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From: LindyBill7/21/2012 9:04:08 PM
7 Recommendations   of 536495
 
Obama the Banal



By Peter Kirsanow
July 21, 2012 1:46 P.M.
Comments
8



Discussing President Obama’s “you didn’t build that” remarks in Commentary, Alana Goodman is the latest to dismantle what she calls “the myth of Obama’s rhetorical brilliance.” She observes:

For the past four years, liberals have tried to sell us on the idea that Obama is one of the greatest speakers of all time. Now they’re complaining that conservatives are taking his words literally and not cutting him enough slack. Which one is it?

Not long after his election, even some Obama supporters began to notice that his teleprompter-supported speeches were unremarkable– more style than substance. Obviously, delivery is important, but not more so than content. Soon Obama’s familiar head swiveling, tennis- match- spectator orations became a source of amusement, if not annoyance.

Obama benefits from having a distinctive name and announcer’s voice. Thought experiment: Imagine Barack Obama’s name is Bob Smith and his voice sounds like, say, John McCain’s. Now imagine Bob Smith/Obama delivering any one of Obama’s addresses, even his celebrated 2008 speech on race.

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To: Tom Clarke who wrote (497457)7/21/2012 9:12:52 PM
From: Alan Smithee2 Recommendations   of 536495
 
"As I was sitting down to get my seat, I noticed that a person came up to the front row, the front right, sat down, and as credits were going, it looked like he got a phone call. He went out toward the emergency exit doorway, which I thought was unusual to take a phone call. And it seemed like he probably pried it open, or probably did not let it latch all the way. As soon as the movie started, somebody came in, all black, gas mask, armor, and threw a gas can into the audience, and it went off, and then there were gunshots that took place."

How about the shooter bought a ticket, took a seat and then feigned a call, went to the exit to take it, propped the door open, went out to the alley or back of the theatre, got his guns and get up and came back in? That seems far more plausible.

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To: Tom Clarke who wrote (497457)7/21/2012 9:19:36 PM
From: MJ1 Recommendation   of 536495
 
How does the shoot down what seems like an eye witnessed account happened?

Then there is the other claim that he bought a ticket.

Are the two compatible---i.e. that the eye witness in the theatre saw what he
saw and the killer also bought a ticket?

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To: LindyBill who wrote (497480)7/21/2012 9:20:24 PM
From: unclewest   of 536495
 
You may need a new venue

I have tried several posts to you today and had them rejected.

Apparently SI may not be accepting a post that mentions a projectile launcher by its proper designation.

I am sending you my email address back channel.

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From: Glenn Petersen7/21/2012 9:26:30 PM
2 Recommendations   of 536495
 
One of the good guys:

Strategist Steers the Right’s Vast Money Machine

By NICHOLAS CONFESSORE
New York Times
July 21, 2012

The most influential political strategist of the 2012 campaign works out of an unmarked suite in an anonymous office park in suburban Virginia, a few floors above a Japanese-themed steakhouse. He does not work for one of the presidential campaigns. He is not a pundit.

But Carl Forti, a low-profile Buffalo native who served as the political director of Mitt Romney’s first White House campaign, will deploy at least $400 million in political money this season, more than Senator John McCain spent running for president in 2008.

After years in the Republican Party trenches, Mr. Forti, 40, is now a consultant and strategist for the biggest of the outside groups and “ super PACs” that are rapidly displacing parties as the means for raising and spending vast amounts of political money.

In those roles, his work embodies the coordinated punch brought by like-minded groups to the effort to oust President Obama and give Republicans full control of Congress.

And as a veteran of Mr. Romney’s inner circle, he brings to the effort a keen understanding of the Romney campaign’s needs even as he is barred by campaign finance law from working directly with it.

Mr. Forti is the political director of American Crossroads, the super PAC founded by his mentor, Karl Rove; Mr. Forti’s firm, the Black Rock Group, is a consultant to tax-exempt groups like the 60 Plus Association, which are expected to spend millions of dollars on ads this fall; and he is a founder of Restore Our Future, the super PAC that helped Mr. Romney in his bid for this year’s Republican presidential nomination.

Now, with Mr. Romney prohibited from spending much of the cash he is raising until after the Republican convention in August, Mr. Forti and his clients are filling in the breach: Crossroads Grassroots Policy Strategies, Restore Our Future and other Forti-linked groups have spent at least $35 million on advertising in 17 states against Mr. Obama since early April, according to the Campaign Media Analysis Group.

