy for 20 years and was elected to the Florida Legislature in 2003. She would become the state's first black woman to be a candidate for lieutenant governor." "Scott will name running mate".

See also "Rick Scott's likely No. 2: Navy vet", "Scott to name Carroll as his running mate", "Rick Scott to name Jacksonville-area lawmaker as running mate" and "Rick Scott's No. 2 expected to be Rep. Jennifer Carroll".

We look forward to Carroll trying to debate Rod Smith, a tough lawyer who spent decades in the trenches of labor and civil rights law.

 

Oil? What oil?

"Republican House Speaker Larry Cretul shot down a special legislative session to study oil spill remedies, saying no urgent action was needed." "House speaker nixes special legislative session on oil spill". See also "Legislative Leaders Pull Plug on Special Session" and "Florida leaders kill plan for fall special session on oil".

 

The Cuba thing

"In a year when the political refrain is jobs, neither candidate wants to risk being seen as out-of-touch by emphasizing an issue that affects a vocal minority in the sprawling, diverse 25th congressional district, which stretches from Homestead and Doral and across the Everglades to near Naples."

Yet Cuba is a passionate point of contention in the fiery race between Rivera, a Republican, and Garcia, a Democrat. The two Cuban Americans -- who at different times each worked for the same powerful Cuban-exile group -- back the trade embargo and a ban on U.S. tourist travel, but are otherwise at odds on greater engagement with the island.
"House candidates David Rivera, Joe Garcia can't escape Cuba factor".

 

Scott's "steroidal disdain for the press"

The Orlando Sentinel editorial board: "If Mr. Scott really wants to get to work as Florida's next governor, ducking appearances and having his mother speak on his behalf is the wrong way to go about it."

The electorate deserves candidates for the state's highest office who won't just advertise but who also defend their policy positions in public. Instead, Mr. Scott has shown a disdain for debate and public forums that include his opponents. And he has exhibited a steroidal disdain for the press which, if it had the chance, would simply challenge Mr. Scott face-to-face in much the same way the public would.
"Rick Scott wants it his way".

 

"Goodbye, Charlie"

Rubio lapdog, Mike Thomas says "Goodbye, Charlie. Enjoy the time you have left." "Charlie is flipping, flopping, fumbling and losing".

 

Chiles effect is "not cut and dry"

TPM: "So what should we make of the withdrawal of independent candidate Bud Chiles from the Florida gubernatorial race, and his endorsement of Democratic nominee Alex Sink? At first glance, it would seem that this is a pure plus for Dems -- but a closer look shows that it's not so totally cut and dry." "Will Indy Chiles Dropping Out Help Dem In FL-GOV Race?".

Related: "Chiles drops out of governor race, throws support to Sink", "Bud Chiles to endorse Democrat Alex Sink for Florida governor" and "Chiles throws support to Sink in Fla. gov's race".

 

"Some pretty rough neighborhoods"

"If U.S. Rep. Kendrick Meek expects to win Florida's U.S. Senate race, his road to victory will run through some pretty rough neighborhoods."

Meek, who is polling a distant third in a three-way race with Republican Marco Rubio and independent Charlie Crist, finished behind Jeff Greene in 34 of 67 counties in the Democratic primary. In 20 counties, Greene garnered an outright majority in the four-candidate contest.

While Meek racked up landslide margins in his home base of Southeast Florida, the rest of the state proved problematic for the Miami congressman. If Meek has any hope of winning this fall, or even being competitive, he will have to dial far beyond his 305 area code.

A Sunshine State News analysis suggests that Greene voters won't necessarily come home for Meek in those counties. Even if the congressman stumps through Florida's rural counties where he performed poorest, he will face gale-force headwinds.
"Meek's Road to Victory Littered with Land Mines".

 

Party boy

"The Republican Party is supplying $2.5 million in advertising support to Marco Rubio's Senate campaign in Florida, a sizable commitment to a candidate the party once tried to push out of the contest."

The money from the National Republican Senatorial Committee is the maximum the party can spend in coordination with Rubio. A party official said the money will be devoted to television ads at a time that is agreeable to Rubio's campaign.
"GOP to pump $2.5 million to help Rubio in Florida".

 

"Hot issues in November’s election"

"The two major party nominees in the race for governor threw some jabs at education Wednesday, setting the stage for what will be one of the hot issues in November’s election." "Primaries Done, Statewide Candidates Focus on Education".

 

Teabaggers = RPOF

"Leaders of the Florida TEA ('Taxed Enough Already') Party chose Tallahassee Wednesday to promote their 21 candidates across the state and to endorse Rick Scott, the Republican gubernatorial candidate." "TEA Party Backs Rick Scott for Governor in November".

 


FCAT follies

"How FCAT will change".

 

Marco's "huge taxpayer rip-offs"

The Saint Petersburg Times editors: "Since St. Petersburg Times senior correspondent Lucy Morgan detailed the evolution of this palatial building, the Republican legislative leaders with their fingerprints all over it have been pointing away from themselves. U.S. Senate candidate Marco Rubio was House speaker when money for the new courthouse was approved. He claims that the project was a Senate, not a House, priority. That's not how everyone remembers it."

Intense lobbying for the building came from 1st District Court of Appeal Chief Judge Paul Hawkes and Judge Brad Thomas — Republican insiders with friends in high places. Hawkes is a former legislator from Crystal River, and both men are former staff members for the Legislature and former Gov. Jeb Bush.

Sen. Charlie Dean, R-Inverness, who was chairman of the House committee that oversaw court expenditures, said after he refused to fund the courthouse, Hawkes and Thomas enlisted help from Richard Corcoran, then Rubio's chief of staff, and from Hawkes' son Jeremiah, who was Rubio's general counsel. Dean says that the decision about the money was left to Rubio and his budget chief, Rep. Ray Sansom, and the final budget included $7.9 million to start work on the building.

Rubio is campaigning for the Senate as a fiscal conservative, yet his tenure as House speaker features two huge taxpayer rip-offs that rewarded political friends and associates: One is the $6 million set aside by Sansom for an airplane hangar for a friend and political contributor. Sansom now faces grand theft charges for that arrangement. The other is this unnecessary and luxurious courthouse that was originally slated to provide each judge on the appellate court with a 60-inch flat screen television and individual kitchens — accoutrements that have disappeared since the public attention.
"The palace and its parents".

The Tampa Tribune editorial board: "Alex Sink, the state's chief financial officer and Democratic nominee for governor, is rightly auditing the project. A preliminary review suggests the state may have tapped money originally intended for other uses, including $16 million from the Workers' Compensation Trust Fund." "In contempt of state taxpayers".

 

Stem cells

"Area lawmakers urge Congress bypass judge, pass law allowing embryonic stem cell research".

 

Send the check, just don't hug me

"Despite fierce opposition from GOP leaders, state agencies are seeking federal help." "Florida is going after millions tied to health care reform".

 

Outa here

"The threat of illegal immigration may have been a political flashpoint in the recent Florida primaries, but a new study suggests that fewer undocumented immigrants call the state home. The analysis by Pew Hispanic Center in Washington, D.C., found that more illegal immigrants have been leaving Florida than have moved in during the past few years. A small percentage have become legalized." "Florida's illegal immigrants have fled state".

 

Not enough

"In the wake of a rash of fish and bird deaths likely due to toxic blue-green algal blooms in the St. Johns River, there are renewed calls for standards that dictate how much nutrient runoff citizens and businesses can dump into Florida’s fresh water. The recent gulf oil spill brought to light the fragility and importance of waters on the state’s economy and ecology, but the ocean isn’t our only at-risk body of water."

The St. Johns has long suffered the effects of nutrient pollution, but the past several months have been undoubtedly worse than usual. Those fish and bird deaths, plus the sudden appearance of a bizarre foam, are just a few of the symptoms of nutrient overload, and it is becoming apparent that the agencies governing Florida’s water bodies need to accelerate the adoption of a stringent set of rules to protect them.
"FDEP workshop suggests the agency will recommend ineffective water quality standards".

 

Probably not a contingency fee arrangement

"Palm Beach billionaire Jeff Greene accused The Miami Herald and St. Petersburg Times in a libel lawsuit filed Wednesday of orchestrating a "plan to assassinate [his] character'' that cost him the Democratic primary for the U.S. Senate in Florida."

Greene, who lost to Miami U.S. Rep. Kendrick Meek by 26 percentage points, said the newspapers published stories about his real estate dealings in California and his 145-foot yacht Summerwind that were "knowingly based on false information.''

"Defendants . . . published the articles with the goal of destroying the personal, business and political reputation of Greene,'' the suit claims.
"Jeff Greene sues Miami Herald, St. Petersburg Times over coverage". See also "Losing Senate candidate sues St. Pete Times, Miami Herald for libel".

 

Fl-oil-duh

"BP oil spill claims czar Ken Feinberg has overpromised and underdelivered, Florida officials and others said Wednesday. Feinberg's new claims process, called the "Gulf Coast Claims Facility," isn't any more popular than the maligned BP process it replaces, members of Gov. Charlie Crist's Oil Spill Economic Recovery Task Force learned Wednesday, as they heard a litany of complaints from Panhandle claimants." "Despite critics, Feinberg says he's paid $17 million in 3,000 emergency oil-spill checks".

 

"Alternative parties hold some sway"

"If they voted as a bloc, Florida's third-party members could have a decisive impact on close races throughout the state, including some in Central Florida. More than 350,000 Florida voters are registered as members of political parties other than the Republican Party of Florida or the Florida Democratic Party, records show." "Alternative political parties hold some sway in Florida".

 

Ambler wants election voided

"Hillsborough County Commissioner Jim Norman has refused to discuss who helped his wife buy a $435,000 lakefront home in Arkansas, but a lawsuit by his political nemesis claims conservative activist Ralph Hughes was the source of the money."

The lawsuit, filed by state Rep. Kevin Ambler, charges that Hughes loaned Norman $435,000, which Norman never disclosed nor paid back.

Ambler, defeated by Norman in last week's Republican primary for state Senate District 12, wants the results of the election voided and election officials to declare him the nominee. Ambler argues that Norman was not a legally qualified candidate because he didn't disclose the loan from Hughes or ownership of two boats purchased in conjunction with the Arkansas home.

The Tampa Tribune has also learned from sources at two government agencies that the FBI has begun investigating Norman's finances in relation to the Arkansas house purchased by his wife, Mearline, in 2006. The sources requested anonymity.

Spokesmen for the FBI and the U.S. Attorney's office said they could not confirm or deny an ongoing investigation.
"Ambler claims activist Hughes loaned Norman $435,000 for house".

 

"Legislature’s deceptive efforts ... to amend the state Constitution"

The Saint Petersburg Times editorial board: "The Florida Supreme Court has properly responded to the Legislature’s deceptive efforts to get voters to amend the state Constitution to suit its political purposes." "Florida’s high court stands up for voters".



08:47 Rick Scott makes it official: Jennifer Carroll is running mate » The Buzz: Florida Politics

Rick Scott's campaign just sent this letter to supporters: I am so grateful today to announce that Representative Jennifer Carroll of Fleming Island Hill is my pick for lieutenant governor. She is the House Representative for District 13, which is...

08:27 Sink buys more TV time, Scott silent (for now) » The Buzz: Florida Politics

For a solid week now, Rick Scott hasn't appeared in a single television advertisement. It seems unfathomable to even turn on the TV these days and not see his shiny head, given how many ads he bought in the primary....

07:14 This Doesn't Register » Bark Bark Woof Woof

Media Matters reports that a right-wing radio station in San Diego polled their listeners to ask if "practicing Muslims" should "register in a national database."


According to MM, 63% of the respondents said yes to this unscientific poll.

Hey, I have an idea: why don't we give them little crescents that they can sew onto their clothes so we can spot them on the street? It's worked before with other groups....

Sheesh.

07:08 FBI investigating state Senate candidate » The Buzz: Florida Politics

In the past two weeks, both a lawsuit and an ethics complaint have alleged that the late businessman Ralph Hughes bankrolled an Arkansas home for Hillsborough County Commissioner Jim Norman. Norman wasn't talking Wednesday. But the St. Petersburg Times asked...

06:12 Simpson's Deficit » Bark Bark Woof Woof

At some point the White House is going to realize that having former Sen. Alan Simpson, the co-chair of the president's deficit commission, going around offending people is not going to work and they're going to have to send him back to Wyoming.

The last time it was people on Social Security. Now it's disabled veterans harmed by Agent Orange.

After all, they fired Shirley Sherrod for something she didn't say, so it only stands to reason they should fire him for something he did say.

06:12 Justice Ginsburg » Bark Bark Woof Woof

I have always admired Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, and this article by Dahlia Lithwick at Slate makes me like her even more.
Those who like to believe they have picked themselves up by the bootstraps sometimes forget that they wouldn't even have boots were it not for the women who came before. Listening to Palin, it's almost impossible to believe that, as recently as 50 years ago, a woman at Harvard Law School could be asked by Dean Erwin Griswold to justify taking a spot that belonged to a man. In Ginsburg's lifetime, a woman could be denied a clerkship with Felix Frankfurter just because she was a woman. Only a few decades ago, Ginsburg had to hide her second pregnancy for fear of losing tenure. I don't have an easy answer to the question of whether real feminists are about prominent lipsticky displays of "girl-power," but I do know that Ginsburg's lifetime dedication to achieving quiet, dignified equality made such displays possible.
It's called quiet leadership, and it works in ways far more effectively than you think.

06:12 He Said/He E-mailed » Bark Bark Woof Woof

I've been watching with interest the quarrel going on in New Jersey between Gov. Chris Christie (R) and his now-fired Education Commissioner Bret Schundler over who screwed up their Race to the Top grant application.
In an e-mail and statement provided to reporters this afternoon, former New Jersey Education Commissioner Bret Schundler (R) defended himself against charges by Gov. Chris Christie (R) that Schundler deliberately misled the governor over the events leading up to the state's loss of a $400 million grant. Although he would have been able to accept being fired over the error that cost the state money, Schundler said he was unwilling to accept any further character assassination.

"I will not accept being defamed by the Governor for something he knows I did not do," he wrote. "The Governor called me a liar this week. That was the last straw."
I'm sorry the school kids in New Jersey will lose out on some of the funding -- after all, the whole thing is about improving public education -- but who knew that screwing up a grant application would lead to headlines and a possible court case?

There but for the grace of the FSM...

04:06 Dishing Sarah Palin » Bark Bark Woof Woof

Michael Joseph Gross has a profile of Sarah Palin in Vanity Fair. Flattering it ain't, but then, you don't expect that sort of thing in a piece titled The Sound and the Fury.

There's the usual stuff that reveals cracks in her character -- she's a lousy tipper, she treats staff like dirt, and has a volcanic temper -- but in the overall scheme of things, sneering articles like this won't put an end to her parade of appearances and endorsements. Supporters won't be dissuaded, and if anything, it will reinforce the mindset that she is hated by the elites who read VF, which only makes them love her more because she upsets the "Establishment." To them, she's Aimee Semple McPherson, Huey Long and Abbie Hoffman.

Despite all the nasty things that the article reveals, I'm pretty sure that the Palin camp is secretly delighted to have it out there; it keeps her name in the headlines, and there's no such thing as bad publicity.

There's a school of thought that says that we should just ignore people like Sarah Palin and Glenn Beck who are so clearly into this for their own ego and the money. Giving them any attention only enables them. But I think we ignore them at our peril. You don't have to repeat and revel in the gossipy stuff about how these people are "in real life" -- do you really care that Sarah Palin demands a particular kind of Lear Jet? -- but the more we expose these people as frauds and manipulators, the more they dismantle their own credibility.

03:04 Short Takes » Bark Bark Woof Woof

President Obama met with Middle East leaders on the eve of peace talks.

Day of Discovery -- Police killed the man who held hostages at the Discovery Channel headquarters in Maryland.

The number of undocumented immigrants has fallen in the U.S. Gee, I wonder why.

August was not a great month for car sales.

Sore loser -- Jeff Greene is suing some newspapers in Florida over campaign coverage.

He's back -- Former Ohio congressman and convicted felon James Traficant has qualified for the ballot.

Tropical Update: Hurricane Earl is now a Cat 4 and looks like it might just miss the coast but watch out, Cape Cod. TS Fiona is staying away; the one to watch, though, is Gaston.

The Tigers lost in ten to the Twins.

01:14 Florida Legislature Denied Three Amendments » Talk to Me




Expect your ballot this Election Day to feel amendment-light.

The Florida Supreme Court affirmed lower court rulings and struck Amendments 3, 7 and 9 from the November ballot. All three amendments were conjured up by the GOP-controlled state legislature.

FOX News called the tossing of Amendment 9 aka Health Care Freedom "...a serious blow to state lawmakers..." who had hoped to join a list of states challenging federal health care law.

Too bad, so sad. The language read nebulous, promising access to health care services without waiting lists (what, where, and how does one access this supposed health care), to protect the doctor-patient relationship (an ethical given) and to guard against mandates that don't work (that statement in itself is a real hee-haw).

