Showing posts with label into. Show all posts
Showing posts with label into. Show all posts

Monday, April 7, 2014

Terrifying Moment of the Day: Dale Earnhardt Jr. Crashes During the Duck Commander 500 and His Car Burst Into Flames

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Terrifying Moment of the Day: Dale Earnhardt Jr. Crashes During the Duck Commander 500 and His Car Burst Into Flames

Friday, April 4, 2014

Miss. Gov. Signs "License to Discriminate" Into Law

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Miss. Gov. Signs "License to Discriminate" Into Law

Wednesday, April 2, 2014

U.S. NSA tapped directly into Google, Yahoo traffic overseas - report

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U.S. NSA tapped directly into Google, Yahoo traffic overseas - report

Tuesday, April 1, 2014

NYC Measles Outbreak Sends Media Into Over-hype Overdrive

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NYC Measles Outbreak Sends Media Into Over-hype Overdrive

Saturday, March 29, 2014

Turkey: Turning mayoral elections into Armageddon rehearsal

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Turkey: Turning mayoral elections into Armageddon rehearsal

​Israel demands free entry of citizens into US, amid standoff over Palestinian settlements

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​Israel demands free entry of citizens into US, amid standoff over Palestinian settlements

Thursday, March 27, 2014

Android apps secretly trick phones into mining cryptocurrency

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Android apps secretly trick phones into mining cryptocurrency

Wednesday, March 26, 2014

Pat Buchanan: MH370 Was A Hijacking That Turned Into Shanksville


PAT BUCHANAN: Either it’s a catastrophic event killed everyone on the plane, I think, or the pilot or someone got into the cabin and turned off those two transponders, and that suggests and act of terrorism. But every terrorist act that I can recall, whether its individual like Columbine, or a couple of people like Washington Navy Yard, they go out in a blaze of what they think is glory, it’s horrible. But why would pilots or anyone getting into the cabin hijack a plane and drive it off into the Indian Ocean where no one would find it, no one would know what they did. So my speculation, that’s what it is Steve, is that this was a Shanksville operation, this was a hijacking of the plane, and a determination, I think, what would they go for? The most spectacular thing they could go for with a plane flying out of Malaysia, if they didn’t go to Beijing and do something to the Chinese, would be to turn it around and fly it back into those towers, even bigger than the twin towers in Manhattan. Not just a mini 9/11, the Petrobas Towers are taller than the New York World Trade Center. 




RealClearPolitics Video Log



Pat Buchanan: MH370 Was A Hijacking That Turned Into Shanksville

Wednesday, March 19, 2014

The Conversion of Law into an Instrument of Plunder - A Great Societal Evil

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The Conversion of Law into an Instrument of Plunder - A Great Societal Evil

Read before jumping into the deep end of NCAA pool








FILE – In this Dec. 18, 2012, file photo, Stanford coach Johnny Dawkins calls to his team during the second half of an NCAA college basketball game against North Carolina State in Raleigh, N.C. If Johnny Dawkins and Craig Neal were still playing _ instead of coaching _ against each other, there’s no doubt which one you’d pick. The two will be back on opposing benches Friday night March 21, 2014, 28 years after they faced off as players. (AP Photo/Gerry Broome, File)





FILE – In this Dec. 18, 2012, file photo, Stanford coach Johnny Dawkins calls to his team during the second half of an NCAA college basketball game against North Carolina State in Raleigh, N.C. If Johnny Dawkins and Craig Neal were still playing _ instead of coaching _ against each other, there’s no doubt which one you’d pick. The two will be back on opposing benches Friday night March 21, 2014, 28 years after they faced off as players. (AP Photo/Gerry Broome, File)





FILE – In this March 8, 2014, file photo, New Mexico coach Craig Neal tries to rally his team during the second half of an NCAA college basketball game against San Diego State. If Johnny Dawkins and Craig Neal were still playing _ instead of coaching _ against each other, there’s no doubt which one you’d pick. The two will be back on opposing benches Friday night March 21, 2014, 28 years after they faced off as players. (AP Photo/Lenny Ignelzi, File)





Senate Agriculture Committee Chair Sen. Debbie Stabenow, D-Mich., gives a thumbs-up to Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse, D-R.I., a member of the Senate Committee on Environment, on Capitol Hill in Washington, Tuesday, March 11, 2014, as Democratic senators finish an all-nighter, working in shifts into Tuesday morning to warn of the devastation from climate change and the danger of inaction. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)













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Welcome to BracketRacket.