On Thursday, American Crossroads announced that it would begin a $9 million, nine-state campaign defending Mr. Romney against the Obama campaign’s attacks on his tenure at Bain Capital. The ads signify a pronounced shift in strategy for Crossroads, which has spent heavily on advertising attacking Mr. Obama, and demonstrate how super PACs and outside groups can synchronize with the candidates they support without violating federal rules that prohibit direct coordination.

“What happened to Barack Obama?” the narrator in the ad asks. “The press and even Democrats say his attacks on Mitt Romney’s business record are misleading, unfair and untrue.”

Mr. Rove and others crisscross the country raising most of the money, tapping a network of wealthy conservatives and business executives determined to see Mr. Obama defeated. But at Crossroads and Restore Our Future, it is chiefly Mr. Forti who figures out how to spend it.

Drawing on his political acumen and knowledge of the swing-state political terrain built over three election cycles at the National Republican Campaign Committee, which oversees Republican strategy for House races, Mr. Forti trolls through reams of polling data, picks targets, approves scripts and helps negotiate with television stations for airtime in significant markets.

Most of the advertising has been placed through a company called Crossroads Media, founded by one of Mr. Forti’s Black Rock partners and housed in the same office suite. So far this cycle, Crossroads and Restore Our Future have broadcast ads in about 40 Senate and House races as well as the presidential race, officials at the groups said, a breadth unmatched in the world of independent spending.

“We came up through the party infrastructure, where you are forced to look at the entire national battlefield,” said Brian O. Walsh, a friend and former colleague of Mr. Forti’s who directs the American Action Network, a tax-exempt group closely allied with Crossroads.

American Crossroads and its tax-exempt affiliate, Crossroads GPS, are expected to spend $300 million on the presidential campaign and Senate races; Restore Our Future is planning to raise at least $100 million and possibly more. Americans for Job Security, a tax-exempt trade association that spent $9 million in 2010 but is not required to release the names of its donors, shares office space with Black Rock and retains one of Mr. Forti’s partners as a consultant.

Mr. Forti, whose clients prize his discretion almost as much as his expertise, declined to be interviewed for this article. But he is well known to watchdog groups tracking the explosive growth of outside spending this year — and is feared by the Democratic candidates who have been pummeled by Crossroads ads.

“He’s pretty good at keeping his name out of the papers,” said Melanie Sloan, the executive director of Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington. “He needs big donors to know he’s there — and no one else.”

Mr. Forti also helps lead a monthly meeting known as the Weaver Terrace Group, where officials from a variety of conservative groups, like the American Action Network, gather at the Crossroads offices to plan their political spending. (Several other groups that attend, like Americans for Tax Reform and the Republican Jewish Coalition, have also received large grants from Crossroads, enabling them to run their own large-issue ad campaigns.)

The meetings allow an extraordinary level of coordination on the right: over the last month or so, conservative groups have taken turns pounding Mr. Obama in critical states like Florida, Iowa and Michigan, the advertising buys dovetailing to ensure a constant barrage. And the enormous budgets that Crossroads and its allies now command allow for high-quality advertising with production values on a par with presidential campaigns, said several consultants who work for outside groups.

Mr. Forti’s own career is a case study in the evolution of unrestricted money and outside groups from the margins to the mainstream of American politics. He spent seven and a half years at the House campaign committee. In his last year, 2006, he supervised its $80 million “independent expenditure” campaign, so called because the spending is financed by the party but cannot be coordinated with the party’s candidates.

Congressional scandals and the war in Iraq helped turn that election into a Democratic rout, with Republicans losing control of the House of Representatives. But the effort cemented Mr. Forti’s reputation as a master of the complicated legal and logistical demands of independent spending.

“He’s a Gatling gun,” said Thomas M. Reynolds, a former Republican congressman from New York who was the chairman of the House committee that year. “He’s got multiple races going at any given time. Carl’s unflappable, disciplined and focused.”

During the race for the 2008 Republican presidential nomination, Mr. Forti was Mr. Romney’s political director, serving alongside the two men with whom he founded Restore Our Future last year: Charles R. Spies, the campaign’s chief counsel, and Larry McCarthy, a veteran ad creator. When Mr. Romney dropped out of the 2008 race, Mr. Forti signed on with Freedom’s Watch, a conservative group that spent at least $30 million in an effort to counterbalance liberal groups like MoveOn.org.