Basically, the 5-2 decision indicated the amendment was a bunch of misleading hogwash that conveyed nada.

Particularly sweet, Amendment 7--verbiage hurriedly slapped together by a panicked Legislature threatened by the specter of a Florida free of gerrymandered districts should Fair Districts citizen initiatives Amendment 5 and 6 be passed by the voters--went into the trash 5-2 respectively along with Amendment 3, which offered a property tax break for first-time homeowners (or not--A3 didn't clearly inform "...voters that the tax break applies only to property bought after Jan. 1, 2010." Ooops).

This could be the year we voters finally take Florida back.

***

Two guys longing for the Days of Jeb.

"It is a sad day when more than 60 percent of the elected representatives of the people of the state of Florida can't get ballot measures approved by the court, but special interest groups can."

--Mike Haridopolos, Incoming Senate President

***

"...it's terribly disappointing to have the work of the legislative branch demolished by a co-equal branch of government, especially when there's no express authority in the constitution for their doing so."

--Dean Cannon, House Speaker

00:59 Tampa's Own "Sleepy Vikings" » The Ybor City Stogie

Tessa McKenna - Julian Conner - Stephanie Pacheco - Ryann Slauson
Nicole Schleif - Sandi Streppone
info

00:59 Michael E. Arth vs. The Two Party Duopoly » The Ybor City Stogie

I have a new blog at the Orlando Sentinel. Now that Bud Chiles is dropping out, I will become the leading no party affiliation candidate.
here

00:42 Tampa Fire HOODS Psycho Terrorists » Tampa's Back Door Ways ... (OR...)

like this guy only they're not in prison yet.


Stalkers: The Psychological Terrorist
Print
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Courtroom footage is available for this story for license and/or purchase from the IN SESSION archives – click here.
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By Katherine Ramsland
Mr Hyde
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Stalking is not limited to star struck admirers. Thomas McCarthy, 43, was a fireman, husband, and father of two children. His friends and coworkers liked him, but he had a terrible dark side that no one suspected. He had violent obsessive fantasies that compelled him to follow adult women of all ages, learn everything he could about them, keep lists, and sometimes act on his fantasies. He might watch a woman sign a check in a store and catch a glimpse of her address; he might go through her mail or garbage to get a phone number. He had all kinds of ways to get the information he needed to feed his fantasies about what he might do to a particular woman and how he might accomplish it.
After he was caught breaking into the home of Peggy Kilroy in Lakewood, Ohio, according to the arresting officers interviewed for "Inside a Stalker's Mind", McCarthy told police he had stalked around 2,400 women. He had elaborate codes for what his target women looked like, and he might follow them for months, watching through their windows, learning their routes and routines, and even reading their records in doctors' offices where he cleaned aquariums after hours. What he wanted to do, he admitted later, was rape them, torture them, and cause them pain. One actual victim whose home he entered he subjected to bondage and a stun gun, another to the cut wires of an electrical fan. Although he went through several years of therapy and had even tried a drug that was supposed to diminish violent urges, nothing seemed to work. His fantasies and stalking behavior escalated.
Then in 1997, he spotted Peggy Kilroy in a supermarket and followed her home. He decided to break in one evening and rape her, but instead he encountered her brother, Brian, who subdued him and called the police. When he pleaded guilty to breaking and entering, he agreed to describe everything that he'd done and his detailed confession went on for two days. The detectives were stunned to realize the number of women that McCarthy had followed without any of them being aware of his activities. They had to wonder how many other women might be in the same predicament with as-yet-undiscovered stalkers like McCarthy.

Dr. Phillip Resnick
In fact, says Dr. Phillip Resnick of Case Western Reserve University, one in 12 women is stalked at some point in her life -- and men do not always do the stalking.
Truth about Tampa. Send this to everyone you know who loves the TRUTH~~!! Truth is violated by falsehood, but it is outraged by silence. - Henri Frederic Amiel Vote in the National Cheney Impeachment Poll http://www.usalone.com/blogvoices.php?Cheney%20Impeachment%3F

00:03 Stalking Tampa FIRE PIGS and cocksuckers » Tampa's Back Door Ways ... (OR...)



yawn.




They apparently, in their little pinhead minds, believe this to be the derring DO of like ... FEAR FACTOR.



What smoking assholes. One hopes they're getting their firefighter-organized crack and meth runs out of the way while they're at it. Doubtful they think that far ahead.... most of them appear to be on steroids.. REALLLLY bad thought processing



We neglected this activity for a long time ... they lie in wait. Like fat ass scott gonzalez. Him and one of his big hairy-ass ugly friends.



It's a fuck-ugly club from what I can see. You have to be beat almost to fucking DEATH with an ugly stick in order to join. That or spread your legs and be a low-life whore for the likes of a murdering, sleezy, scummy stalking, child-molesting tampa fireman.




Both these guys should have made the cut a long time ago. And piper fire should have the fbi right up their ass.



But considering they're ALL RELATED down there in alphabet land ...




This idiot angled in and almost wrecked himself to get in front of us this morning... an idiot WITH A GUN notice his way cool hunting sticker. Impressive. The bigger the gun the smaller the cock I think is how that works.

Definitely TRUE with truck, isn't that right scawtee??? You and your big rig buddy? Must have a lil wee weenie like you ..... soon as you got done were you off giving him head ?? That's what I heard. I heard you go down like a fucking whore.




Anyway ... oh I almost forgot.. if you enlarge the picture you can catch where the stupid pig was caught weaving in and out of our lane... faggin pussy probably getting head from scawtee firefighter/murderer.




That firepig above Ya7lz was behind the wigington fire you name it we'll burn it down truck ... which also likes to hang out with me at publix (hey martin, how's your CAREER IN MY HANDS going??? you shiney fat thug) ... you get where you can smell 'em. I'm the crazy one but they lie in wait and hop in the trucks that YOU BUY FOR THEM WITH YOUR HARD-EARNED TAX DOLLARS to follow my family and I around town...

this guy shoved behind us on the interstate until we pulled over and then roared by.

I've seen both these guys way too many times. Fuck em.

They don't like it that the arsons are hitting close to home but they just don't stop.

You guys emasculate yourselves EVERY DAY in EVERY WAY. There's not a man among you.

Seriously.

Stalking children.

You're such pussies you should sell yourselves for ten bucks a pop like the keler whores.

speaking of which... MAN that BITCH IS OLD, keller. LOL
Truth about Tampa. Send this to everyone you know who loves the TRUTH~~!! Truth is violated by falsehood, but it is outraged by silence. - Henri Frederic Amiel Vote in the National Cheney Impeachment Poll http://www.usalone.com/blogvoices.php?Cheney%20Impeachment%3F

Wed 01 September, 2010

23:59 Slopping the pigs of Tampa » Tampa's Back Door Ways ... (OR...)

well, imagine that. Took fifteen minutes for kevin beckner to use the SAD deaths of officers kocab and curtis and THE INHOUSE (MUMFORD AND DELGADO AND KELLER AND TOME gang) murder HIT of Officer Mike Roberts to suck some more money up and buy some votes, too.
Stay tuned. We've got a pictorial of the STALKING PIGS this is slopping.
Hillsborough commissioners approve fund for families of fallen police, firefighters
By Nicole Hutcheson, Times Staff Writer In Print: Thursday, September 2, 2010
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TAMPA — The families of police officers and firefighters killed in the line of duty will get up to $100,000 under a new county program.
Hillsborough County commissioners unanimously approved the First Responders Fallen Heroes Fund on Wednesday.
"We're looking at providing immediate sustenance for surviving families to honor the sacrifice their loved one has made for our community," said Commissioner Kevin Beckner, who spearheaded the creation of the fund.
Beckner is particularly interested in quickly making money available to families of first responders who are killed.
"It can sometimes take 45 to 60 days before people even see a check, especially with insurance policies," Beckner said.
First responders, including police officers, firefighters and paramedics in the county and its three cities, would be eligible for the benefit.
The county would allocate $200,000 annually for the fund. The money would be moved from a reserve fund that is normally used for emergencies to the county's operating budget. If the money isn't used, it would go back to the reserve fund and be reallocated the following fiscal year.
No more than $1 million could be allocated each year.
Payments are expected to be made to beneficiaries within 30 days of a death, Beckner said.
"I don't want people to be confused that we're sacrificing services or jeopardizing somebody's employment," he said. "This is coming from funds for catastrophic events and there's plenty there."
The county's reserve fund has a balance of $36.3 million, Beckner said.
Commissioner Jim Norman stressed the importance of getting financial support from the county's cities: Tampa, Temple Terrace and Plant City.
"I really do passionately think there needs to be a legal structure where everyone steps up for these families involving all municipalities," Norman said.
None of the three cities have committed funds to the county's fallen heroes fund yet.
"We are in the process of finalizing our annual budget, and funding for that project isn't immediately available," said Temple Terrace spokesman Mike Dunn, adding that they would like to hear more about the idea from Beckner.
Private funds also will be raised for the county's fallen heroes program and county employees will be able to contribute automatically from their paychecks.
A virtual memorial tribute is also in the works for those killed in the line of duty. The names of those killed since 1885 along with their pictures, obituaries and eulogies would be included. The site is currently under construction.
As it stands now, beneficiaries of first responders killed in the line of duty are entitled to a combination of public and union funds. Children generally receive money for college, funeral expenses are covered and a portion of the officer's pension is paid to the family. The Florida Police Benevolent Association also pays $30,000 to the families of its members who are killed in the line of duty. Private money can also play a big role.
In the most recent case, more than $300,000 was collected through fundraising for the families of slain Tampa Officers David Curtis and Jeffrey Kocab. Each widow also qualified for more than $700,000 in government, union and pension money.
Nicole Hutcheson can be reached at nhutcheson@sptimes.com or (813) 226-3405.[Last modified: Sep 01, 2010 11:42 PM] Click here for reuse options! Copyright 2010 St. Petersburg Times
There are 7 comments Oldest First Newest First Top Rated

sidney wrote:
Good thing that the annuities for the families of the fallen were listed. Gilding the lilly in this case and far too much. But hey, we support illegitimate kids, tons from one idiot, so what's another few hundred thousand?
Sep 1, 2010 12:27 PM
2 1 Report Abuse

mytwocents wrote:
Maybe this is something the unions of those that "sacrifice for their community" should consider doing instead of the county.
Many of these are paid well, enjoy great benefits, pensions, free programs, etc., etc.,
Sep 1, 2010 2:05 PM
2 2 Report Abuse

vennboy wrote:
i hope beckner and norman each give up a house and a car for this fund. When my father was murdered we just sat and waited. My mother alone with FOUR OF US. That's all I'm saying. Was my father less a hero? As well, look for more officers to be killed. They're buying the families in advance. If you fail to see my meaning please check what U.S. soldiers' families get now.
Sep 1, 2010 2:44 PM
2 2 Report Abuse

Tampa605 wrote:
Putting money in a fund for families that will already be well taken care of through good insurance policies, perpetual state retirement benefits, healthcare for life, and other community funds, while laying people off...sounds ridiculous to me. I am thankful for everything the police do for us but for example the two widows of the TPD officers who recently died will each see over $600,000 from insurance and other community funds PLUS free health insurance and state retirement benefits for life.
Sep 1, 2010 5:15 PM
0 1 Report Abuse

somethingtosay wrote:
Beckner is buying votes for 2012; He is as pathetic as the rest of them. One term is more than enough. Why enrich someone who is already taken care of while taking food out of the mouths of others. Not one deputy or firefighter was in the audience to cheer him on, because they know how excessive this is.
Sep 1, 2010 8:59 PM
0 1 Report Abuse

mattgordonmd wrote:
I can see some short-term assistance in re: bill paying and such. The union-negotiated life insurance policies, pensions, etc., are far more generous than the vast majority of people receive.
Sep 2, 2010 12:20 AM
0 0 Report Abuse

firemanarsonisspenceroberts wrote:
My family will enjoy that one hundred grand. almost as much as i snuck out the back door.
Sep 2, 2010 12:58 AM
0 0 Report Abuse

Have your say...
Truth about Tampa. Send this to everyone you know who loves the TRUTH~~!! Truth is violated by falsehood, but it is outraged by silence. - Henri Frederic Amiel Vote in the National Cheney Impeachment Poll http://www.usalone.com/blogvoices.php?Cheney%20Impeachment%3F

23:56 Fox News Boycott! » The Ybor City Stogie

here

22:53 What Stogie Had For Dinner » The Ybor City Stogie

911 Hot Wings
$7.95.....At My Place, 4944 E. Busch Blvd, Tampa
How Much Was Your Last Value Meal?
Eat Local!

22:53 Gulf Health Problems Blamed On Dispersed Oil » The Ybor City Stogie



BP says it is no longer using toxic dispersants to break up the Gulf of Mexico oil spill. Gulf Coast residents claim otherwise, and say they have the sicknesses to prove it.

22:53 Get Well Leslie Curran » The Ybor City Stogie

here

22:53 Community Harvest Program » The Ybor City Stogie



In the month of September, Columbia Restaurant will donate 5 percent their earnings to a charity of the customer's choosing.

22:51 Looking back at what we’ve done. » Florida Progressive Coalition Blog

Citizens, With the end of combat in Iraq, Lets not forget the pain we burned through ignorance, for example: The same people that attack Democrats & Progressives over their “Their God Given Rights” Attack others for using it in was that don’t support their own cause. Be Safe Citizens, Storm

21:49 Years Of MoveOn Members Work To End The War » The Ybor City Stogie

here

20:57 Why Rick Scott is picking Jennifer Carroll » The Buzz: Florida Politics

In choosing Jennifer Carroll as his running mate, Rick Scott, himself a Navy veteran, would get a woman with a distinctive personal story who could neutralize the gender appeal of his Democratic opponent, Chief Financial Officer Alex Sink: • In...

19:19 New Reagan-Rostys » FLA Politics - Front Page

With the recent passing of former U.S. Congressman Dan Rostenkowski (D., Ill.) one could not help but remember his leadership in helping pass the historic tax reform of 1986.  Democrat Rosty teamed up with Republican President Ronald Reagan to do what most said could not be done.  It was a perfect combination of political powerhouses that made it work.  Are there other bi-partisan combinations who could again pass tax reform today?  Possibilities?

Republicans:  Bob Dole, George Shultz, Pete Peterson, and Howard Baker.

Democrats:  Sam Nunn, John Breaux, Mario Cumo, and Bob Graham.

Two that don't work are Eskine Bowles and Alan Simpson.



18:49 President Palin » Florida Progressive Coalition Blog

Citizens, First and foremost, Gonna try to get back on the ball. Had to take some time to lick my wounds cause kids let me tell you, This is how it ended for me: Overkill: Always a Good Decision Not gonna lie, That kinda stings. On a different topic, Now that Jeff Greene knows his [...]

17:25 An Inside Job » Florida Progressive Coalition Blog


16:54 Big News From Tallahassee » Discourse.net

One of the big stories of the day is buried in my newspaper, on the inside of the Metro section: 3 amendments kept off Florida ballot. Yes, the Florida Supreme Court ruled that would-be Amendments 3, 7 and 9 will not be on the November ballot, but Amendments 5 and 6 will be. That means that the fair redistricting amendments pushed by Fair Districts Florida and supported by a massive numb er of voter signatures will be before the voters, but the sneaky underhanded attempt by the legislature to instantly undermine them (in Amendment 7) will not be. As the court of appeals noted, the summary of the amendment was so confusing even lawyers and judges couldn't figure it out. This is a big deal, as Amendments 5 and 6 have the potential to be transformative and to fix one of the biggest things wrong with Florida politics: the very partisan gerrymandering of our electoral districts.l Amendment 9 was an attempt to get out the Republican vote by offering a meaningless attempt to block part of Obama's healthcare program. It was meaningless and deceptive because the US Constitution contains something called the Supremacy Clause, which makes federal legislation trump state...

16:28 Thurman Statement on Bud Chiles Withdrawing From Governor's Race » Change In Tallahassee


Florida Democratic Party Chair Karen Thurman released the following statement reacting to Bud Chiles announcement that he is withdrawing from the Governor's race:

"During his campaign for governor, Bud Chiles reminded Floridians of the values he and his family have dedicated lifetimes of service to our state fighting for -- such as cleaning up the Republican culture of corruption in Tallahassee, working to improve Florida's public schools, and advocating for children across the Sunshine State.

"By withdrawing from the race and supporting Alex Sink, Bud allows Floridians to be fully united behind Alex, the new and different leader we need to bring jobs to our state using her 26 years of business experience."


16:21 Ferlita picks up endorsement from county’s firefighters » March On Politics

In her bid to become Tampa’s next mayor, Hillsborough County Commissioner Rose Ferlita has picked up a coveted endorsement from the union representing the county’s firefighters.

In a statement released Wednesday by Ferlita’s campaign, George Sucarichi, President of the Hillsborough County Fire Fighters local 2294, said the endorsement…


16:09 It’s official; Bud Chiles dropping out and endorsing Sink » March On Politics

Independent gubernatorial candidate Lawton “Bud” Chiles III is dropping out of the race and endorsing Democratic candidate Alex Sink.