Think of it as one-stop shopping on game days for all your NCAA tournament needs. We’ll have interviews with celebrity alums drawn from sports, entertainment and politics, plus occasional “bracket-buster” picks, photos, news, gossip, stats, notes and quotes from around the tourney sites — all of it bundled into a quick read that gives diehard fans and office-poolers alike something to sound smart about.


So without further ado:


TAKE THIS JOB … AND DUNK IT


The business of America is business, and the NCAA tournament is bad for business; ergo, the NCAA tournament is bad for America.


The outplacement firm of Challenger, Gray & Christmas proved it by wasting a few hours again this year calculating how much U.S. employers could lose while employees (like this one, via wordpress.com: http://bit.ly/1fYuFac ) obsess over the tournament. In an annual report, the company set the figure at $ 1.2 billion for every unproductive hour.


“You have employees talking about which teams made or didn’t make the tournament. You have other workers setting up and managing office pools. Of course, there are the office pool participants,” Challenger’s statement cautioned, “some of whom might take five minutes to fill out a bracket, while others spend several hours researching teams, analyzing statistics and completing multiple brackets.”


Never mind that the math behind the estimate is fuzzy, or that both academic researchers and corporate managers who looked at the problem concluded the real numbers were considerably lower, mostly because employees tend to make up for lost time by working outside traditional hours.


So what should an employer do?


“Despite all of the scary numbers, Challenger suggests that employers not try to clamp down on March Madness,” the statement added. “Initiatives to block access to sports sites and live streaming in order to boost productivity in the short term, could result in long-term damage to employee morale, loyalty and engagement.”


Is this a great country or what?


___


CELEBRITY ALUM


Think the folks in Congress have trouble making up their minds now? Just wait. Nothing gets politicians procrastinatin’ and prevaricatin’ like the NCAA tournament.


Thirty-one states and the District of Columbia dispatched at least one representative into the 68-team field that began play Tuesday night. California topped the list with five, North Carolina, Ohio and Texas boasted four each, six others had three and Indiana — a.k.a, the “heartland of hoops” — had zero.


Generally speaking, elected officials from states with more than one entrant fear voters so much they’d rather talk about raising taxes than which school they’re backing. They make picking between them sound like “Sophie’s Choice.”


That made Michigan Sen. Debbie Stabenow thumbing her nose at the maize-and-blue recently seem refreshing.


“Oh, Michigan State! Michigan State,” she gushed during a groundbreaking ceremony at the university Monday.


“I have to tell you, after yesterday,” Stabenow added, referring to the Spartans’ win over state rival Michigan in the Big Ten championship game, “we are back. We’ve got the full team going, Coach (Tom) Izzo is primed and ready and I think we’ll take it all.”


Just to rub it in, she unveiled the little rhinestone number — courtesy of MSU Today alumni magazine — pictured here: http://bit.ly/1eiqiFK


Stabenow received both her undergraduate and graduate (magna cum laude) degrees from Michigan State, so while she might need those Democratic votes over in Ann Arbor someday, it won’t be until 2018 at the earliest.


Even then, Stabenow barely cracks the “how-to-alienate-alumni” list. Since-retired North Carolina Sen. (and UNC alum) Brad Miller locked up the top spot in 2012 when he told BracketRacket: “I have said very publicly that if Duke was playing against the Taliban, then I’d have to pull for the Taliban.”


___


DON’T I KNOW YOU FROM SOMEWHERE?


Speaking of “Sophie’s Choice,” a Pennsylvania high school coaching legend named John Miller could be facing one come early April.