Mr. Forti has often worked at the edge of the regulatory envelope that governs outside spending. Freedom’s Watch ignored a demand from the Federal Election Commission that it disclose its finances, after reports that the casino billionaire Sheldon Adelson had provided virtually all of the group’s financing and was directing its political spending, a circumstance that would normally have stripped the tax-exempt group of its right to keep its donors private. (The commission’s Republican and Democratic members deadlocked on pursuing the investigation, leaving the group’s finances undisclosed.)

In 2009, after Mr. Forti founded the Black Rock Group with two other Republican consultants, the company sought a legal opinion from the election commission that would have allowed it to solicit money from donors and coordinate spending without registering as a political committee. The proposal, which would have allowed the donors to spend money on political advertising without being subject to contribution limits, was not approved.

nytimes.com 

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To: LindyBill who wrote (497475)7/21/2012 9:46:31 PM
From: Honey_bee1 Recommendation   of 536495
 
Not that it matters, but just have to say this: I see RED every time I see the words, "Governor Jerry Brown" in print. Ditto for Obama, whom I have never called "President Obama" and never will.

Silly little protests, but it's about as effective as my vote is in California.

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From: FUBHO7/21/2012 9:48:04 PM
3 Recommendations   of 536495
 
Obama Paid $93k for Half-Empty Stadium Kick-Off Event

12:35 PM, Jul 21, 2012 • By DANIEL HALPER


According to disclosure forms with the Federal Election Commission, President Obama's reelection team appears to have paid $92,751.50 to rent the Ohio State University's Jerome Schottenstein Center, the site of the campaign's much touted kick-off even in May.



The disclosure appears on records of the campaign's June spending, though the event took place May 5. And of course does not include other costs associated with the event; only the cost of renting the arena.

The event was widely considered a dud, and perhaps best remembered for images of the numerous empty seats:



The Drudge Report headline after the campaign launch event read, "OBAMA LAUNCHES CAMPAIGN IN HALF EMPTY STADIUM."

But it was not supposed to be that way. As ABC News reported the day of the event, "The Obama campaign expects overflow crowds ... as part of carefully orchestrated optics. Aides want to portray the president as still highly popular among young people and still able to energize large crowds."


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To: FUBHO who wrote (497486)7/21/2012 9:50:32 PM
From: FUBHO   of 536495
 
Obama Campaign Spends More than $2.6 Million for Polling—in June

10:22 AM, Jul 21, 2012 • By DANIEL HALPER

Campaign disclosure forms for Obama for America, President Obama's reelection team, reveal a heavy emphasis on public opinion polling. According to the forms, in the month of June alone, Obama for America spent a whopping $2,639,265.72 on polling.



This appears to be a record this election cycle. And it does not include money spent on polling by the Democratic party in the month of June.

In May, for instance, both the Democratic National Committee and Obama for America combined to spend $2,105,107.93 on polling, according to disclosure forms with with the Federal Election Commission. And most of that money came from the Democratic party ($1,627,107.93), while the Obama campaign chipped in $478,000 for polling research.

In April, for the sake of comparison, the Democratic party and the Obama election team combined to spend $456,083.01 on polling. Of that, only $18,000 came from Obama's campaign proper, while $438,083.01 was spent on polling in that month by the Democratic National Committee.

Polling is often conducted by campaigns to make sure the candidate's message is in sync with what the voters want to hear.

Meanwhile, looking at the June numbers, the AP reports, "President Barack Obama's re-election campaign spent more than it collected in June."




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To: LindyBill who wrote (497462)7/21/2012 9:57:17 PM
From: MJ1 Recommendation   of 536495
 
This will likely increase the sales of guns. People who have never thought of owning or learning to shoot may do so.

Years ago we were told by the local police, when burglaries were occurring to support drug habits, just to be sure that if we should shoot a burglar just to be sure to pull him in the front door. This was stated at home security meetings for homeowners. I don't know what they say now.

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To: goldworldnet who wrote (497473)7/21/2012 9:58:19 PM
From: FUBHO1 Recommendation   of 536495
 

Campaign lull as Obama to visit Colo. victims


By By KEN THOMAS – 8 minutes ago

WASHINGTON (AP) — President Barack Obama will fly to Colorado on Sunday to visit with victims and families from the Aurora movie theater shooting, the White House announced, as he and Mitt Romney dialed back their campaigning in the shocked aftermath of the massacre.