Rumors and speculation have circulated for days, both in the press and political circles, that Chiles would abandon his uphill race to the governor’s mansion. Many Democrats have feared that Chiles,…


14:39 Bud Chiles to leave governor's race, support Alex Sink » The Buzz: Florida Politics

Bud Chiles has officially said he will get out of the governor's race and plans to endorse Democrat Alex Sink tomorrow at a press conference in Tallahassee. Chiles met Tuesday with Sink in Fort Lauderdale and began telling supporters of...

13:51 First Scott-Sink debate expected to focus on children's issues » The Buzz: Florida Politics

The first-ever gubernatorial debate to focus solely on the future of Florida's children will be held next month at the University of Miami, and organizers expect Democrat Alex Sink and Republican Rick Scott to participate. Working as partners with UM,...

13:34 Much ado about special session turned out to be nothing » March On Politics

Well, so much for that. House Speaker Larry Cretul and Senate President Jeff Atwater have no plans now to hold a special legislative session this fall to address Florida’s response to the Deepwater Horizon oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico.

When House and Senate members quit the July…


12:42 Rubio getting $2.5m from national GOP » March On Politics

Marco Rubio’s campaign confirmed today that he’s getting $2.5 million from the National Republican Senatorial Committee, the arm of the national party that campaigns for Senate candidates.

Party spokesman Alex Burgos couldn’t provide details on what form the contribution would take, but said it likely would be in the form…


12:39 Mike Haridopolos continues remake of Senate with hire of former PSC chairman » The Buzz: Florida Politics

Contining his remake of the Senate staff, Sen. Mike Haridopolos, the Senate's designated incoming president, has hired former Public Service Commission chairman Matt Carter to be staff director of the Senate Communications, Energy, and Public Utilities Committee and gave him...

11:54 Task force takes oil spill czar Kenneth Feinberg to task over claims decisions » The Buzz: Florida Politics

After hearing from Russell Kent of the attorney general's office about all the disagreements they're having with oil spill claims czar Kenneth Feinberg, who doesn't think that many of the businesses affected by the plunge in tourism should be compensated,...

11:09 BP's $93 million ad blitz » The Buzz: Florida Politics

BP spent $93 million on advertising from April through July, more than three times what it spent during the same period in 2009, according to information provided to a House committee at the request of Rep. Kathy Castor, D-Tampa. "While...

10:39 Updated: Jeff Atwater 'clearly disappointed' on oil session » The Buzz: Florida Politics

UPDATED: Senate President Jeff Atwater said Wednesday he is "clearly disappointed" that the House is unwilling to consider relief for those impacted by the oil spill. "I have that urgency," he said in an interview. "I feel there is an...

10:33 First-ever children's issues debate proposed » The Buzz: Florida Politics

The Children's Movement of Florida, in association with the University of Miami, announced Wednesday that it will host the first-ever gubernatorial debate devoted exclusively to the needs of Florida's children. The Oct. 16 debate between major gubernatorial candidates will be...

10:23 House speaker doesn't see need for special session » The Buzz: Florida Politics

House Speaker Larry Cretul issued a memo to lawmakers Wednesday that suggests a special session to address the oil spill is not necessary. Cretul stopped short of nixing the idea altogether, but his intent is clear in his tone: "It...

10:07 'Florida Thinks' is no more » The Buzz: Florida Politics

That’s the word from John Koenig, editor of Florida Thinks, an online service that attempted to entice readers with editorial pieces on serious Florida issues. Koenig announced the demise of the experiment Wednesday with an e-mail to subscribers. “'Florida Thinks'...

10:04 Loranne Ausley hits Jeff Atwater for SB 6 support » The Buzz: Florida Politics

Ah, it seems so long ago -- Gov. Charlie Crist was a Republican and he spurned his party by vetoing the teacher merit pay bill, SB 6. Afterward, he was showered with support from teachers and many in the education...

10:01 Juan Zapata predicts Rep. Jennifer Carroll for Rick Scott's running mate » The Buzz: Florida Politics

Juan Zapata, seen as a serious contender to be Rick Scott's running mate, said he probably wouldn't take the job if it were offered to him. "I'm pretty much done with Tallahassee." He said there's a last-minute push for Kim...

09:32 Vanity Fair Does Palin » Discourse.net

A very good read: Sarah Palin the Sound and the Fury. Full of creepy personal details. And this: For messaging strategy, Palin relies on William Kristol, editor of The Weekly Standard, and Fred Malek, who was an aide to Presidents Richard Nixon and George H. W. Bush. It is actually hard to imagine a worse combination (although I will admit preemptively that it is undoubtedly possible): one stupid and venal, the other evil. Yes, it's that Fred Malek....

08:50 Source: Rep. Jennifer Carroll to be Rick Scott's running mate » The Buzz: Florida Politics

Campaigning in Jacksonville on Tuesday night, Republican nominee for governor Rick Scott said he has "pretty much" made up his mind on his choice for a lieutenant governor running mate. A well-placed Republican source said Scott had a short list...

08:14 Kendrick Meek's first radio ad goes after Charlie Crist, the 'Jeb Bush Republican' » The Buzz: Florida Politics

Kendrick Meek uses Charlie Crist's words against him in this first radio ad of the general election. Listen here / script below. Kendrick Meek:
 I'm Kendrick Meek, candidate for Senate, and I approve this message. Announcer: 
Home is where the...

07:56 Chiles drops bid, boosting Sink campaign » Florida Politics

"In a sign of relief for Democrats,"
Lawton "Bud'' Chiles III is expected to abandon his independent bid for governor.His departure would make it a two-way race between Democrat Alex Sink and Republican Rick Scott -- a contest in which Chiles, a former Democrat, was expected to play spoiler.
"With `spoiler' out of race, it's a one-on-one matchup". See also"" and "Reports: Bud Chiles dropping independent bid for Florida governor".


No wonder Jebbie likes Scott

The irrelevant "Jeb!" Bush has discovered he loves Rick Scott.

"Republican gubernatorial nominee Rick Scott is prepared to be Florida's next governor and has the background for the job, former Gov. Jeb Bush told some 200 GOP loyalists Tuesday. Bush, who was Florida's governor from 1999-2007, formally joined ranks with the Republican nominee at a Republican Party unity rally in Jacksonville after supporting Attorney General Bill McCollum in last week's primary."

Mississippi Gov. Haley Barbour, head of the Republican Governors Association, joined Scott and about 200 mostly elderly supporters at a Miami-area community center.

Scott's campaign called the appearances a "unity tour," a week after a terse exchange between Scott and the governors' group over a primary ad attacking McCollum.

Senate President Jeff Atwater and incoming House Speaker Dean Cannon emphasized Republican teamwork was needed to send Scott to the governor's mansion in November instead of members of what they called "Obama's team."
"Republican leaders mend fences in Fla. with Scott". See also "Jeb Bush: Scott prepared to be governor".

But Jebbie's new found love for the fraudster really isn't much of a surprise. After all, in Jebbie's first publicized business activity since leaving office, "Jeb!" hooked up with ... you guessed it ... a company that had just paid $900 million to settle allegations of Medicare fraud.

As reported at the time,
former Gov. Jeb Bush is joining the board of Tenet Healthcare, the national hospital that has been working to clean up its image and performance since dealing with widespread allegations of fraud. ...

The hospital chain has been struggling to emerge from a series of legal and financial problems. Earlier, it paid $10 million to settle a Securities and Exchange Commission investigation into Medicare fraud allegations. Last year, it reached an agreement with the federal government to pay $900 million to settle allegations of Medicare fraud.
"Jeb Bush joins Tenet board of directors".

According to Forbes, Bush remains on the Tenet Healthcare Corporation board; his most recent reported total compensation from Tenet was $241,046.00.


Florida in the front lines

"Needing to pick up 39 seats to take control from the Democrats, Republicans are dreaming of picking up more U.S. House seats -- and Florida is in the front line of their effort to take the gavel from U.S. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi as they focus on four possibilities to pick up seats." "Florida Becoming Front Line in Battle for Congress".


Special session needed

The Tallahassee Democrat editorial board: "Is the time for a special legislative session that in July Speaker Larry Cretul and Senate President Jeff Atwater said would be more appropriate in September? No." "Our Opinion: Special session on oil issues deserves full attention".


"A blow to Republican legislative leaders"

"The Florida Supreme Court on Tuesday upheld lower-court decisions to remove three legislatively drafted constitutional amendments dealing with property tax breaks, redistricting and the federal health-care reform from the Nov. 2 ballot."

Leon County judges had removed Amendments 3, 7 and 9 from the ballot this summer because they deemed their summaries for voters to be too confusing — and a majority of the justices on Florida’s high court agreed, delivering a blow to Republican legislative leaders who had pushed the measures.

Earlier this month, House Speaker-designate Dean Cannon took the unusual step of appearing before the court to defend Amendment 7, which would have given lawmakers broader power to draw political districts regardless of other standards currently in the Constitution. Critics said it would have also weakened Amendments 5 and 6, which are also on the ballot and seek to limit lawmakers’ power to gerrymander districts.
"Ruling keeps redistricting, tax, health amendments off ballot". See also "Supreme Court Strikes Amendments From Ballot", "Florida Supreme Court strikes 3 GOP-backed amendments from ballot", "Amendments 3, 7, 9 stricken from November ballot" and "Florida Supreme Court keeps three amendments from ballot".


"Political hacks" take it in the shorts

Scott Maxwell: "In wrestling terms, Florida politicians have suffered a pile-driver, full-nelson and double-knee gut-buster. All within the last few weeks. And all delivered by judges who say political hacks don't have the right to thwart the people's will, or trample on the state constitution, just because they want to." "Legal smackdowns should send politicians a strong message".


Sink's school plan

"Democratic gubernatorial nominee Alex Sink's education plan proposes sending education decisions back to locals and strengthening state standards." "Sink unveils plan for school changes".


Crist "a campaign chameleon"

The Tampa Tribune editorial board: "Charlie Crist seems to have become a campaign chameleon, shifting shape and changing colors depending on where he is and to whom he's talking." "Charlie, who are you now?".


Rubio "supporters eager for more"

Tom Jackson "Two months remain in the dash to Election Day. Two months to work the stump speech and tilt the fence-sitters. Perhaps the best thing about the Taste of Marco Tour: He left his supporters eager for more." "Rubio blitz leaves backers hungry for more".


RPOFers urge Scott to pretend ...

... that he never said those things. "The '800-pound gorilla' at Tuesday's closed-door meeting between the newly crowned Republican nominee for governor and Hispanic state legislators wasn't their strong support for his former rival, according to one participant."

It was Rick Scott's hardline stance on illegal immigration.

Scott has championed Arizona's new crackdown that requires police to question suspected illegal immigrants and says he wants to bring a similar law to Florida. Some Hispanic Republicans say they hope the issue will take a back seat to the economy between now and the Nov. 2 general election.
"Hispanics urge Scott: Reduce immigration issue emphasis".


Early-Retiree insurance

"Sixty-nine Florida businesses and government entities have been accepted into a new federal program designed to help employers and unions maintain health coverage for early retirees not yet eligible for Medicare." "Early-Retiree Insurance: a Broken Bridge?".


"Reminiscent of Fiasco 2000"

"It's not deja vu all over again. There are no 'butterfly' ballots, no presidency at stake, no Supreme Court arguments and no candidates by the name of Bush or Gore."

But Sarasota County's latest recount battle is reminiscent of Fiasco 2000 in one key respect: It again proves that human error can lead to some very controversial election results.

The error this time is a certain lack of foresight on the part of two people, Kathy Bolam and Kathy Dent, in connection with last week's primary vote.

Bolam, a county Charter Review Board candidate, conceded a very close race too soon. Worse, she did it by e-mail -- which is considered legally binding by the Florida Division of Elections. When she tried to undo her decision and get a recount, it was too late, state law suggests.

Bolam (down by 136 votes, according to the election supervisor's Web site) should accept the result and learn from what amounts to a beginner's mistake. She apparently plans to formally contest the decision, however.
"Return to controversy".


Teachers = their union

The Orlando Sentinel editorial board can't get it through their heads that the teachers union is not comprised of a bunch of Bolsheviks, but rather the teachers themselves: "Don't give on merit pay reforms".


Sore loserman

"State Rep. Kevin Ambler, who lost a bitter Republican primary election to Hillsborough County Commissioner Jim Norman for the state Senate District 12 seat, has named his opponent in a lawsuit filed Tuesday."

Ambler, who has represented state House District 47 for eight years, did not immediately concede defeat to Norman after the election. An Ambler spokesman said the state representative planned to take some time to consider his options.

The lawsuit marks Ambler's first public response since the primaries. Neither Ambler nor his Tallahassee attorney, Mark Herron, could be reached for comment.

Norman issued a statement late Tuesday critical of Ambler's action. He urged his opponent to end his campaign.
"Norman named in suit filed by defeated GOP rival Ambler".


More RPOFer legislation bites the dust

The Miami Herald editorial board: "Local governments -- and the taxpayers who pay for them -- got a fair shake when a judge struck down a controversial 2009 growth-management bill that put an undue financial burden on cities and counties." "Good riddance to sprawl-promoting law".


07:56 Question of the Day » Bark Bark Woof Woof

Okay, so not everyone's a dancer... How about another spontaneous expression.
Do you whistle?
Rarely, and it's usually nothing more than an occasional peep. However, I do know that one reader will respond with an affirmative.

06:52 Florida Political News: Sept. 1, 2010 » FLA Politics - Front Page

Our digest of, and commentary on today's Florida political news and punditry.


Chiles drops bid, boosting Sink campaign

"In a sign of relief for Democrats,"

Lawton "Bud'' Chiles III is expected to abandon his independent bid for governor.His departure would make it a two-way race between Democrat Alex Sink and Republican Rick Scott -- a contest in which Chiles, a former Democrat, was expected to play spoiler.
"With `spoiler' out of race, it's a one-on-one matchup". See also"" and "Reports: Bud Chiles dropping independent bid for Florida governor".

 

No wonder Jebbie likes Scott

The irrelevant "Jeb!" Bush has discovered he loves Rick Scott.

"Republican gubernatorial nominee Rick Scott is prepared to be Florida's next governor and has the background for the job, former Gov. Jeb Bush told some 200 GOP loyalists Tuesday. Bush, who was Florida's governor from 1999-2007, formally joined ranks with the Republican nominee at a Republican Party unity rally in Jacksonville after supporting Attorney General Bill McCollum in last week's primary."

Mississippi Gov. Haley Barbour, head of the Republican Governors Association, joined Scott and about 200 mostly elderly supporters at a Miami-area community center.

Scott's campaign called the appearances a "unity tour," a week after a terse exchange between Scott and the governors' group over a primary ad attacking McCollum.

Senate President Jeff Atwater and incoming House Speaker Dean Cannon emphasized Republican teamwork was needed to send Scott to the governor's mansion in November instead of members of what they called "Obama's team."
"Republican leaders mend fences in Fla. with Scott". See also "Jeb Bush: Scott prepared to be governor".

But Jebbie's new found love for the fraudster really isn't much of a surprise. After all, in Jebbie's first publicized business activity since leaving office, "Jeb!" hooked up with ... you guessed it ... a company that had just paid $900 million to settle allegations of Medicare fraud.

As reported at the time,
former Gov. Jeb Bush is joining the board of Tenet Healthcare, the national hospital that has been working to clean up its image and performance since dealing with widespread allegations of fraud. ...

The hospital chain has been struggling to emerge from a series of legal and financial problems. Earlier, it paid $10 million to settle a Securities and Exchange Commission investigation into Medicare fraud allegations. Last year, it reached an agreement with the federal government to pay $900 million to settle allegations of Medicare fraud.
"Jeb Bush joins Tenet board of directors".

According to Forbes, Bush remains on the Tenet Healthcare Corporation board; his most recent reported total compensation from Tenet was $241,046.00.

 

Florida in the front lines

"Needing to pick up 39 seats to take control from the Democrats, Republicans are dreaming of picking up more U.S. House seats -- and Florida is in the front line of their effort to take the gavel from U.S. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi as they focus on four possibilities to pick up seats." "Florida Becoming Front Line in Battle for Congress".

 

Special session needed

The Tallahassee Democrat editorial board: "Is the time for a special legislative session that in July Speaker Larry Cretul and Senate President Jeff Atwater said would be more appropriate in September? No." "Our Opinion: Special session on oil issues deserves full attention".

 

"A blow to Republican legislative leaders"

"The Florida Supreme Court on Tuesday upheld lower-court decisions to remove three legislatively drafted constitutional amendments dealing with property tax breaks, redistricting and the federal health-care reform from the Nov. 2 ballot."

Leon County judges had removed Amendments 3, 7 and 9 from the ballot this summer because they deemed their summaries for voters to be too confusing — and a majority of the justices on Florida’s high court agreed, delivering a blow to Republican legislative leaders who had pushed the measures.