That’s when Miller’s sons — Sean, who coaches No. 1 West seed Arizona; and younger brother Archie, who coaches No. 11th South seed Dayton — could meet in the Final Four. It’s a longshot, sure, especially since the Flyers only got off the bubble and into the bracket after winning nine of their last 10 games.


Then again, what were the odds that brothers from a tiny town in western Pennsylvania would wind up coaching in the same tournament? (Short answer: Who knows? The Beaver County (Pa.) Times said it was believed to be the first time that’s happened, but added such record-keeping at the NCAA was “sketchy.”)


“Sean, you kind of always figured he was going to be a coach. Archie always said he wasn’t going to coach,” John Miller, who won four state titles and more than 650 games before retiring from Blackhawk High in Beaver Falls, told the newspaper. “It was only three or four days after graduation, though, when we talked. He said, ‘All my contacts are in basketball, maybe I should try coaching.’”


After a number of stints as an assistant elsewhere, Archie’s best contact (and brother) came through with a two-year deal at Arizona.


“No question, being part of the tournament is going to be great for him,” Sean said.


John will be on hand Thursday in Buffalo, when Archie makes his NCAA tournament debut against Ohio State and coach Thad Matta, whom both Millers served under as assistants. But he’ll have to settle for watching Arizona’s opener Friday against Weber State in San Diego on TV. And even if both boys somehow get their teams to Arlington, Texas, on the tourney’s final weekend, John, who still coaches a youth team now and then, isn’t making any promises.


“This March Madness,” he fumed, “is getting in the way of basketball.”


___


DON’T I KNOW YOU FROM SOMEWHERE (Part 2)?


If Johnny Dawkins and Craig Neal were still playing — instead of coaching — against each other, there’s no doubt which one you’d pick.


The two will be back on opposing benches Friday night, 28 years after they faced off as players. But it looks like Neal has the upper hand now. His No. 7 New Mexico squad will be a slight favorite over Dawkins’ No. 10 Stanford when they meet in St. Louis.


The last time they did — competitively speaking — was the 1986 ACC tournament title game. Neal, who kicked around basketball’s minor leagues for seven seasons, played for Georgia Tech in that one. Dawkins, who was in his senior year at Duke, went on to win the game and become the ACC tourney MVP in 1986, as well as Duke’s career scoring leader until 2006.


Small wonder the Cardinal coach was happy to reminisce with AP’s Janie McCauley.


“He was younger than I was, so it was a little different,” Dawkins recalled. “We played in a great game. … It was an amazing environment.”


After a nine-year NBA career, the coaching racket hasn’t gone quite as smoothly. Stanford finally made the tourney in Dawkins’ sixth season there, amid talk that his job depended on it.


___


STAT OF THE DAY


From 2005 through 2009, a No. 1 seed was like an invitation to the Sweet 16. During that stretch all 20 top seeds got there. More recently, though, the big dogs haven’t been quite as lucky, according to research by STATS. One No. 1 has been eliminated in the first weekend three of the last four years. The mighty who fell: Kansas in 2010 (to Northern Iowa), Pittsburgh in 2011 (to Butler) and Gonzaga in 2013 (to Wichita State).


But if it’s any consolation, Butler and Wichita State wound up riding those upsets all the way to the Final Four.


___


QUOTE OF THE DAY


“She’ll probably be in tears, so that will be good.” — Peter Hooley, one of four Australians who play for the University of Albany, about how his mother and 20 other family members who got up at 3 a.m. to watch the game back home would react to the Great Danes’ win over Mount St. Mary’s.


___


TUESDAY’S RESULTS


At Dayton, Ohio


First Four


Albany (N.Y.) 71, Mount St. Mary’s 64


N.C. State 74, Xavier 59


WEDNESDAY’S GAMES


Cal Poly (13-19) vs. Texas Southern (19-14), 6:40 p.m.


Iowa (20-12) vs. Tennessee (21-12), 30 minutes following


Associated Press




Top Headlines



Read before jumping into the deep end of NCAA pool

Tuesday, March 18, 2014

NSA surveillance program reaches ‘into the past’ to retrieve, replay phone calls

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NSA surveillance program reaches ‘into the past’ to retrieve, replay phone calls

West furious as Crimea accepted into Russia

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West furious as Crimea accepted into Russia

Sunday, March 16, 2014

5 Asian remedies guaranteed to transform you into a superhero





So who among us doesn’t want to feel younger, stronger, richer, smarter, and more heroic between the sheets?