White House communications director Dan Pfeiffer disclosed plans for the visit Saturday night. Aides said Obama's stop would also include meetings with state and local officials.

Friday's deadly rampage briefly silenced the acrimonious presidential contest, with both campaigns cutting short schedules and pulling advertising in Colorado out of respect for the dead and injured.

But for Obama, the pause was to be short-lived. After his Colorado visit, he was to fly Reno, Nev., for a Monday speech to the Veterans of Foreign Wars, followed by a series of campaign fundraisers in California, Oregon and Washington state. Romney is also expected to speak to the Veterans of Foreign Wars on Tuesday.

Obama said Saturday in his weekly radio and Internet address that he hopes everyone takes time this weekend "for prayer and reflection — for the victims of this terrible tragedy, for the people who knew them and loved them, for those who are still struggling to recover."

The president said Americans should also think about "all the victims of the less publicized acts of violence that plague our communities on a daily basis. Let us keep all these Americans in our prayers."

The White House said Obama received updates Saturday from John Brennan, his homeland security adviser, on the investigation into the shooting and the attempts by authorities to gain access to the suspect's apparently booby-trapped apartment.

Obama and Romney used campaign appearances on Friday to focus attention on the need for national unity in the aftermath of the shooting in Aurora, which killed 12 people and wounded dozens of others. Their campaign teams rescheduled Sunday show appearances by top aides and surrogates, essentially providing a break in what has been an increasingly testy campaign.

The rampage injected a new tone into the campaign after Obama and Romney had clashed repeatedly over the economy, Medicare and tax returns.

Obama was set to start his second day of events in Florida when the shooting occurred, prompting his team to address the violence at a previously scheduled rally in Fort Myers, Fla., and scrapping an event in suburban Orlando. Obama told supporters in Fort Myers that the shooting served as a "reminder that life is very fragile."

"Our time here is limited and it is precious. And what matters at the end of the day is not the small things, it's not the trivial things," he said. "Ultimately, it's how we choose to treat one another and how we love one another."

Romney echoed Obama's call for unity, saying at a previously scheduled event in Bow, N.H., that he joined with the president and first lady in offering condolences for those "whose lives were shattered in a few moments, a few moments of evil in Colorado."

"The answer is that we can come together. We will show our fellow citizens the good heart of the America we know and love," Romney said.

Other prominent lawmakers called the shooting a time for unity. House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, said in the Republican address Saturday that lawmakers joined Obama in offering condolences and prayers to the loved ones of those who were killed and wounded.

"I know that when confronted with evil we cannot comprehend, Americans pull together and embrace our national family more tightly," Boehner said.

Yet, beyond the calls for a higher purpose, the shooting could raise the profile of gun rights in the presidential campaign, an issue which has played a minor role so far.

As a senator Obama voted to leave gun makers and dealers open to civil lawsuits, and as an Illinois state lawmaker he supported a ban on all forms of semiautomatic weapons and tighter state restrictions generally on firearms.

Following the killing of six people and wounding of then-Rep. Gabrielle Giffords in Tucson, Ariz., in 2011, Obama called for a series of steps to "keep those irresponsible, law-breaking few from getting their hands on a gun in the first place."

Among those steps was a better federal background check system. The administration said Friday that it has indeed improved the amount and quality of information poured into that system, allowing background checks to be more thorough.

But the administration has offered no detailed, public explanation of how it is following up on all of Obama's previous promises, and it had no comment about any need for new legislation.

"The president believes that we need to take common-sense measures that protect Second Amendment rights of Americans, while ensuring that those who should not have guns under existing law do not get them," said White House press secretary Jay Carney.

Romney backed some gun control measures when he was governor of Massachusetts. When he challenged Sen. Edward M. Kennedy in 1994 he declared, "I don't line up with the NRA." In April, Romney told the National Rifle Association he was a guardian of the Second Amendment.

Romney spokeswoman Andrea Saul said the Republican candidate believes that the "best way to prevent gun violence is to vigorously enforce our laws."

New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg, in a radio interview, urged the president and his challenger to address gun violence forcefully.

"You know, soothing words are nice," Bloomberg said, "but maybe it's time that the two people who want to be president of the United States stand up and tell us what they are going to do about it, because this is obviously a problem across the country."

___

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