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No Recount On Reality

Recount, HBO’s dramatic recreation of events surrounding Florida’s 2000 presidential voting fiasco which landed George W. Bush in the White House, debuts on May 25. Early returns look good, at least with regard to the film’s entertainment value, which should come as no surprise given the network’s long track record of high-quality original programming. The consensus of critics who’ve screened Recount — a group that doesn’t include me, by the way — seems to be that, despite its token gestures at evenhandedness, the film makes clear that supporters of Al Gore were more right than wrong while supporters of Bush were more wrong than right.

Recount, therefore, is certain to fire up that substantial portion of the electorate that still believes the 2000 presidential election was stolen. But before we get our collective undies in a bunch, here are a few points to keep in mind.  On the matter of chads, On the matter of black voter suppression, On the matter of justice being done.

. . . instructions were provided at every polling location in Florida where punch-card ballots were used, . . . not a single black voter has ever come forward with a credible claim. Not one.. . .“The principal issue in the case, whether the scheme that the Florida Supreme Court had put together violated the federal Constitution, that wasn’t even close. The vote was seven to two.” Scalia also points out, “It was Al Gore who made it a judicial question. It was he who brought it into the Florida courts. [The Supreme Court] didn’t go looking for trouble. It was he who said, ‘I want this to be decided by the courts.’ What are we supposed to say? ‘Oh, it’s not important enough.’?”



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Senate Passes Iraq War Funding Bill With Add-ons

In a stunning vote that illustrated President Bush's diminished standing, the Senate on Thursday ignored his veto threat and added tens of billions of dollars for veterans and the unemployed to his Iraq war spending bill.

Bush has promised to veto the Iraq spending if it exceeds his request. He has enough GOP support in the House to sustain a veto.

But the spectacle of 25 Senate Republicans abandoning the White House and voting to extend jobless benefits by 13 weeks and boost the GI Bill to provide veterans enough money to pay for a four-year education at a public institution made it plain that Bush's influence is waning.

''He has no political capital left,'' said Sen. Robert Bennett, R-Utah.

No wonder Congressional approval is at 18% [lower than the President's].

I guess the Republicans want to get one spending frenzy in before the 2008 election.  Then the Democrats get in and we will see so much more spending, and increased taxes.  Wait and see how many Republicans lose in '08, and then listen to them wonder why this happened.



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Afghan Girl's Death Sparks National Debate

Honor Killing in Germany Sparks Debate  Killing over values may not be the Europeans' cup of tea, but it's something that that they will need to get used to if they are to continue handing over the continent.
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Gun Control Is Based On False Premises

Even with their flawed assumptions exposed, what is especially insidious is that gun control does not work. The results of their policies are abject failures. Whether in Washington, D.C., Los Angeles, New York or Chicago, gun control does not work.

Read About It: Roanoke Times
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McCain Wants It Both Ways

Report: McCain asks Bush to scale back fundraising event

McCain should really scale back any appearances with any members of Congress.  Congress has a lower rating then the President.
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Just Another Gaffe-Filled Sunrise

How often did Quayle misspell potato?


Somewhere in Indiana, Dan Quayle sits fuming over a breakfast of eggs and potatoes. He misspelled potato once — once! — and the media painted him as an illiterate idiot. Barack Obama can’t remember the name of the city he’s in for the second time, and it barely makes a splash

. . . How many times did Gerald Ford bump his head before comedians started portraying the former star athlete as an uncoordinated boob?

Michelle Malkin  •  May 24, 2008 09:28 AM [Below]

The Gaffe Machine keeps going and going and going.

Barack Obama–promoted by the Left and the media as an all-knowing, articulate, transcendent Messiah–is a walking, talking gaffe machine. How many more passes does he get? How many more can we afford?


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Science

Global Warming’s New ‘Consensus’ - There’s a new global warming consensus in town. It’s too bad the once-level-headed, but now chicken-hearted Bush Administration has already skedaddled, perhaps leaving our standard of living at the mercy of Barack Obama and his high regard for the international hate-America crowd. (Steven Milloy, FoxNews.com)

31,000 Signatures Prove ‘No Consensus’ About Global Warming - Presidential candidate Barack Obama said on Monday that “we have to get used to the idea that we can’t keep our houses at 72, drive our SUVs and eat all we want.” Arthur B. Robinson, president and professor of chemistry at the Oregon Institute of Science and Medicine, has a different response.

“I don’t want to give up eating all I want because of a failed hypothesis,” said Robinson at the National Press Club here on May 19. Robinson said global warming is not a threat to America. He said that the global temperature increased by just .5 degrees in the last century. (AIM)

Endangered Specious - Alaska says it will sue to challenge the listing of polar bears as a threatened species. The designation could block vital oil and gas development. But that was the whole point in the first place. (IBD)

Bush’s polar bear legal disaster - Some not-so-clever polar bear skeptic in the White House may have thought this was a brilliant manoeuvre (Kevin A. Hassett, Financial Post)

State's fever on global warming may be cooling - The state's costly, grandiose scheme to combat global warming is finding resistance from many of the same folks who approved it two years ago. Meanwhile, legislative opposition also is growing to the plan to create a global warming state think tank financed by a utility users' surcharge.

It appears that paying for saving mankind from a projected 1- or 2-degree increase in temperature over the next century already is proving too costly in today's limited dollars. (Appeal Democrat)

Oil Industry, Lawmakers Aim To Lift Bans on Drilling - Mounting concerns about global energy supply are fueling a drive by the oil industry and some U.S. lawmakers to end longstanding bans on domestic drilling put in place to protect environmentally sensitive areas.

Increasing U.S. oil production would require overturning decades-old moratoriums that limit offshore drilling and accelerating leasing of federal lands, moves that would trigger a swift and vigorous political backlash. Still, as gasoline prices continue to climb and squeeze household budgets, the momentum appears to be gaining to open up new areas. (Wall Street Journal)

Italy Plans to Resume Building Atomic Plants - ROME — Italy announced Thursday that within five years it planned to resume building nuclear energy plants, two decades after a public referendum resoundingly banned nuclear power and deactivated all its reactors.

“By the end of this legislature, we will put down the foundation stone for the construction in our country of a group of new-generation nuclear plants,” said Claudio Scajola, minister of economic development. “An action plan to go back to nuclear power cannot be delayed anymore.”

The change is a striking sign of the times, reflecting growing concern in many European countries over the skyrocketing price of oil and energy security, and the warming effects of carbon emissions from fossil fuels. All have combined to make this once-scorned form of energy far more palatable.

“Italy has had the most dramatic, the most public turnaround, but the sentiments against nuclear are reversing very quickly all across Europe — Holland, Belgium, Sweden, Germany and more,” said Ian Hore-Lacey, spokesman for the World Nuclear Association, an industry group based in London. (New York Times)


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