The problem is, achieving these goals is hard. They take work. Discipline. Luck. Talent.


We’d need to eat kale. Study hard. Forgo alcohol. Sign up for a PX90.


And that makes us feel, like, ugh. Where’s the remote?


So how about a shortcut to stardom?


Got it.


As anyone who’s visited a pharmacy knows, there’s no dearth of potions promising vigor, happiness and superior wit — or at least a healthier prostate. Just hand-over some cash, and swallow with 8 ounces of water.


Not buying it?


Westerners are by no means alone in seeking such shortcuts.


In Asia, concoctions purporting to carry super-hero powers are not just ubiquitous. They’ve been around for centuries. In some may lie Big Pharma’s next billion dollar blockbuster  — Artemisinin, a key malaria drug, is derived from traditional Chinese medicine. Some are placebos. Others are toxic.


Either way, they tend to be somewhat more exotic than what you get at CVS.


This list, compiled by our Asia correspondents, includes some of the more noteworthy.


But be forewarned: We have no evidence that they work better than the concoctions in the vitamin aisle.


And some (i.e. human sacrifice) are downright hazardous.


1) Deer antler snuff


Imagine inhaling a horn through one’s nostrils. Few things sound less appealing. But such is the putative potency of deer antler velvet that American athletes have taken to snorting the stuff to partake of its growth-inducing properties.


In the corpus of traditional Chinese medicine, deer antler is believed to impart strength, energy, and vitality because of growth hormones in the horns. In Asia, it is generally consumed as a tea made from boiling horn slices. (Dried horn is sold in buckets on my street, whose name in Chinese means “Ginseng and Deer Antler Road.”)


This remedy has caught on in the West in the form of nose spray. Athletes think it helps repair their tendons and muscles. Last year, Baltimore Ravens linebacker Ray Lewis drew controversy when he admitted he had snorted antler spray to fix a torn tricep.


The science is still out on what exactly it does, but for a macho image, at least, saying you “snort horn” can’t hurt.


By Ben Carlson in Hong Kong


2) Bird’s Nest Soup


It’s the next best thing to the elixir of life — as long as you can get over the fact that it’s effectively a bowl of bird drool.


“Bird’s nest soup,” as it’s known in China in Hong Kong, is an expensive delicacy made from the nests of Southeast Asian birds that build their homes out of salivary excretions. Restaurants charge anywhere from $ 30 to $ 100 for a bowl of “soup,” which resembles a clear, gloopy jelly.


While I have little appetite for other, more exotic Cantonese specialties — rat, cat, civet, dog, snake — this is one that I can stomach. It’s sweet, delicate, a little refreshing — and more importantly, it’s reputed to keep you safe from Father Time. 


By Ben Carlson in Hong Kong


3) Raw baby octupus


Chopped up and served raw, Sannakji is a baby octopus whose tentacles squirm and twist on the plate. Diners dip the delicacy in sesame oil and chew thoroughly, resisting the grip of suction cups that cling to their cheeks and tongue.


Tempted?


If so, eat with caution. Each year a handful of Koreans swallow hastily and suffocate from a tentacle stuck to the throat. Yet for some, the risk is worth the reward: Koreans say that men who survive the wet and slimy treat can count on elevated sexual power.


In North America, animal rights groups complain the octopi are cruelly dismembered and eaten alive. And so it is in Oldboy, the 2003 South Korean thriller (clip below).


But in nearly all restaurants, the invertebrates are already dead before being cut up. Nerve activity keeps the tentacles wriggling. Consider this seasonal summer dish, a pride of the southern coastal city of Busan, an opportunity to savor the world’s most stomach-wrenching, alleged virility-endowing seafood.


By Geoff Cain in Seoul


4) Vietnamese serpent wine


Fear gripped me the first time I put the stuff to my lips. I would have passed on the offer, but it was one of those cross-cultural situations that simply demand acquiescence.