Earlier this month, House Speaker-designate Dean Cannon took the unusual step of appearing before the court to defend Amendment 7, which would have given lawmakers broader power to draw political districts regardless of other standards currently in the Constitution. Critics said it would have also weakened Amendments 5 and 6, which are also on the ballot and seek to limit lawmakers’ power to gerrymander districts.
"Ruling keeps redistricting, tax, health amendments off ballot". See also "Supreme Court Strikes Amendments From Ballot", "Florida Supreme Court strikes 3 GOP-backed amendments from ballot", "Amendments 3, 7, 9 stricken from November ballot" and "Florida Supreme Court keeps three amendments from ballot".

 

"Political hacks" take it in the shorts

Scott Maxwell: "In wrestling terms, Florida politicians have suffered a pile-driver, full-nelson and double-knee gut-buster. All within the last few weeks. And all delivered by judges who say political hacks don't have the right to thwart the people's will, or trample on the state constitution, just because they want to." "Legal smackdowns should send politicians a strong message".

 

Sink's school plan

"Democratic gubernatorial nominee Alex Sink's education plan proposes sending education decisions back to locals and strengthening state standards." "Sink unveils plan for school changes".

 

Crist "a campaign chameleon"

The Tampa Tribune editorial board: "Charlie Crist seems to have become a campaign chameleon, shifting shape and changing colors depending on where he is and to whom he's talking." "Charlie, who are you now?".

 

Rubio "supporters eager for more"

Tom Jackson "Two months remain in the dash to Election Day. Two months to work the stump speech and tilt the fence-sitters. Perhaps the best thing about the Taste of Marco Tour: He left his supporters eager for more." "Rubio blitz leaves backers hungry for more".

 

RPOFers urge Scott to pretend ...

... that he never said those things. "The '800-pound gorilla' at Tuesday's closed-door meeting between the newly crowned Republican nominee for governor and Hispanic state legislators wasn't their strong support for his former rival, according to one participant."

It was Rick Scott's hardline stance on illegal immigration.

Scott has championed Arizona's new crackdown that requires police to question suspected illegal immigrants and says he wants to bring a similar law to Florida. Some Hispanic Republicans say they hope the issue will take a back seat to the economy between now and the Nov. 2 general election.
"Hispanics urge Scott: Reduce immigration issue emphasis".

 

Early-Retiree insurance

"Sixty-nine Florida businesses and government entities have been accepted into a new federal program designed to help employers and unions maintain health coverage for early retirees not yet eligible for Medicare." "Early-Retiree Insurance: a Broken Bridge?".

 

"Reminiscent of Fiasco 2000"

"It's not deja vu all over again. There are no 'butterfly' ballots, no presidency at stake, no Supreme Court arguments and no candidates by the name of Bush or Gore."

But Sarasota County's latest recount battle is reminiscent of Fiasco 2000 in one key respect: It again proves that human error can lead to some very controversial election results.

The error this time is a certain lack of foresight on the part of two people, Kathy Bolam and Kathy Dent, in connection with last week's primary vote.

Bolam, a county Charter Review Board candidate, conceded a very close race too soon. Worse, she did it by e-mail -- which is considered legally binding by the Florida Division of Elections. When she tried to undo her decision and get a recount, it was too late, state law suggests.

Bolam (down by 136 votes, according to the election supervisor's Web site) should accept the result and learn from what amounts to a beginner's mistake. She apparently plans to formally contest the decision, however.
"Return to controversy".

 

Teachers = their union

The Orlando Sentinel editorial board can't get it through their heads that the teachers union is not comprised of a bunch of Bolsheviks, but rather the teachers themselves: "Don't give on merit pay reforms".

 

Sore loserman

"State Rep. Kevin Ambler, who lost a bitter Republican primary election to Hillsborough County Commissioner Jim Norman for the state Senate District 12 seat, has named his opponent in a lawsuit filed Tuesday."

Ambler, who has represented state House District 47 for eight years, did not immediately concede defeat to Norman after the election. An Ambler spokesman said the state representative planned to take some time to consider his options.

The lawsuit marks Ambler's first public response since the primaries. Neither Ambler nor his Tallahassee attorney, Mark Herron, could be reached for comment.

Norman issued a statement late Tuesday critical of Ambler's action. He urged his opponent to end his campaign.
"Norman named in suit filed by defeated GOP rival Ambler".

 

More RPOFer legislation bites the dust

The Miami Herald editorial board: "Local governments -- and the taxpayers who pay for them -- got a fair shake when a judge struck down a controversial 2009 growth-management bill that put an undue financial burden on cities and counties." "Good riddance to sprawl-promoting law".



06:52 Caught Another One » Bark Bark Woof Woof

A candidate for the U.S. Senate in Ohio has been busted on sex charges.
DAYTON, Ohio -- A New Lebanon man, running for a U.S. Senate seat in Ohio, has been indicted by a Montgomery County grand jury on sex charges.

Eric Deaton was indicted on one count of unlawful sexual conduct with a minor. He is accused of having an inappropriate relationship with a 15-year-old girl between March 2006 and March 2007.

Perry Township police said Deaton met the victim at a church where Deaton served as an elder.

Chief Bob Bowman said, "He would tutor some classes and allowed her to come to his residences to do some work and earn some money."

Investigators said they have recordings and hotel records proving the inappropriate relationship. They don't know if there are more victims.

Bowman said, "There are additional hotel dates that don't correspond with information from our victim. We also have information from early on that there may be other girls from the church."

A campaign spokesperson said Deaton is still running for Senate.
Mr. Deaton is running on the Constitution Party ticket. Josh Marshall has a bit more on his background.
Deaton, who has the support of major Tea Party groups in Ohio, is not backing down. He plans to remain in the race and says he believes the charges are "politically motivated." According to Deaton, the "powers that be don't like" his decision to enter the Senate race.
One of the unintended consequences of this Tea Party insurgency is that we get to find out all about the background of the people running, including some of their more unsavory aspects. For instance, who knew that Rand Paul, the Kentucky Senate candidate, was a charter member of the Baylor chapter of the Midnight Tokers? Or that Sharron Angle, running for the Senate in Nevada, had such interesting views on life and politics posted on her own website that she threatened to sue Harry Reid's campaign for re-printing them. And if your real past isn't good enough, you just make stuff up, like Mark Kirk, the senate candidate in Illinois.

This certainly is a colorful crowd and we won't be lacking for entertainment and creativity if they're elected. More's the pity.

06:26 Alex Sink's education plan shifts emphasis back to locals, strengthens standards » The Buzz: Florida Politics

Democratic gubernatorial candidate Alex Sink envisions an education system in Florida where at-risk students have incentives to stay in school, better-trained teachers get performance-based raises and school buildings become community centers. She also wants to use technology to enhance school...

05:20 War and Peace » Talk to Me



(...)


"Nearly 1.5 million Americans put their lives on the line. Many returned for multiple tours of duty, far from their loved ones who bore a heroic burden of their own. And most painfully, more than 4,400 Americans have given their lives, fighting for people they never knew, for values that have defined our people for more than two centuries.


What their country asked of them was not small. And what they sacrificed was not easy.
For that, each and every American owes them our heartfelt thanks.


Our promise to them -- to each woman or man who has donned our colors -- is that our country will serve them as faithfully as they have served us. We have already made the largest increase in funding for veterans in decades. So long as I am President, I will do whatever it takes to fulfill that sacred trust.


Tonight, we mark a milestone in our nation's history. Even at a time of great uncertainty for so many Americans, this day and our brave troops remind us that our future is in our own hands and that our best days lie ahead."


--President Barack Obama, August 31, 2010

03:40 The Real Cost of The War » Bark Bark Woof Woof

President Obama's speech last night on the end of the combat role in Iraq was appropriate in that it didn't declare "Mission Accomplished," he didn't stride across the deck of an aircraft carrier with a sock in his pants, and he paid homage to the men and women who did their job as they were ordered to do. He also did a nice job of honoring the dead and the wounded from all the countries and then turned our attention to what we can do now. In short, it was presidential without being too platitudinous and preachy.

That said, it still doesn't make up for the fact that we never should have fought that damn war in the first place. No one denies that Saddam Hussein was a brutal dictator who subjugated his people and committed crimes against them and others. In that way he was no different than the leaders of Libya, Syria, Iran, our ally Saudi Arabia, our trading partners China and Vietnam, and even the pariah nations of North Korea, Cuba, and Burma. So why Iraq? Why did we blow nearly a trillion dollars and the lives of so many people? There was no just cause, no righteous vengeance, no direct threat, and certainly no one outside of the Bush administration and a few chicken-hawk think tanks and columnists who live for the masturbatory fantasy of watching other people fight their battles on their idea of a real X-Box who saw it as anything but a disgrace at a terrible cost.

We were lied to, conned, fear-mongered and cowed into going there, and if there was any justice in the world, George W. Bush, Dick Cheney, Condoleezza Rice, Paul Wolfowitz, and the rest of the Bush administration neo-cons who took us there would be held accountable. Some folks would like them brought up on charges in the International Court in The Hague, but that's show business. Rather, I'd like to see them have to explain to every family of the more than 4,500 Americans who died or the more than 50,000 who were wounded with everything from debilitating physical injuries to PTSD or the more than 100,000 Iraqi soldiers and civilians and countless others lost as collateral damage, exactly why we waged war against a country that had absolutely nothing whatsoever to do with the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001, and, for all intents and purposes, was no different than any other sovereign country in the world that doesn't embrace Jeffersonian democracy and Wonder Bread.

It will never happen. President Obama didn't address that; he's not that kind of person, I guess. But the worst thing we can do -- worse than all the tragedies and loss -- is to forget how we got there, who led us there, and how much damage the war really caused. We can't turn the page on that.

02:35 Short Takes » Bark Bark Woof Woof

Direct talks between Israelis and Palestinians begin today at the State Department.

Never Mind -- Dutch authorities think it's unlikely that the two men arrested for weird stuff in their luggage had any nefarious motives.

Lisa Murkowski concedes her loss in the Alaska Senate primary.

Cleaning House -- Three Congressmen - two Republicans and one Democrat - face ethics charges.

What's left of the old General Motors is being sold for parts.

The Florida Supreme Court knocked three amendments off the November ballot, including the one attacking the federal healthcare bill.

Bud Chiles will probably drop out of the governor's race in Florida, making life easier for Democrat Alex Sink.

Tropical Update: Hurricane Earl is making people on the North Carolina Outer Banks think about evacuation; TS Fiona is probably not a danger to the mainland.

The Tigers lost in Minnesota; playoff hopes are fading.

02:35 Get A Room » Bark Bark Woof Woof

Does anybody besides Maureen Dowd and the right-wing snipers give a flying rat's ass what the Oval Office redecoration looks like?

Tue 31 August, 2010

21:47 Tampa Arsonist hitting close to home » Tampa's Back Door Ways ... (OR...)

\\
interesting that I was researching these guys because they own a dump right next to the latest ybor arson and then lo and behold (18th avenue where jane claimed it was NOT near the ybor fires yet there it sits SMACK IN YBOR smacl in the block) so then george driver and jeffrey long who is alleged to work for FDLE get their house burnt .. only driver was inside. maybe it's over between them???
Neighbors lead man out of Tampa house fire, help rescue pets
By Danny Valentine, Times Staff Writer Posted: Aug 30, 2010 06:36 AM
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TAMPA — Paul Kerr was drinking his coffee about 3 a.m., getting ready for his early shift at Home Depot, when he heard a loud pop.
He looked outside to see flames shooting up from his neighbor's garage.
"I screamed, 'Call 911, call the fire department,' " Kerr recalled.
Kerr, 38, woke his stepson, Mathew Ausburn, 20, and ran to the front of the house at 5119 N River Blvd.
They yelled for their neighbor and banged on the front door. No one answered.
Ausburn said he and Kerr barged through the front door, where they were met with a billowing wall of smoke. They could only see about 6 inches in front of them.
They met George A. Driver in the hallway. He had been sleeping and was confused, Ausburn said. When he first woke up, he thought he was blind.
The three rushed out of the house. It would take an hour and dozens of firefighters before the blaze was under control.
The $130,000 home is owned by Driver and Jeffrey S. Long, according to property records. The structure is considered a total loss.
Investigators determined the fire was caused by a mechanical failure associated with a scooter in the garage, Tampa Fire Rescue said. Damage to the home and its contents was estimated to be about $300,000.
As soon as Driver was out of the house, he remembered that his standard poodle, Trevor, and three birds were still inside.
So in they went. The men made several trips back in the house to rescue the animals.
They had to run in twice after the poodle, which darted back in the house after the first rescue.
Ausburn said there wasn't a doubt that he had to go in and help his neighbor of eight years.
"He's like my uncle," he said. "If he's going to die in the fire, I might as well go in there with him. He's like family to me. I'm not going to lose a family member."
Once they got the animals, they watched crews battle the blaze from Ausburn's home. They could feel the heat from the flames.
"He was just screaming, 'My house, my house,' " he said.
Ausburn's mother, Tammy Kerr, said she is just happy Driver is all right.
"Houses can be rebuilt," she said.
Times staff writers Andy Boyle and Shelley Rossetter contributed to this report.
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There are 8 comments Oldest First Newest First Top Rated

doodlebug wrote:
Heroes! I'm very proud of these guys!
Aug 30, 2010 11:20 AM
2 0 Report Abuse

tooprettyforprison wrote:
HEY. these guys owned the house right next to the one on 18th avenue in YBOR that was arson'd. SMALL WORLD, huh??? The one guy works for the FDLE so the properties are all unlisted. Jeffrey Long. The whole deal with those two is quite quite weird. Pay back of some sort going on here !
Aug 30, 2010 12:56 PM
1 1 Report Abuse

TimfromIndiana wrote:
Nice to hear positive stories. Good job to both men for their efforts.
Aug 30, 2010 4:25 PM
1 0 Report Abuse

mpbinpinellas wrote:
i am sure people are just burning to thank them.
Aug 30, 2010 6:40 PM
1 1 Report Abuse

littletampagal wrote:
hey tooprettyforprison..Jeffrey Long is a realtor and the property is listed on HCPA. Get your facts correct before posting your not correct comments!!
Aug 30, 2010 6:42 PM
2 0 Report Abuse

littletampagal wrote:
hey mpbinpinellas.. from someone that lost their house last year to a house fire and lost my dog in the fire, that is not funny. May the lord forgive you for your stupid comment!!!
Aug 30, 2010 6:51 PM
0 2 Report Abuse

elainec wrote:
Oops, sugarme is off her meds. Good job, Mr. Kerr and Mr. Ausburn.
Aug 30, 2010 6:53 PM
1 1 Report Abuse

tooprettyforprison wrote:
elainec, real nice. You're welcome for all the times I had your back. Whatever. LOL. THAT is THE ONE property which is listed. Numerous others: NOT. Yes he is a realtor AND w/the FDLE. I always have my facts straight. littletampagal: Yeah, they burnt down MY house when I was 12, as well and my little Christmas puppy was lost. But they weren't done YET. Spence Roberts, arsonist and Tampa fireman THEN burnt down my sister's home and now his fat, disgusting family lives there. And she is DEAD as a result. So ... this, besides the fact that he then tried to burn down my mother's house twice (IDIOT is a failure at everything he tries but 1/2 the arsons and some murders)perhaps causes me to look at TFR w/a sharper eye than most. They probably burnt your house down, too. Have a closer look at jeffrey long. The recent arson on 18th ave in ybor is NEXT DOOR to his other property under global one. Go have a look.
Aug 31, 2010 10:22 PM
0 0 Report Abuse

Have your say...
Truth about Tampa. Send this to everyone you know who loves the TRUTH~~!! Truth is violated by falsehood, but it is outraged by silence. - Henri Frederic Amiel Vote in the National Cheney Impeachment Poll http://www.usalone.com/blogvoices.php?Cheney%20Impeachment%3F

18:01 MDPLS Search Plugin Repaired » Discourse.net

Only a few days after I contacted them to report a problem with the browser search plugin, the Miami-Dade Public Library System (MDPLS) has come through with a fix via Sr. Systems Analyst/Programmer Jose J. Rivero. If you go to the MDPLS Library Tools & Gadgets page, you'll find a repaired and working search plugin, as well as an IGoogle Catalog Gadget and a Windows Vista Library Catalog Gadget. The search plugin works in IE and FF, and offers search completion too. But if you had the broken version, be sure to delete the old version before you install the new one. Thank you, Mr. Rivero! Previously: MDPLS Library Search Plugin is Broken (6/7/10) MDPLS Puts the Wow Back in the Wowbrary (8/26/10)...

16:14 Presidential Address Preshow » Talk to Me





With the last combat troops out of the Iraq, the discussion (dissection?) has begun.

The Interviewer and Interview-ee in the video below prove no fans of the American involvement.

Around about the 2:12 marker, John Laughland--a British conservative journalist and frequent contributor to like-minded publications--The American Spectator, The Wall Street Journal and the National Review to name just a few-addresses who he believes is to blame and why.

A clue.

He's named after his dad.



16:11 Sometimes the Truth Hurts – Unless You’re Too Stooopid to See The Truth » Deep Something

Perhaps one of the biggest loons in the anti-equality campaign if former Executive Director (now Board Chairperson) of the National Organization for Marriage (NOM), Maggie Gallagher. Maggie had a child out-of-wedlock, has been married twice, and despite basically making herself the self-proclaimed world champion of traditional marriage, has never been seen at any event with an actual husband or any of her children. What a sad and small person she is. It would be easy to feel sorry for her, but she's made it her mission in life to foment hate against loving, committed gay couples, so she gets what she deserves. In this case, a well deserved cartooning is in order. Poor Maggie, hate and bigotry, even against Gay people, just becomes harder and harder to justify, but at least she makes a good living at it.

14:07 Martini and the Groomer » Morning Martini

The man who grooms Martini also grooms all sorts of show dogs and travels around the country to do so. Today after he groomed Martini he said he looked good enough to go into any dog show ring. Then as soon as he removed his hands from Martini, Martini shook himself like a dog just getting out of the water. Then instead of looking like a dog ready for the show ring, he looked like a dog who had a fitful night of sleep.

I am glowing with pride at the groomer’s remarks about Martini’s show dog looks. The previous groomer really messed up the look of Martini’s head and face with the way she trimmed his hair. I have been brushing and combing him daily as his hair grew back and now he really does look beautiful. I think Martini knows it too as he struts around the house as if to say, “With my rocking looks and my sweet personality, who could say no to me?”. He’s right because I just gave him an extra treat.

13:35 Debates » FLA Politics - Front Page



09:59 Stogie Recommends » The Ybor City Stogie

Frequently Asked Questions About Time Travel
Is a 2009 science fiction comedy feature film directed by Gareth Carrivick from a script by Jamie Mathieson, starring Anna Faris, Chris O'Dowd, Marc Wootton, and Dean Lennox Kelly.
Very Funny Film.

09:59 What does a Moderate Muslim look like » Stupid Enough Unexplanation

Frank N. Gaffney's latest article is pretty awful, in that it argues that while Obama may not be a Muslim, he clearly supports extremist Muslims like the Muslim Brotherhood.
A better explanation is that more Americans are taking note of the accumulating series of statements and actions by the President that display favoritism, or worse, towards Muslims.

. . .In instance after instance, Mr. Obama has seemingly bent over backwards to accommodate not just Muslim-Americans, but a deeply problematic organization - the Muslim Brotherhood (or Ikhwan) - that purports to represent their interests here.
Among the awful things Obama is doing?

He stated that America was a land of "Christians and Muslims, Jews and Hindus and non-believers." Putting Muslims before Jews in his little speech is a mark of disrespect towards Jews apparently. One might argue that we aren't that worried about convincing Jews they are equal citizens with the rest of us.

Obama also wants to allow Muslims Zakat, their form of tithing or religious giving, something. Gaffney, frankly isn't clear, although it seems he believes that this initiative would allow American Muslims to support terrorism more easily.

He supported a United Nations Resolution.
In September 2009, the Obama administration co-sponsored a United Nations Human Rights Council resolution eagerly sought by the Muslim Brotherhood and its friends. The resolution called on member nations to "prohibit and criminalize" speech that offends Islam and its followers. Such an accommodation would clearly violate the Constitution's First Amendment guarantees of freedom of expression.
Yep - I went to the Human Rights Council's website to see if I could track down this offensive document. Let me quote from it, assuming I found the right one.
Recalling also that States should encourage free, responsible and mutually respectful
dialogue,
1. Reaffirms the rights contained in the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, in particular the right of everyone to hold opinions without interference, as well as the right to freedom of expression, including the freedom to seek, receive and impart information and ideas of all kinds, regardless of frontiers, either orally, in writing or in print, in the form of art or through any other media of their choice, and the intrinsically linked rights to freedom of thought, conscience and religion, peaceful assembly and association and the right to take part in the conduct of public affairs;
Wait I guess that may not be it, except that later on it does talk about respecting all points of view, and a line about not letting the war on terror interrupt the free exchange of ideas. The document calls on all states to "To refrain from using counter-terrorism as a pretext to restrict the right to freedom of opinion and expression in ways that are contrary to their obligations under international law." Unless Gaffney got the date wrong, I really don't know what he is talking about.

Also Obama has argued that allowing AIG to continue underwriting shariah compliant insurance is a breach of the separation of Church and State; this is just silly. AIG sells a number of products and supports a number of different clienteles - to argue that they should simply shut down part of their business to please xenophobes is nonsensical.

Obama supported the "megamosque" near Ground Zero, by which I assume Gaffney means the community center with a mosque in it.
Subsequent efforts to distance himself from that stance, in the face of intense criticism from the public and politicians of both parties, has only put into even sharper focus his pandering to this community.
Hilarious. Obama's immediate abandonment of his support for the Cordoba Center shows how subservient he is to the Muslim Brotherhood, who must be very very easy to please.

Anyway going back to my initial question - how many Muslims of any type would want to see Shariah compliant insurance shut down? How many support the Cordoba Center? More to the point, how many are OK with being seen as second class citizens the way Gaffney seems to want them?

09:58 RPOFers "zipping on their Hazmat suits and embracing Scott" » Florida Politics

"Once viewed as a pariah among Republicans, Rick Scott is embraced by top party leaders who hope he can forgive and forget."
Politics is funny sometimes in Florida.

One day people call you a fraud who ripped off taxpayers and financed smut, the next day they hail you as a visionary leader, job creator and good friend. One day you're denouncing special interest and lobbyist money, the next day you are courting it.

Such is the case with Rick Scott, the mega-rich businessman ['who has more baggage than J-Lo on a camel safari'] who stunned the GOP establishment last week by beating Bill McCollum for the Republican gubernatorial nomination. Only a week ago, state and national party leaders treated Scott as a dangerous pariah, but now they're eagerly embracing him and hoping for forgiveness.
"GOP leaders reach out to Rick Scott". See also "Scott, GOP make a show of unity".

Carl Hiaasen: "Now that Florida's bitter Republican primary is over, party leaders are zipping on their Hazmat suits and preparing to embrace Rick Scott."
Whether Sink can capitalize on the rancorous split in the GOP remains to be seen. Meanwhile, the efforts of Thrasher and others to present a unified front will provide some much-needed comedy, if nothing else.

Expect staged photo opportunities of Scott posing with ex-McCollum backers, pained smiles all around. It will also be intriguing to see how party godfather Jeb Bush devises to appear enthusiastic about Scott, when the truth is the opposite. ...

McCollum will face mounting pressure from GOP insiders to hold his nose and praise a man whom he truly believes is unqualified to be governor.
"How McCollum responds will be a measure of his own integrity. Either he'll continue to say what he really thinks, or he'll join Scott's make-believe lovefest and paste on a smile."
With his résumé reeking from one of the nation's worst health-care ripoffs, the new GOP gubernatorial nominee is now being courted by the same stalwarts who did everything in their power to sink his self-financed excursion into politics.

Scott's surprise victory last week over Attorney General Bill McCollum was a gift to the Democrats and a blow to the wobbly state Republican machine.

Now comes the fun part, when all the GOP bigshots who spent months trashing Scott now pretend that they didn't do that, or didn't really mean it if they did.

Listen to this kissy-face lie from incoming Senate President Mike Haridopolos: "When you people check the record, you'll see it's only positive from me.''

Haridopolos, a vocal supporter of McCollum, was one of numerous Republican leaders who helped raise millions of dollars for attack ads against Scott.
Much more here: "Let the lovefest begin".


Free Choice Kerfuffle

"There’s no doubt Florida’s business community holds a lot of sway when it comes to electing the state’s next governor. Associated Industries of Florida boasts the most powerful business lobby in the state and the Florida Chamber of Commerce claims the largest membership with 139,000 businesses in its group."

One issue important to both of them, affecting endorsements and fund-raising for the candidates, is the Employee Free Choice Act, or card-check.

Card-check is currently being considered in Congress. It was co-sponsored by Sen. Bill Nelson, D-Fla., and is expected to be taken up by the Senate this fall. The bill would change the way unions can organize by getting rid of the secret-ballot system, and allowing businesses with as few as 10 employees to become unionized.

Many in the business community worry that getting rid of the secret ballot would allow unions to intimidate employees, essentially checking their cards while voting.

AIF president Barney Bishop says that’s one of the major reasons they are not endorsing Alex Sink, even though she’s described herself as a business-friendly Democrat.

"She’s a business person who just happens to be a Democrat," said Bishop. "And that dog just ain't going to hunt."

Bishop says one of his primary concerns with Sink is that she will side with Congress and the White House when it comes to the union-favored card-check legislation.
"Union-Supported Card-Check Bill May Help Decide Next Governor".


Scott claims he was "a victim of Bill and Hillary Clinton's wrath"

Myriam Marquez the other day:

Hi, it's me again!

With his ah-shucks, Opie Taylor demeanor and his "Let's get to work!'' slogan, Republican gubernatorial candidate Rick Scott pulled it off. He beat seasoned politico Bill McCollum in the primary by campaigning against his own party.

At his victory party in Fort Lauderdale Tuesday night, I marveled at the rise of a businessman who just a decade ago was forced to leave the company he created after a multibillion-dollar criminal scandal. Scott maintains that the $1.7 billion paid by Hospital Corporation of America -- the largest fine in U.S. history -- was not an admission of fraud.

As he implies on the stump (check out YouTube for illuminating videos of his "explanation''), he was a victim of Bill and Hillary Clinton's wrath once their healthcare reform plan went bust.
"We still don't know who Rick Scott is".

Joy-Ann Reid gives us "Five things to know about Rick Scott".

See also "Outsider Scott surrounds himself with GOP insiders".


"Scott must choose a running mate by Thursday"

"The Florida Republican Party’s newest supernova, gubernatorial nominee Rick Scott, blazed Monday across Central Florida on a party unity tour with legislative leaders – and a star-studded fly-around on deck. ... But while the self-styled political outsider basks in the glow of party insiders, Scott also is getting ready to create an instant celebrity of his own. Scott must choose a running mate by Thursday, under state law." "Who's Ready for 15 Minutes of Fame? Scott to Choose LG".


Never mind

"As a House panel wrapped up its work on Monday, chances for a September oil spill special session appeared to be slim and none." "Oil spill special session not likely". Related: "BP data reveals high stakes for Florida in oil spill claims process".


Crist "hedging, backpedaling and two-stepping"

"A longtime target of finger-to-the-wind accusations, Gov. Charlie Crist has engaged in an unusual amount of hedging, backpedaling and two-stepping since Tuesday's primary crystallized his opposition in the U.S. Senate race."

What's more, he is refusing to join his chief rivals, Republican Marco Rubio and Democrat Kendrick Meek, on NBC's Meet the Press this Sunday.

"When it comes down to the governor, I think Florida voters are going to really pay close attention because you don't know where he stands on the issues,'' Meek said in Tallahassee on Monday.

Twice in the past three days, the Crist campaign has scrambled to put out statements clarifying his remarks on healthcare and same-sex marriage. The Republican-turned-independent candidate has also given muddy answers on returning money to disgruntled donors and on which party he would caucus with if elected.

The difficulty in pinpointing Crist's positions reflects the unprecedented balancing act of an unaffiliated candidate trying to hold together a fragile coalition of Democratic, Republican and non-partisan voters.
"Crist remarks give fodder to opponents".

The Miami Herald editorial board: "Crist's bid to become the next U.S. senator from Florida -- and make history as an independent -- has liberated the long-time Republican from following a party script. But in so doing, Gov. Crist has left many voters confused and others angry. They're right to wonder what being an independent means, if all his positions seem to follow popular opinion. Voters aren't selecting a pollster. They are looking for a leader -- ideally, one who won't just parrot the mob." "Charlie Crist's challenge" ("Running as independent is no free pass to flip-flop").


SOE stoties

"The Sarasota Herald-Tribune is reporting new accusations that Sarasota County Supervisor of Elections Kathy Dent influenced charter review board candidate Kathy Bolam’s decision to concede last Wednesday, after primary results indicated she had lost her bid by just over 100 votes. The narrowness of that margin would have triggered an automatic recount, if Bolam had not conceded." "Sarasota supervisor of elections accused of influencing candidate’s decision to concede".


"Smaller this storm season"

"Florida's massive reinsurance fund is much smaller this storm season".


The week ahead

"The Week Ahead for Aug. 30-Sept. 3".


Grayson - Webster on the air

Mark Schlueb reports that the Webster - Grayson "TV battle began last week. Americans for Prosperity, the stealth conservative group backed by oil billionaire David Koch, launched attack ads against Grayson and fellow Democrat Suzanne Kosmas from the neighboring 24th District, noting their support of the federal stimulus. Grayson has paid for a spot slamming Webster for spending $32,000 of taxpayer money to install a spiral staircase in his state House office in 1997 and for billing taxpayers for 68 flights private jet flights. The staircase claim is true, and the information about the flights is partially true."

That Webster would associate himself with "Americans for Prosperity" speaks volumes. Jane Mayer has a lengthy piece in the New Yorker titled "Covert Operations", about the Koch brothers, who are "the billionaire brothers who are waging a war against Obama". She writes:

The Kochs are longtime libertarians who believe in drastically lower personal and corporate taxes, minimal social services for the needy, and much less oversight of industry—especially environmental regulation. These views dovetail with the brothers’ corporate interests. In a study released this spring, the University of Massachusetts at Amherst’s Political Economy Research Institute named Koch Industries one of the top ten air polluters in the United States. And Greenpeace issued a report identifying the company as a "kingpin of climate science denial." The report showed that, from 2005 to 2008, the Kochs vastly outdid ExxonMobil in giving money to organizations fighting legislation related to climate change, underwriting a huge network of foundations, think tanks, and political front groups. Indeed, the brothers have funded opposition campaigns against so many Obama Administration policies—from health-care reform to the economic-stimulus program—that, in political circles, their ideological network is known as the Kochtopus.
"Americans for Prosperity" is part of the Kochtopus.

The Kochs are also propping up the teabaggers. One Peggy Venable — "a longtime political operative who draws a salary from Americans for Prosperity, and who has worked for Koch-funded political groups since 1994" — announced at an Americans for Prosperity [an organization that David Koch started in 2004] event that
"We love what the Tea Parties are doing, because that’s how we’re going to take back America!" she declared, as the crowd cheered. In a subsequent interview, she described herself as an early member of the movement, joking, "I was part of the Tea Party before it was cool!" She explained that the role of Americans for Prosperity was to help "educate" Tea Party activists on policy details, and to give them "next-step training" after their rallies, so that their political energy could be channelled "more effectively." And she noted that Americans for Prosperity had provided Tea Party activists with lists of elected officials to target. She said of the Kochs, "They’re certainly our people. David’s the chairman of our board. I’ve certainly met with them, and I’m very appreciative of what they do."

Venable honored several Tea Party "citizen leaders" at the summit. The Texas branch of Americans for Prosperity gave its Blogger of the Year Award to a young woman named Sibyl West. On June 14th, West, writing on her site, described Obama as the "cokehead in chief." ...

During a catered lunch, Venable introduced Ted Cruz, a former solicitor general of Texas, who told the crowd that Obama was "the most radical President ever to occupy the Oval Office," and had hidden from voters a secret agenda—"the government taking over our economy and our lives." Countering Obama, Cruz proclaimed, was "the epic fight of our generation!" As the crowd rose to its feet and cheered, he quoted the defiant words of a Texan at the Alamo: "Victory, or death!"

Americans for Prosperity [the organization that David Koch started in 2004] has worked closely with the Tea Party since the movement’s inception. In the weeks before the first Tax Day protests, in April, 2009, Americans for Prosperity hosted a Web site offering supporters "Tea Party Talking Points."
"Covert Operations".

Frank Rich last weekend on the history billionaires subsidizing the wingnut "movements":
Only the fat cats change — not their methods and not their pet bugaboos (taxes, corporate regulation, organized labor, and government "handouts" to the poor, unemployed, ill and elderly). Even the sources of their fortunes remain fairly constant. Koch Industries began with oil in the 1930s and now also spews an array of industrial products, from Dixie cups to Lycra, not unlike DuPont’s portfolio of paint and plastics. Sometimes the biological DNA persists as well. The Koch brothers’ father, Fred, was among the select group chosen to serve on the Birch Society’s top governing body. In a recorded 1963 speech that survives in a University of Michigan archive, he can be heard warning of "a takeover" of America in which Communists would "infiltrate the highest offices of government in the U.S. until the president is a Communist, unknown to the rest of us." That rant could be delivered as is at any Tea Party rally today.
"The Billionaires Bankrolling the Tea Party". See generally "American Politics is Getting All Koch'ed Up" and "Group Is Accused on Tax Exemption".

One wonders if the Orlando Sentinel will ask Taliban Dan if he agrees with the views of his billionaire benefactors?


Grayson debate debate

"The candidates in the most closely watched congressional race in Florida might not have a televised debate because the campaigns disagree over who should be invited."