The offer: A highball of wretched smelling, potent rice wine, home-brewed in the Mekong Delta, and marinated in a glass urn filled with dead serpents — snakes, lizards and all manner of bizarre reptiles.


The promise: In addition to the usual bonhomie that from sharing a drink, my visa status depended on this bonding ritual. Plus, the serpent tonic, I was told, would keep me healthy for 6 months. It would impart gusto, make me more manly.


The offerer: My editor at the Communist Party’s English language daily in Saigon (a man whose success depended on speaking so softly that no one could ever hear him, let alone object to what he’d say). We had an unwritten, unspoken deal: I’d fix his writers’ English; He would let me continue filing magazine stories for foreign publications, despite a nebulous work visa status.


There were venomous snakes in that liquor, and while I’d seen him drink the stuff and survive, I’d also watched Southeast Asians eat food so spicy that it would just blow a hole in my stomach.


In the end I survived, and grew to enjoy this ritual. Did the elixir work? Well, let’s just say I didn’t get sick much for a while.


By David Case, formerly in Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam


5) Human sacrifice in India


Unfortunately, attaining super-natural powers is not all about eating.


Every year or two, police in India arrest someone for performing a human sacrifice in the hope of attaining wealth or magical powers.


Usually offered to the Hindu goddess Kali, the sacrifice purportedly grants the person who performs it power over his enemies, according to ancient texts. But in most modern cases, some poor, illiterate perpetrator hoping to change his fortune performs the sacrifice on the advice of a tantric — a kind of witch doctor who himself claims magical powers, such as the ability to put curses on people or even kill with the touch of his hand.


This is India, so more than occasionally, the tragedy plays as farce. Last summer, for instance, a gang of robbers confessed to attempting to strangle a man because a tantrik offered them a hefty sum for the rope used in the murder – only to refuse to pay when it turned out to be a dud.


In years past, atheist crusader Sanal Edamaruku challenged such a tantrik to kill him with his touch on live TV. Nothing happened, apart from stellar ratings.


By Jason Overdorf in India


http://www.globalpost.com/dispatch/news/regions/asia-pacific/140131/5-asian-remedies-guaranteed-make-you-super-hero




GlobalPost – Regions



5 Asian remedies guaranteed to transform you into a superhero

Saturday, March 15, 2014

Rep. Bridenstine: Obama Wants to "Bully" States into Common Core

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Rep. Bridenstine: Obama Wants to "Bully" States into Common Core

Wednesday, March 12, 2014

28-million-year-old fossil gives researchers new insight into origin of whales’ sonar

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28-million-year-old fossil gives researchers new insight into origin of whales’ sonar

Rare Interview of Amish Family Ordered Into Experimental Chemotherapy

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Rare Interview of Amish Family Ordered Into Experimental Chemotherapy

Gaza militants fire barrage of rockets into southern Israel

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Gaza militants fire barrage of rockets into southern Israel

Tuesday, March 11, 2014

Christie used Port Authority to turn 9/11 wreckage into political gifts

New Jersey Governor Chris Christie gives a news conference in Trenton January 9, 2014. Christie on Thursday fired a top aide at the center of a brewing scandal that public officials orchestrated a massive traffic snarl on the busy George Washington Bridge

Just when you thought the list of things New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie is now associated with couldn’t get worse, it gets worse:

For a state that lost hundreds of lives on Sept. 11, the gifts were emotionally resonant: pieces of steel from the ruins of the World Trade Center. They were presented by the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey to 20 carefully chosen New Jersey mayors who sat atop a list of 100 whose endorsements Gov. Chris Christie hoped to win.

At photo opportunities around the mangled pieces of steel, Bill Baroni, Mr. Christie’s top staff appointee at the Port Authority, told audiences how many people wanted a similar remnant of the destroyed buildings, and how special these mayors were.



Can you imagine the scandal that would have erupted if President Obama had given pieces of the Pentagon rubble to Republicans he was trying to woo in his re-election battle? The outrage from the right would be so fierce that Darrell Issa wouldn’t be able to work in a word edgewise about the IRS or Benghazi. Yet when Christie does it, not a peep.