Incumbent Democrat U.S. Rep. Alan Grayson refuses to debate Republican challenger Dan Webster unless lesser known candidates are invited to the stage. Webster, a former state senator and the GOP standard-bearer, says he wants to take on Grayson solo. ...

In addition to the two major-party candidates, the Nov. 2 ballot in Florida's 8th Congressional district also will include Florida Tea Party candidate Peg Dunmire and independent George Metcalfe.

The choice of which candidates would participate is a calculated one for both camps. It is to Grayson's advantage to have Dunmire and Metcalfe there because they'd likely peel conservative votes away from Webster.

"Webster wants me and Peg Dunmire to go away," Metcalfe said. "He wants to frame this as a two-party election. This is not an exclusive boys' club.''

Dunmire called her exclusion "elitist."
"Candidates debate having debate".

The teabaggers will whine for a moment, but will of course flock to Webster in the end.


What say you ... Mr. Scott

"Leon County Circuit Judge Charles Francis has agreed with the city of Weston that a law passed last year by the state Legislature would create unconstitutional expenses for local governments. He threw the ill-advised bill in the trash can. Gov. Charlie Crist, who signed the Community Renewal Act, should not appeal." "On growth law, judge protects taxpayers".


"All that stood between the GOP and dynastic dominance were ..."

Thomas Tryon: "When the Republican Party gained firm control of Florida politics in the late 1990s, all that stood between the GOP and dynastic dominance were ... the Republican Party and its members." "Tryon: GOP's challenge is to keep it together".


"Frequent filer"

"Frequent filer Josue Larose runs for governor, raises questions". "$14.2 Million Write-In 'Challenges' Division of Elections".


Pathetic turnout

"Final turnout figures for the primary election are in: statewide, the 2.43 million votes cast were 21.9 percent of registered voters, according to the state Division of Elections. Leading the pack were the smaller counties, like Liberty, where more than 51 percent of the 4,237 voters turned out. ... Miami-Dade, 17.2 percent, Palm Beach, 16.2 percent, Broward, 14.7 percent". "21.9% of state's registered voters in cast ballots in primary, final figures show".


"Perverse political hubris at work here"

Daniel Ruth complains, "so it was the other day as we attempted to enjoy our first cocktails of the evening while watching the news only to be exposed — again and again and again — with yet another wave of campaign commercials."

Couldn't we just have a break from this silliness — just a short one? Haven't we earned it?

There is a perverse political hubris at work here — that the general public is sitting at their kitchen counters breathlessly, anxiously awaiting the next commercial pimping a candidate's fitness for office or why their opponent is a vile agent of darkness who makes Saddam Hussein look like Dr. Seuss.

Really, do either Rubio, Sink or the Committee of Sleazy Mysterious Touts for Rick Scott honestly believe if they merely went away until after Labor Day they would lose potential votes to be cast more than two months from now?

It is estimated that during the recent primary mosh pit, the average television viewer in the Tampa Bay area was treated to 266 commercials — most of them portraying Bill McCollum as a shiftless poltroon — hawking the candidacy of Rick Scott. Madonna hasn't exposed herself this much.

Imagine — if you dare — what we can expect going into the general election.

Of course the argument for the airwaves carpet bombing is that it is important for the public to get to know these candidates. But the problem, unfortunately, is — we know, we know.

At the risk of committing heresy — could we just know a little less?
Much more here: "Call it a campaign, but it’s more like torture".


Union hating fun

The Sun Sentinel editorial board: "Palm Beach County teachers are forced to watch from the sidelines, because their union, in a petulant fit, opted not join in the Race to the Top fun." "Palm union's petulance cost teachers a bundle".


"Strange"

"Just two weeks after publicly pumping up U.S. Rep. Kendrick Meek in the U.S. Senate Democratic primary race against Jeff Greene, state senator-to-be Maria Sachs yesterday pulled a switch and endorsed Meek’s general election rival Gov. Charlie Crist." "Sachs' defection to Crist in Senate race strange, Meek tells reporters". Related: "Meek, Thurman: Few Dems will defect".


Taj Mahal audit

"Sen. Charlie Dean, R-Inverness, was chairman of the House committee that oversaw court expenditures."

Dean says he rejected a plea from Hawkes and Thomas to fund the courthouse after Dean toured the existing courthouse. He said he rejected it because the state was slashing budgets, and he said the courts had more important needs than the construction of a new courthouse for the appellate court.

Dean said Hawkes and Thomas indicated they would go around him to get the funding they needed.

"He (Hawkes) just looked at me and grinned and said, 'I got friends,' '' Dean said.

Dean said the two judges had help from Richard Corcoran, then chief of staff for House Speaker Marco Rubio, and from Hawkes' son Jeremiah, who was general counsel for Rubio.
"Alex Sink orders audit of 'Taj Mahal' courthouse finances". See also "Sink orders audit of building deal".


Skip the scotch and read the cross tabs

The wingers on The Orlando Sentinel editorial board are outraged that Florida's overworked, underpaid (they haven't had a raise in years), state employees have ... get ready for this ... not had their pensions gutted. They whine this morning: "Most legislators panicked at the idea of antagonizing the state's politically powerful public employee unions in an election year." "Make state pensions more equitable, more affordable and more sustainable".

Of course, "equitable, affordable and sustainable" pensions are code words for cutting pensions. The editors then whine about "apologists [who] bring up poor pay for public employees, ignoring a Bureau of Labor Statistics report that shows public employees make more than their private counterparts". Of course, the editors are merely passing along the propaganda they hear from their Chamber buddies at the club - we urge the editors to skip the scotch and read the cross tabs.

To complete the whinge, the editors look adoringly into the eyes of Rick Scott: "only Republican Rick Scott is proposing to raise employee pension contributions. Good for him."

Related: "Millions in salary, pension cuts in front of Miami Commission on Tuesday".


In the heart of darkness

"Rubio campaigning in Pasco and Hernando". See also "Warm welcomes greet Rubio in Pasco, Hernando visits".


09:20 Florida Political News: August 31, 2010 » FLA Politics - Front Page

After reading the hard copy of your hometown newspaper, please consider becoming a site fan on Facebook and following us on Twitter. Whenever you visit a newspaper site online, please click on one or more of the advertisements and make an effort to patronize newspaper advertisers. Our digest of, and commentary on today's Florida political news and punditry follows.


RPOFers "zipping on their Hazmat suits and embracing Scott"

"Once viewed as a pariah among Republicans, Rick Scott is embraced by top party leaders who hope he can forgive and forget."

Politics is funny sometimes in Florida.

One day people call you a fraud who ripped off taxpayers and financed smut, the next day they hail you as a visionary leader, job creator and good friend. One day you're denouncing special interest and lobbyist money, the next day you are courting it.

Such is the case with Rick Scott, the mega-rich businessman ['who has more baggage than J-Lo on a camel safari'] who stunned the GOP establishment last week by beating Bill McCollum for the Republican gubernatorial nomination. Only a week ago, state and national party leaders treated Scott as a dangerous pariah, but now they're eagerly embracing him and hoping for forgiveness.
"GOP leaders reach out to Rick Scott". See also "Scott, GOP make a show of unity".

Carl Hiaasen: "Now that Florida's bitter Republican primary is over, party leaders are zipping on their Hazmat suits and preparing to embrace Rick Scott."
Whether Sink can capitalize on the rancorous split in the GOP remains to be seen. Meanwhile, the efforts of Thrasher and others to present a unified front will provide some much-needed comedy, if nothing else.

Expect staged photo opportunities of Scott posing with ex-McCollum backers, pained smiles all around. It will also be intriguing to see how party godfather Jeb Bush devises to appear enthusiastic about Scott, when the truth is the opposite. ...

McCollum will face mounting pressure from GOP insiders to hold his nose and praise a man whom he truly believes is unqualified to be governor.
"How McCollum responds will be a measure of his own integrity. Either he'll continue to say what he really thinks, or he'll join Scott's make-believe lovefest and paste on a smile."
With his résumé reeking from one of the nation's worst health-care ripoffs, the new GOP gubernatorial nominee is now being courted by the same stalwarts who did everything in their power to sink his self-financed excursion into politics.

Scott's surprise victory last week over Attorney General Bill McCollum was a gift to the Democrats and a blow to the wobbly state Republican machine.

Now comes the fun part, when all the GOP bigshots who spent months trashing Scott now pretend that they didn't do that, or didn't really mean it if they did.

Listen to this kissy-face lie from incoming Senate President Mike Haridopolos: "When you people check the record, you'll see it's only positive from me.''

Haridopolos, a vocal supporter of McCollum, was one of numerous Republican leaders who helped raise millions of dollars for attack ads against Scott.
Much more here: "Let the lovefest begin".

 

Free Choice Kerfuffle

"There’s no doubt Florida’s business community holds a lot of sway when it comes to electing the state’s next governor. Associated Industries of Florida boasts the most powerful business lobby in the state and the Florida Chamber of Commerce claims the largest membership with 139,000 businesses in its group."

One issue important to both of them, affecting endorsements and fund-raising for the candidates, is the Employee Free Choice Act, or card-check.

Card-check is currently being considered in Congress. It was co-sponsored by Sen. Bill Nelson, D-Fla., and is expected to be taken up by the Senate this fall. The bill would change the way unions can organize by getting rid of the secret-ballot system, and allowing businesses with as few as 10 employees to become unionized.

Many in the business community worry that getting rid of the secret ballot would allow unions to intimidate employees, essentially checking their cards while voting.

AIF president Barney Bishop says that’s one of the major reasons they are not endorsing Alex Sink, even though she’s described herself as a business-friendly Democrat.

"She’s a business person who just happens to be a Democrat," said Bishop. "And that dog just ain't going to hunt."

Bishop says one of his primary concerns with Sink is that she will side with Congress and the White House when it comes to the union-favored card-check legislation.
"Union-Supported Card-Check Bill May Help Decide Next Governor".

 

Scott claims he was "a victim of Bill and Hillary Clinton's wrath"

Myriam Marquez the other day:

Hi, it's me again!

With his ah-shucks, Opie Taylor demeanor and his "Let's get to work!'' slogan, Republican gubernatorial candidate Rick Scott pulled it off. He beat seasoned politico Bill McCollum in the primary by campaigning against his own party.

At his victory party in Fort Lauderdale Tuesday night, I marveled at the rise of a businessman who just a decade ago was forced to leave the company he created after a multibillion-dollar criminal scandal. Scott maintains that the $1.7 billion paid by Hospital Corporation of America -- the largest fine in U.S. history -- was not an admission of fraud.

As he implies on the stump (check out YouTube for illuminating videos of his "explanation''), he was a victim of Bill and Hillary Clinton's wrath once their healthcare reform plan went bust.
"We still don't know who Rick Scott is".

Joy-Ann Reid gives us "Five things to know about Rick Scott".

See also "Outsider Scott surrounds himself with GOP insiders".

 

"Scott must choose a running mate by Thursday"

"The Florida Republican Party’s newest supernova, gubernatorial nominee Rick Scott, blazed Monday across Central Florida on a party unity tour with legislative leaders – and a star-studded fly-around on deck. ... But while the self-styled political outsider basks in the glow of party insiders, Scott also is getting ready to create an instant celebrity of his own. Scott must choose a running mate by Thursday, under state law." "Who's Ready for 15 Minutes of Fame? Scott to Choose LG".

 

Never mind

"As a House panel wrapped up its work on Monday, chances for a September oil spill special session appeared to be slim and none." "Oil spill special session not likely". Related: "BP data reveals high stakes for Florida in oil spill claims process".

 

Crist "hedging, backpedaling and two-stepping"

"A longtime target of finger-to-the-wind accusations, Gov. Charlie Crist has engaged in an unusual amount of hedging, backpedaling and two-stepping since Tuesday's primary crystallized his opposition in the U.S. Senate race."

What's more, he is refusing to join his chief rivals, Republican Marco Rubio and Democrat Kendrick Meek, on NBC's Meet the Press this Sunday.

"When it comes down to the governor, I think Florida voters are going to really pay close attention because you don't know where he stands on the issues,'' Meek said in Tallahassee on Monday.

Twice in the past three days, the Crist campaign has scrambled to put out statements clarifying his remarks on healthcare and same-sex marriage. The Republican-turned-independent candidate has also given muddy answers on returning money to disgruntled donors and on which party he would caucus with if elected.

The difficulty in pinpointing Crist's positions reflects the unprecedented balancing act of an unaffiliated candidate trying to hold together a fragile coalition of Democratic, Republican and non-partisan voters.
"Crist remarks give fodder to opponents".

The Miami Herald editorial board: "Crist's bid to become the next U.S. senator from Florida -- and make history as an independent -- has liberated the long-time Republican from following a party script. But in so doing, Gov. Crist has left many voters confused and others angry. They're right to wonder what being an independent means, if all his positions seem to follow popular opinion. Voters aren't selecting a pollster. They are looking for a leader -- ideally, one who won't just parrot the mob." "Charlie Crist's challenge" ("Running as independent is no free pass to flip-flop").

 

SOE stoties

"The Sarasota Herald-Tribune is reporting new accusations that Sarasota County Supervisor of Elections Kathy Dent influenced charter review board candidate Kathy Bolam’s decision to concede last Wednesday, after primary results indicated she had lost her bid by just over 100 votes. The narrowness of that margin would have triggered an automatic recount, if Bolam had not conceded." "Sarasota supervisor of elections accused of influencing candidate’s decision to concede".

 

"Smaller this storm season"

"Florida's massive reinsurance fund is much smaller this storm season".

 

The week ahead

"The Week Ahead for Aug. 30-Sept. 3".

 

Grayson - Webster on the air

Mark Schlueb reports that the Webster - Grayson "TV battle began last week. Americans for Prosperity, the stealth conservative group backed by oil billionaire David Koch, launched attack ads against Grayson and fellow Democrat Suzanne Kosmas from the neighboring 24th District, noting their support of the federal stimulus. Grayson has paid for a spot slamming Webster for spending $32,000 of taxpayer money to install a spiral staircase in his state House office in 1997 and for billing taxpayers for 68 flights private jet flights. The staircase claim is true, and the information about the flights is partially true."

That Webster would associate himself with "Americans for Prosperity" speaks volumes. Jane Mayer has a lengthy piece in the New Yorker titled "Covert Operations", about the Koch brothers, who are "the billionaire brothers who are waging a war against Obama". She writes:

The Kochs are longtime libertarians who believe in drastically lower personal and corporate taxes, minimal social services for the needy, and much less oversight of industry—especially environmental regulation. These views dovetail with the brothers’ corporate interests. In a study released this spring, the University of Massachusetts at Amherst’s Political Economy Research Institute named Koch Industries one of the top ten air polluters in the United States. And Greenpeace issued a report identifying the company as a "kingpin of climate science denial." The report showed that, from 2005 to 2008, the Kochs vastly outdid ExxonMobil in giving money to organizations fighting legislation related to climate change, underwriting a huge network of foundations, think tanks, and political front groups. Indeed, the brothers have funded opposition campaigns against so many Obama Administration policies—from health-care reform to the economic-stimulus program—that, in political circles, their ideological network is known as the Kochtopus.
"Americans for Prosperity" is part of the Kochtopus.

The Kochs are also propping up the teabaggers. One Peggy Venable — "a longtime political operative who draws a salary from Americans for Prosperity, and who has worked for Koch-funded political groups since 1994" — announced at an Americans for Prosperity [an organization that David Koch started in 2004] event that
"We love what the Tea Parties are doing, because that’s how we’re going to take back America!" she declared, as the crowd cheered. In a subsequent interview, she described herself as an early member of the movement, joking, "I was part of the Tea Party before it was cool!" She explained that the role of Americans for Prosperity was to help "educate" Tea Party activists on policy details, and to give them "next-step training" after their rallies, so that their political energy could be channelled "more effectively." And she noted that Americans for Prosperity had provided Tea Party activists with lists of elected officials to target. She said of the Kochs, "They’re certainly our people. David’s the chairman of our board. I’ve certainly met with them, and I’m very appreciative of what they do."

Venable honored several Tea Party "citizen leaders" at the summit. The Texas branch of Americans for Prosperity gave its Blogger of the Year Award to a young woman named Sibyl West. On June 14th, West, writing on her site, described Obama as the "cokehead in chief." ...

During a catered lunch, Venable introduced Ted Cruz, a former solicitor general of Texas, who told the crowd that Obama was "the most radical President ever to occupy the Oval Office," and had hidden from voters a secret agenda—"the government taking over our economy and our lives." Countering Obama, Cruz proclaimed, was "the epic fight of our generation!" As the crowd rose to its feet and cheered, he quoted the defiant words of a Texan at the Alamo: "Victory, or death!"

Americans for Prosperity [the organization that David Koch started in 2004] has worked closely with the Tea Party since the movement’s inception. In the weeks before the first Tax Day protests, in April, 2009, Americans for Prosperity hosted a Web site offering supporters "Tea Party Talking Points."
"Covert Operations".

Frank Rich last weekend on the history billionaires subsidizing the wingnut "movements":
Only the fat cats change — not their methods and not their pet bugaboos (taxes, corporate regulation, organized labor, and government "handouts" to the poor, unemployed, ill and elderly). Even the sources of their fortunes remain fairly constant. Koch Industries began with oil in the 1930s and now also spews an array of industrial products, from Dixie cups to Lycra, not unlike DuPont’s portfolio of paint and plastics. Sometimes the biological DNA persists as well. The Koch brothers’ father, Fred, was among the select group chosen to serve on the Birch Society’s top governing body. In a recorded 1963 speech that survives in a University of Michigan archive, he can be heard warning of "a takeover" of America in which Communists would "infiltrate the highest offices of government in the U.S. until the president is a Communist, unknown to the rest of us." That rant could be delivered as is at any Tea Party rally today.
"The Billionaires Bankrolling the Tea Party". See generally "American Politics is Getting All Koch'ed Up" and "Group Is Accused on Tax Exemption".

One wonders if the Orlando Sentinel will ask Taliban Dan if he agrees with the views of his billionaire benefactors?

 

Grayson debate debate

"The candidates in the most closely watched congressional race in Florida might not have a televised debate because the campaigns disagree over who should be invited."

Incumbent Democrat U.S. Rep. Alan Grayson refuses to debate Republican challenger Dan Webster unless lesser known candidates are invited to the stage. Webster, a former state senator and the GOP standard-bearer, says he wants to take on Grayson solo. ...

In addition to the two major-party candidates, the Nov. 2 ballot in Florida's 8th Congressional district also will include Florida Tea Party candidate Peg Dunmire and independent George Metcalfe.

The choice of which candidates would participate is a calculated one for both camps. It is to Grayson's advantage to have Dunmire and Metcalfe there because they'd likely peel conservative votes away from Webster.

"Webster wants me and Peg Dunmire to go away," Metcalfe said. "He wants to frame this as a two-party election. This is not an exclusive boys' club.''

Dunmire called her exclusion "elitist."
"Candidates debate having debate".

The teabaggers will whine for a moment, but will of course flock to Webster in the end.

 

What say you ... Mr. Scott

"Leon County Circuit Judge Charles Francis has agreed with the city of Weston that a law passed last year by the state Legislature would create unconstitutional expenses for local governments. He threw the ill-advised bill in the trash can. Gov. Charlie Crist, who signed the Community Renewal Act, should not appeal." "On growth law, judge protects taxpayers".

 

"All that stood between the GOP and dynastic dominance were ..."

Thomas Tryon: "When the Republican Party gained firm control of Florida politics in the late 1990s, all that stood between the GOP and dynastic dominance were ... the Republican Party and its members." "Tryon: GOP's challenge is to keep it together".

 

"Frequent filer"

"Frequent filer Josue Larose runs for governor, raises questions". "$14.2 Million Write-In 'Challenges' Division of Elections".

 

Pathetic turnout

"Final turnout figures for the primary election are in: statewide, the 2.43 million votes cast were 21.9 percent of registered voters, according to the state Division of Elections. Leading the pack were the smaller counties, like Liberty, where more than 51 percent of the 4,237 voters turned out. ... Miami-Dade, 17.2 percent, Palm Beach, 16.2 percent, Broward, 14.7 percent". "21.9% of state's registered voters in cast ballots in primary, final figures show".

 

"Perverse political hubris at work here"

Daniel Ruth complains, "so it was the other day as we attempted to enjoy our first cocktails of the evening while watching the news only to be exposed — again and again and again — with yet another wave of campaign commercials."

Couldn't we just have a break from this silliness — just a short one? Haven't we earned it?

There is a perverse political hubris at work here — that the general public is sitting at their kitchen counters breathlessly, anxiously awaiting the next commercial pimping a candidate's fitness for office or why their opponent is a vile agent of darkness who makes Saddam Hussein look like Dr. Seuss.

Really, do either Rubio, Sink or the Committee of Sleazy Mysterious Touts for Rick Scott honestly believe if they merely went away until after Labor Day they would lose potential votes to be cast more than two months from now?

It is estimated that during the recent primary mosh pit, the average television viewer in the Tampa Bay area was treated to 266 commercials — most of them portraying Bill McCollum as a shiftless poltroon — hawking the candidacy of Rick Scott. Madonna hasn't exposed herself this much.

Imagine — if you dare — what we can expect going into the general election.

Of course the argument for the airwaves carpet bombing is that it is important for the public to get to know these candidates. But the problem, unfortunately, is — we know, we know.

At the risk of committing heresy — could we just know a little less?
Much more here: "Call it a campaign, but it’s more like torture".

 

Union hating fun

The Sun Sentinel editorial board: "Palm Beach County teachers are forced to watch from the sidelines, because their union, in a petulant fit, opted not join in the Race to the Top fun." "Palm union's petulance cost teachers a bundle".

 

"Strange"

"Just two weeks after publicly pumping up U.S. Rep. Kendrick Meek in the U.S. Senate Democratic primary race against Jeff Greene, state senator-to-be Maria Sachs yesterday pulled a switch and endorsed Meek’s general election rival Gov. Charlie Crist." "Sachs' defection to Crist in Senate race strange, Meek tells reporters". Related: "Meek, Thurman: Few Dems will defect".

 

Taj Mahal audit

"Sen. Charlie Dean, R-Inverness, was chairman of the House committee that oversaw court expenditures."

Dean says he rejected a plea from Hawkes and Thomas to fund the courthouse after Dean toured the existing courthouse. He said he rejected it because the state was slashing budgets, and he said the courts had more important needs than the construction of a new courthouse for the appellate court.

Dean said Hawkes and Thomas indicated they would go around him to get the funding they needed.

"He (Hawkes) just looked at me and grinned and said, 'I got friends,' '' Dean said.

Dean said the two judges had help from Richard Corcoran, then chief of staff for House Speaker Marco Rubio, and from Hawkes' son Jeremiah, who was general counsel for Rubio.
"Alex Sink orders audit of 'Taj Mahal' courthouse finances". See also "Sink orders audit of building deal".

 

Skip the scotch and read the cross tabs

The wingers on The Orlando Sentinel editorial board are outraged that Florida's overworked, underpaid (they haven't had a raise in years), state employees have ... get ready for this ... not had their pensions gutted. They whine this morning: "Most legislators panicked at the idea of antagonizing the state's politically powerful public employee unions in an election year." "Make state pensions more equitable, more affordable and more sustainable".

Of course, "equitable, affordable and sustainable" pensions are code words for cutting pensions. The editors then whine about "apologists [who] bring up poor pay for public employees, ignoring a Bureau of Labor Statistics report that shows public employees make more than their private counterparts". Of course, the editors are merely passing along the propaganda they hear from their Chamber buddies at the club - we urge the editors to skip the scotch and read the cross tabs.

To complete the whinge, the editors look adoringly into the eyes of Rick Scott: "only Republican Rick Scott is proposing to raise employee pension contributions. Good for him."

Related: "Millions in salary, pension cuts in front of Miami Commission on Tuesday".

 

In the heart of darkness

"Rubio campaigning in Pasco and Hernando". See also "Warm welcomes greet Rubio in Pasco, Hernando visits".



06:53 MWA-HAHAHAHA! » Anarchy in the AM


06:52 Question of the Day » Bark Bark Woof Woof

Choose your partner...
When was the last time you danced, either by yourself or with someone?
Last week while one of our secretaries and I were taking turns at the copier, a Strauss waltz came on (I live-stream Classical South Florida at my desk). I bowed, she curtsied, and we did a few steps that would have made Mrs. Brown (dancing school in 1963) very proud.

06:52 Bully For You » Bark Bark Woof Woof

It's a new week, so Focus on the Family has a new villain.
As kids head back to school, conservative Christian media ministry Focus on the Family perceives a bully on the playground: national gay-advocacy groups.

School officials allow these outside groups to introduce policies, curriculum and library books under the guise of diversity, safety or bullying-prevention initiatives, said Focus on the Family education expert Candi Cushman.

"We feel more and more that activists are being deceptive in using anti-bullying rhetoric to introduce their viewpoints, while the viewpoint of Christian students and parents are increasingly belittled," Cushman said.

Public schools increasingly convey that homosexuality is normal and should be accepted, Cushman said, while opposing viewpoints by conservative Christians are portrayed as bigotry.
Gee, I wonder why anyone would ever think that labeling an entire class of people as an "abomination" was bigotry?

Actually, it's no surprise to see FotF standing up for bullies; that's their stock in trade. And isn't it ironic that they get their tails all puffed up about the Radical Homosexuals recruiting kids when that's basically what they do to lure their unsuspecting prey into their din of inequity?

06:52 Beck vs. The Theocrats » Bark Bark Woof Woof

The Religious Right took notice of Glenn Beck's call to prayer this last weekend. They're all in favor of his right-wing agenda, but they're not crazy about his brand of superstition.
Glenn Beck promotes a false gospel. However, many of his political ideas can help America.

Our country was founded on Judeo-Christian values. Mormonism is not a Christian denomination but a cult of Christianity.

The country needs to get back to the simplicity of the Bible. The reason our country is in bad shape is that ministers for the most part do not share the truth. Many endorse false gospels including Mormonism.
What's really going on here has very little to do with "false gospels" or whether or not "Mormonism" is a cult. (We're getting really close to Pot/Kettle territory here.) What the real issue is that the evangelicals see Mr. Beck horning in on their side of the street: "Hey, those are our pigeons you're trying to pluck."

HT to Steve.

05:43 Last call for your bad art! » Florida Citizens for Science

Today is the LAST DAY to enter the Stick Science cartoon contest. Get moving, folks! Fame and fortune awaits … or something like that.

02:42 Alex Sink Refuses To Debate Michael E. Arth » The Ybor City Stogie

Michael E. Arth confronts Alex Sink and Florida Democratic Party officials over debates and unfair practices. Eric Jotkoff, Communications Director for the Florida Democratic Party, had Arth escorted out of the rally by a security guard. It appears that Jotkoff was especially incensed when Arth brought up that 23% of Democrats voting in the primary had apparently registered protest votes by voting for an unknown socialist candidate (Brian Moore) with no money.
here

Mon 30 August, 2010

23:24 Outside Looking In » Talk to Me



Although GOP gubernatorial candidate Rick Scott ran as the ultimate outsider, it didn't take too him too long to allow the insiders in.

In fact, it didn't take two shakes of an elephant's tail for Senate President Mike Haridopolos to sidle out from behind Bill McCollum's left shoulder primary night to hang with Rick at the Tampa Jet Center and paint the picture of a united conservative front .

"Dean and I were not on the Rick Scott team," Haridopolos told the crowd at the rally. "But he showed a lot of grace and we're going to be there for him."

"We" does not include the defeated Bill McCollum. He's not quite ready to kiss and make up, if ever. Questioning Scott's integrity, honesty and character, McCollum has pretty much phoned in his regrets. "I'm not going to involve myself in the race. I'm just not going to do so unless something dramatic happens that I don't expect to."

Enter Jeb Bush.

The former Fan of Bill will hit the campaign trail with Scott and likely teach him a thing or two about how to face off against that Sink woman. And expect new hires on the Great Scott horizon, in the form of "...high-level Republican operatives, some connected with former President George W. Bush and some with the McCollum campaign."

How Rove can you go?

20:36 It's a Numbers Game: The Who Keeps Calling it the 'Silly Season' Edition » The Spencerian

Gallup: Obama Job Approval, 43% Approve, 49% Disapprove Gallup: Americans Oppose Renewing U.S. Combat Operations in Iraq Gallup: GOP Maintains Edge in Midterm Voting Preferences, 47% to 44% TPM PollTracker: Florida Governor, Sink 40.9%, Scott 36.7%, Chiles 7.7% TPM PollTracker:...

19:32 Downtown Sunset » The Ybor City Stogie

Finding Tampa

19:32 Off the Radar Monday Morning Blues (From My Head Down to My Shoes) Edition » The Spencerian

My big 39th birthday present was to get my bicycle fixed up. It costs more than you'd think (and was in worse shape than you'd think). I'm pretty excited about it. I used to love riding my bike, an old...

18:24 Tampa Tea Party » The Ybor City Stogie

In Tampa

18:24 Florida Ghost Team Spooktacular » The Ybor City Stogie

The Italian Club In Ybor City
Sept. 10, 2010
info

18:24 Bud Chiles: Spoiler Or Serious Candidate? » The Ybor City Stogie


17:49 Meek Needs To Sell Obama To Win » FLA Politics - Front Page

Politico provided this video of Kendrick Meek on Face The Nation "staking his claim in Florida."


The part that bothered me though was this excerpt:

And while Meek said he had the support of Obama, it was unclear whether the Democratic congressman would return the favor.

Also on CNN's "State of the Union," Meek left the door open Sunday as to whether he thought Obama should shake up his economic advisory team in the wake of the country's deep economic woes.

As I've said in the past, if Rep. Meek wants to win a three way race he needs to concentrate on turning out his hard core base. This comment sounds like he's trying to steal Democratic voters back from Gov. Crist.

Simply focusing on Crist is the wrong strategy. He needs to fire up the faithful by talking about how Obama (OUR president) is under attack from right wing extremists. (See Jane Mayer's New Yorker article for details.)

Two years ago we put Obama in power and now everyone needs to make sure we've got his back. The best way to support OUR president and make sure things turn out right is to send a REAL Democrat to Washington.

That's what the man needs to be saying. Come on Kendrick, be like Obama, DOUBLE DOWN.


17:17 What Stogie Had For Dinner » The Ybor City Stogie

Mexican Quesadillas
$7.95.....At My Place, 4944 E. Busch Blvd, Tampa

How Much Was Your Last Value Meal?
Eat Local!

17:17 Sharon Corr » The Ybor City Stogie

Debut Album
info

17:17 Classic » The Ybor City Stogie

In Drew Park

15:57 fatass » Tampa's Back Door Ways ... (OR...)

I worry about you not wearing a seatbelt.

What if you fell off your trike??

And busted yourself to bits on the asphalt??

The world would lose:


A nice clean piece of asphalt.


Loser.


Murderer.
Truth about Tampa. Send this to everyone you know who loves the TRUTH~~!! Truth is violated by falsehood, but it is outraged by silence. - Henri Frederic Amiel Vote in the National Cheney Impeachment Poll http://www.usalone.com/blogvoices.php?Cheney%20Impeachment%3F

15:56 Blog Headline of the Day » Discourse.net

Paul Krugman, I Am A Psychotic Ferret. The underlying debate is pretty good too (in that I think my side wins), but takes some economics to follow....

08:44 Another Real Estate Slump » Discourse.net

We have concrete evidence that the big three fantasy cover clichés (“castles”, “glowy magic”, and “swords”) are in decline. The 50% reduction in castles can only mean one thing. Orbit Books, The Chart of Fantasy Art, 2009 (spotted via Boing Boing via Making Light)...

08:32 Another child murdered » Tampa's Back Door Ways ... (OR...)

CLEARWATER — A Safety Harbor woman died late Saturday after losing control of her car and slamming into a utility pole, police said.
The woman, Jillian Lacey Rivers, 25, was driving a 2000 Nissan south on U.S. 19 just before 11 p.m. when she struck the utility pole at 25400 U.S. 19 N.
Clearwater Fire Rescue pronounced her dead at the scene. She was the only occupant of the car and no other vehicles were involved in the crash, police said.
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There are 44 comments Oldest FirstNewest FirstTop Rated

Ace wrote:
So young,had her whole life in front of her.
That is very sad indeed.
Condolences to her family and friends.
Aug 29, 2010 8:49 AM
20 1 Report Abuse

Clobbohead wrote:
I'm guessing "No seatbelt"
Aug 29, 2010 9:23 AM
1 9 Report Abuse

gogreen46 wrote:
Busterbowels and Liquorbutt - I hope you both lose a beloved young family member in a terrible tragedy. You deserve it.
Aug 29, 2010 9:49 AM
4 15 Report Abuse

vennmaster wrote:
so stpetetimes while what those guys said was bad it's no better to leave the insults and the hope that they lose young family members.Dear family, So sorry for your immeasurable loss. Kind thoughts go out to you in a time that will last forever. Take care of yourselves.
Aug 29, 2010 10:31 AM
5 7 Report Abuse

apflorida wrote:
I actually drove by this accident last night, and the sight was horrible. Poor girl the car was smashed like an acordian.
Aug 29, 2010 10:37 AM
5 2 Report Abuse

Boppy wrote:
Another senseless death. There are so many of them. I'm not going to jump to any conclusions as the the cause of this tragedy. I do extend my deepest sympathy to the family and loved ones of Ms. Rivers.
Aug 29, 2010 10:57 AM
4 2 Report Abuse

gogreen46 wrote:
Sandy Gina - if SPT hadn't taken their disgusting posts off you would have seen them - both CONSTANTLY write vile and hateful things here. As far as wishing me a happy gathering, you're just as bad. Touche.
Aug 29, 2010 11:30 AM
5 4 Report Abuse

YumYum wrote:
More facts are needed before conclusions can be made. RIP Jillian!.
Aug 29, 2010 11:47 AM
8 2 Report Abuse

luvstpete wrote:
Condolences to family and friends.
Aug 29, 2010 11:49 AM
8 1 Report Abuse

edg wrote:
So many of you are judgemental and ignorant simpletons. No one knows the facts of what happened. Yes, she may have been texting, or chemically impaired. Then again, she may have had a massive stroke, or even a heart attack. Yes, these things do happen to young women. You who rush to judgements and concusions need to get a life. SHAME ON YOU!!! You are merely using this tragedy for your amusement, and the St. Ptersburg Times is facilitating this under the guise for freedom of expression. What if YOU were the ones at a funeral home today making these final arrangements for a member of your family? I for one, have been there and done that. My step-son died in an accident and was neither impares nor texting.
Aug 29, 2010 11:50 AM
11 1 Report Abuse

empsnewclozh wrote:
Another fine day of posters wishing each other unbearable pain and loss. I'm glad to see some of your self serving rants under your various screen names on other articles such as this were removed.
Condolences to the family and friends of this woman.
Aug 29, 2010 11:55 AM
6 3 Report Abuse

dawgman wrote:
Busterbowels and Liquorbutt...so easy to hide behind a keyboard...You both are not only cowards but are deserving of experiencing tragedy's in your life. May you both answer for your despicable comments when your time comes
Aug 29, 2010 12:01 PM
7 2 Report Abuse

Mini2010 wrote:
What time was it? Did she fall asleep at the wheel possibly? It sounds like she didn't even hit the breaks according to those who saw the car.
Aug 29, 2010 12:45 PM
2 1 Report Abuse

vennmaster wrote:
gogreen46, that doesn't make what you said correct. I learned that in like ... near-infancy. Reject wishing ill on others. You have a doorstep, as well. I reserve my venom for the scum who lead entire legions of citizens (the state of Florida) in an unhealthy direction. I happen to believe they will die a painful death. So wishing it on them is not really prophetic but knowing. Any way ... you are lowering yourself to their level. Just for the record.
Aug 29, 2010 12:47 PM
2 2 Report Abuse

vennmaster wrote:
edg, so sorry for your loss. Hugs !
Aug 29, 2010 12:49 PM
2 2 Report Abuse

vennmaster wrote:
Okay everyone better STFU. I just realized I know this girl's parents. LAY OFF. She has a tiny little brother about 13 years old who is very smart and will likely read here. GDF, I'm SO SORRY !!!! Let me know if the jays and I can do ANYTHING at all. I'm so sorry. I wish that I could wrap my arms around you. This is more than enough car wrecks in your family for YOU TOO to question what the hell is going on in Tampa. I love you. I'm so sorry we lost touch. Lay off, people and I mean it. I have missed you so much and I feel how badly you are hurting now. Love to you and your mama and lil one .... SO SORRY !!!
Aug 29, 2010 1:11 PM
4 6 Report Abuse

willie_from_penniless_park wrote:
another reason i don't like driving on US19 - especially later in the evening... unfortunately, we'll never read about why or how this happened
Aug 29, 2010 1:14 PM
4 3 Report Abuse

beeper555 wrote:
It's sad to see her driving record and see she's been ticketed several times for careless or reckless driving, DUI,leaving the scence, no seat belts and etc. One would hope people would learn from their mistakes. Too many young people feel they are immortal, that nothing will happen to them. I do feel sorry for the family.
Aug 29, 2010 1:39 PM
5 6 Report Abuse

HarrysHiat wrote:
gogreen46 wrote:
Busterbowels and Liquorbutt - I hope you both lose a beloved young family member in a terrible tragedy. You deserve it.Aug 29, 2010 9:49 AMYou must have gotten your vile comment removed the wannabe bikerLiquorbutt & the wannabee tough guy Busterbowels.
Aug 29, 2010 1:45 PM
4 0 Report Abuse

lili wrote:
To all you people that have so much hatred in your hearts-remeber the old saying"If you can't sat something mice then don't say anything at all". Somehow i do not think you can do it!
Aug 29, 2010 1:46 PM
4 3 Report Abuse

beeper555 wrote:
beeper555 wrote: It's sad to see her driving record and see she's been ticketed several times for careless or reckless driving, DUI,leaving the scence, no seat belts and etc. One would hope people would learn from their mistakes. Too many young people feel they are immortal, that nothing will happen to them. In any case, I do feel sorry for the family's loss.
....perhaps my original words were not said right.
Aug 29, 2010 1:58 PM
5 2 Report Abuse

vennmaster wrote:
Then why did you bring it up, beeper555??? This was a beautiful young lady with parent who loved her and thought the world of her future despite a broken home. The car she was driving was also wrecked by someone pulling out in front of HER MOTHER as her mother left my home one day. The mother had to swerve to avoid hitting someone at anderson and waters. Didn't get the car back for a LONG TIME. Kinda suspicious if you ask me. Any witnesses? This smells like murder to me just as the attempt on the mother whom the car rolled over w/her inside breaking bones in her body ... Right down the street from them lives the head of the hit and run gangs. Shares the name with mike roberts' murderer. I'm pretty sure they went to webb together, as well. And more. So maybe she was run off the road. Some kids are more easily led than others. Just because she hit a pole does not mean she was not induced to do so by another driver.
Aug 29, 2010 2:00 PM
2 8 Report Abuse

vennmaster wrote:
sounds to me like she was targeted. They tried to get my young family member driving at sixteen, as well. No doubt to pull the same. When that failed they tried to get him on a bike. Actually made up some story about it ... got it all on video. Murdering peoples' children destroys the family. Except some of us realized we were smarter and decided to LET THEM KNOW WE KNOW WHAT THEY ARE UP TO. I'd like to see some video of this crash. I'm sure there has to be a nearby camera or a REAL witness not a planted one as they like to do.
Aug 29, 2010 2:05 PM
1 5 Report Abuse

vennmaster wrote:
their former home is now in gang hands. Wondered what was going on around there. Very recent ganger movein. This family is a good family. Every kid my family member KNOWS goes back to the gangster husband of the above facebook.
Aug 29, 2010 2:09 PM
1 5 Report Abuse

vennmaster wrote:
realtor.
Aug 29, 2010 2:09 PM
1 5 Report Abuse

SmokeyFBaby wrote:
Lacey was one of the sweetest funniest girls you could meet. She left behind her daughter and family. she had just recently lost her brother which was the hardest thing for her.. shes going to be very missed by all her friends and family. i didnt know her very well or even for that long.. but every time we did hang out she always had people laughin!! RIP LACEY.. YOU WILL BE MISSED. only the good die you...
Aug 29, 2010 2:31 PM
7 0 Report Abuse

vennmaster wrote:
smokeyfbaby, WHAT brother?? Younger brother??? Please tell me.
Aug 29, 2010 2:40 PM
2 2 Report Abuse

keepdreaming wrote:
I believe that this girl had just lost her brother in Nov. 2009 from a motorcycle crash in Clearwater. If this is correct, this is another horrible tragedy for this family. God bless.
Aug 29, 2010 4:15 PM
0 0 Report Abuse

vennmaster wrote:
what is the brother's name? Please tell me. I know her mother. She must be losing her mind right now. I would like to know before I call her. Please. Just put a link if there is one.
Aug 29, 2010 4:21 PM
1 2 Report Abuse

keepdreaming wrote:
Yes, Lacey's brother, Daniel died on Nov. 5, 2009 from a motorcycle crash. Pray for this family as this double tragedy is too much loss for anyone to endure on their own.
Aug 29, 2010 4:23 PM
2 0 Report Abuse

vennmaster wrote:
never mind. I found it. Thank you for relating this. I wanted to be sure it wasn't the little boy before I called her. Thank you.
Aug 29, 2010 4:24 PM
2 2 Report Abuse

vennmaster wrote:
sandy gina you are a piece of ●●●●.
Aug 29, 2010 4:24 PM
2 5 Report Abuse

vennmaster wrote:
delgado family musta woke up and had the commentary about their murdering selves removed. It's okay... we have a better place for that.
Aug 29, 2010 4:27 PM
1 3 Report Abuse

vennmaster wrote:
google sarah rinaldi. Same folks involved.
Aug 29, 2010 7:13 PM
1 1 Report Abuse

Honestly50 wrote:
ole Busterbowels you already got 1 comment removed wannabee tough guy. Know I didn't wait hours for you to show up
Aug 29, 2010 7:32 PM
2 0 Report Abuse

vennmaster wrote:
delgado, vicki facebook.
Aug 29, 2010 7:58 PM
1 0 Report Abuse

vennmaster wrote:
for the record, I see no arrests or dui or anything for this young person.
Aug 29, 2010 8:16 PM
0 0 Report Abuse

the hoff wrote:
It was karma.
Aug 29, 2010 8:49 PM
1 2 Report Abuse

aliveinlargo wrote:
Vennmaster, I see you have feelings and a conscience after all. You have slammed others out here at other posts and have made some not so moral comments that seem full of vile and ugly. Now..the karma has come around real close to home. RIP Jillian.
Aug 29, 2010 8:55 PM
0 0 Report Abuse

Greenhill wrote:
25 and 0. Dark 11 Pm. Not watching what your doing, pole, opps.I'm still sorry for this young girl. My condolences to the family.
Aug 29, 2010 8:57 PM
0 1 Report Abuse

Clobbohead wrote:
lili; here I "sat something mice" (sic)(. Sorry for the loss. But she was insane to drive on 19 in the A.M. with no seatbealt. Probably a family tradition from the trailer park she lived in.
Aug 29, 2010 8:58 PM
0 3 Report Abuse

the hoff wrote:
Bad things happen to bad drivers.
Aug 29, 2010 9:04 PM
1 2 Report Abuse

keepdreaming wrote:
It makes me very sad to read the posts here. None of you know this girl do you? Do you know what kind of person she was? Do you know anything about her or her baby or her family? If not, don't say these cruel things. Family members read these posts sometimes and the cruelty is salt for their already wounded hearts. Keep your ignorance and your "thoughts" about what "might" have happened to yourself. If you know facts about Lacey as a person...then post. This is tragic and the majority of post are pure stupidity.
Aug 29, 2010 9:21 PM
1 0 Report Abuse

vennmaster wrote:
hey aliveinlargo, is that you gina clotworthy?? W/your numerous drug and drinking arrests?? As a matter of fact I met LACEY and her mother during the aftermath of a MURDER in my own family. And they extended a great deal of kindness towards us. Not that it's ANY of your business ... I say what I want which is the truth, unlike you stalking people around like white trash. For the record, the family is a good family and none live in trailers where most of you belong. I'd prefer a good trailer person to the trash on bayshore blvd now and on shellpoint drive and conley off of bayshore. Her grandmother and brother and mother and younger brother will eventually read here. A mystery to me where karen mcallister is today. alive in largo, stop stalking me.
Aug 29, 2010 9:36 PM
0 0 Report Abuse
Have your say...
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Truth about Tampa. Send this to everyone you know who loves the TRUTH~~!! Truth is violated by falsehood, but it is outraged by silence. - Henri Frederic Amiel Vote in the National Cheney Impeachment Poll http://www.usalone.com/blogvoices.php?Cheney%20Impeachment%3F

07:38 Florda key state in Dem control of Congress » Florida Politics

"Florida's party primaries last week set the stage for a half-dozen closely contested congressional elections this fall that could help resurgent Republicans regain majority control of Congress."
National political analysts foresee a Republican gain of two or three U.S. House seats in Florida.

Four Democratic incumbents appear vulnerable: Alan Grayson of Orlando, Suzanne Kosmas of New Smyrna Beach, Allen Boyd of Monticello and Ron Klein of Boca Raton. On the other hand, two open seats vacated by Republicans in South and Central Florida offer opportunities for Democrats.

"I expect Republicans to pick up three seats in Florida on their way to the 40 they hope to get nationally," said David Wasserman, who tracks House campaigns for The Cook Political Report, which analyzes elections across the country. "The primaries demonstrated that there is more enthusiasm on the Republican side this year."
In the meantime, "Democrats hope to wrest two seats from Republicans, one at the southern end of the Miami area and another south of Orlando."
Congressman Mario Diaz-Balart of Miami is leaving the 25th District to run unopposed in the more Republican-friendly 21st District now represented by his brother, Lincoln Diaz-Balart, who is retiring from Congress.

Competing for the open seat are Democrat Joe Garcia and Republican state Rep. David Rivera. Garcia has a slight lead in the money chase, raising $1.6 million to Rivera's $1.3 million. ...

A similar contest is unfolding in the 12th District, an area marked by suburban sprawl and citrus groves, where Republican Adam Putnam is retiring to run for agriculture commissioner. That sets up a competitive race between Republican Dennis Ross, a former legislator, and Democrat Lori Edwards, the supervisor of elections in Polk County.
Half-dozen Florida races could hold key to GOP gaining control of Congress".


And so it begins ...

"Crist won the backing of two state Democrat legislators this morning in his quest to become a United States Senator. State Sen.-elect Maria Sachs, Delray Beach, and State Rep. Darryl Rouson, District 55, based in St. Petersburg, praised Crist at the South County Civic Center before a crowd of about 100 voters who braved the rain to snack on bagels and meet the Republican-turned-Independent." "Democrat state lawmakers Sachs, Rouson endorse Crist in Delray".


Is Scott FlaDem dream or nightmare?

"Rick Scott's triumph in the GOP gubernatorial primary may have drawn almost as many cheers from Democrats as it did from Republicans."

Several polls showed that Alex Sink, the presumptive Democratic candidate, was leading Scott before Tuesday's election. The Republican elite wanted state Attorney General Bill McCollum to win, and McCollum had done a yeoman's job of highlighting vulnerable spots in Scott's background.

Scott, Democrats surmised, would be the easier opponent. Now the question remains: is Scott's nomination the gift that many Democrats think -- or will the political newcomer turn out to be their worst nightmare?
"Scott: A gift to Democrats or their worst nightmare?".


LeMieux laff riot

Florida Trend: "LeMieux has a lot bigger agenda than warming a seat for whoever is elected to the Senate in November". "Climbing the Hill".


Fladems might change three key things

"William March writes that FlaDems have "the potential for change in three key items on the Nov. 2 ballot – the governor's race, in which Democrat Alex Sink appears tied or narrowly leading; and constitutional amendments seeking to outlaw gerrymandering of legislative and congressional districts.".


"Where the next governor will stand on the growth issue?"

The Saint Petersburg Times editorial board: "From the beginning, Senate Bill 360 — the 2009 Legislature's assault on Florida's growth management laws — was a rash deal. Cooked up by Republican leaders in a matter of weeks at the behest of powerful development interests, the law gutted decades of careful, if imperfect, law under the guise of jump-starting Florida's economy. Now that a judge has ruled the law unconstitutional, those same legislative leaders are planning to try again in 2011. Floridians must know where the next governor will stand on the issue." "Growth bill becomes election issue".


"Doomed by late start"

"In a state of 4 million Republicans, McCollum lost by fewer than 38,000 votes. Now with three losses in four statewide campaigns, many expect it to be his final race." Michael Bender takes a detailed look at his campaign strategy here: "Despite last-minute surge in spending, McCollum bid doomed by late start".


FCAT Follies

"Big disconnect seen in testing as reading results run 20-40 points lower". "'Inflated' FCAT Writing Scores Pad School Grades".


Tubby bullies duke it out

"It’s not talked about much, but the rivalry between Florida’s top business associations is real, and it’s beginning to show itself more in the 2010 elections. The Florida Chamber of Commerce and Associated Industries of Florida have long sparred for the position of top dog." "Top Business Associations Fight for Political Prominence".


"The union president is seeing red"

"Deltona firefighters are asking to wear pink shirts as a show of support for women whose lives have been impacted by breast cancer. City Manager Faith Miller says she supports their cause and has encouraged other city workers to wear pink shirts on Fridays in October, which is National Breast Cancer Awareness Month. But she doesn't think the firefighters' request -- pink uniform shirts for six weeks -- is a good precedent to set. Miller's decision has the union president seeing red. " "Deltona manager, firefighters clash over pink shirts".


Business speaks, editors jump

The Sun Sentinel editorial board: "Candidates hoping to win posts in Tallahassee should latch on to a promising 2009 proposal to change the way Florida taxes corporate income. Florida TaxWatch says its approach, already adopted by about a dozen other states, would stimulate business investment and create jobs — the very goals to which the candidates claim to be dedicated." "Florida's approach to corporate tax discourages business investment and hiring".


"His lips moved, he said nothing"

Nancy Smith: "Does Charlie Crist believe in anything?"

You have to ask yourself.

Did you watch his performance on CNN’s "State of the Union" Sunday?

I’m beginning to think that thick coat of Teflon covering Florida’s governor, the independent duck-and-dodge candidate for U.S. Senate, is finally breaking down. And it’s happening before our very eyes.

Crist didn’t just look like a candidate without a party Sunday, he looked like a man without a principle to his name.

There were moments in the 15-minute segment when I was actually embarrassed