Daily Kos



Christie used Port Authority to turn 9/11 wreckage into political gifts

What Should We Read Into FL-13? Maybe Nothing.



Tonight, votes will be tallied in Florida’s 13th Congressional District special election to replace deceased Congressman Bill Young, a Republican. Here are three basic thoughts on the race:


1. My sense is that the Democratic candidate, former state chief financial officer and 2010 gubernatorial nominee Alex Sink, will probably win. 


Back in mid-January, I was corresponding with a left-of-center analyst about a St. Petersburg Times poll, and I commented that “53-47 Sink is about what I’d predict.” That’s about where I am right now, though I think a narrower Sink win is likely, maybe in the three-to-four point range. 


We’ll discuss this more in bullet point No. 3, but this is a district that has gradually trended Democratic over the past few decades, where Democrats have an unusually strong (though still somewhat flawed) candidate, and where Republicans have a candidate who is average at best. In a swing district, that seems to be a recipe for a Democratic win.


There hasn’t been much independent polling in this race. The Tampa Bay Times and Saint Leo University released polls in early February showing Sink up 7 and 9 points, respectively. A PPP poll conducted the weekend before Election Day for the League of Conservation Voters showed Sink with a smaller, 48-45, advantage.


On top of this, if there were ever a case where we’d expect a massive polling failure, it would be a special election for a legislative seat. Witness the special election to replace Tim Scott in South Carolina, where polls predicted anywhere between a big Democratic win and a close race, but which ended up in a nine-point GOP blowout.  Legislative seats are just difficult to poll in our gerrymandered universe, especially when the unpredictable turnout from a special election is figured in.


But if there’s one thing that seems to tip the scales in Sink’s direction, it’s that Democrats seem to be outperforming their early voting/absentee metrics from 2012.  That race ended up with an Obama victory in the district, albeit a narrow one. Of course, Election Day turnout may drop off if Democrats are simply cannibalizing their regular voters, but for now, things seem to point in Sink’s direction.


2. There is some symbolic importance to this election.


The 13th District is the lineal descendent of one created in 1952 and won by Republican Bill Cramer.  Cramer was the first Republican from Florida since 1882, when Horatio Bisbee represented a district that spanned the entire eastern half of the Florida Peninsula (it was based in Jacksonville, as Miami wouldn’t be incorporated for another 14 years).  Cramer’s win was the face of the “New Southern Republicanism,” a creation of immigrants from the North who caused sleepy Sun Belt hamlets to explode in population and who transformed the political dynamic in the South.  These sorts of victories were replicated during the ’50s in places like Dallas, Charlotte, N.C., and Arlington, Va., before spreading to the countryside starting in the ’70s and turning swing regions into Republican ones.


Republicans have already lost Tampa and have had to cede most of St. Petersburg proper to that Tampa-based district in order to keep the Pinellas peninsula red.  Losing one of the first Republican redoubts in the South doesn’t mean terribly much in the big picture, but it is a useful reminder that things really do change, sometimes quickly, even in the South.


3. There are very few electoral lessons to be drawn here.


The Hill and USA Today both agree that there is a broader lesson to be learned from this race about the 2014 elections.  I’m much less certain. To begin with, special elections aren’t bellwethers, except when they are. If that doesn’t sound particularly helpful, well, it isn’t meant to.


As we might expect, wave elections are often preceded by surprising wins for the victorious side. In 1974, a number of surprising special election Democratic wins in historically Republican districts were the first signals that things were about to go massively awry for the GOP, and played a role in convincing Richard Nixon to resign. In 1994, Democrats lost historically Democratic districts in Kentucky and Oklahoma.  In 2008, GOP losses in Illinois, Mississippi and Louisiana seemingly presaged the rout in the fall.


But sometimes waves aren’t preceded by surprising wins. In 2006, the GOP managed to hang on to a seat with a badly flawed candidate in southern Ohio, and kept a San Diego-based district that many saw as a test of Democrats’ chances in the fall.  In 2010, the GOP lost a special election in southwestern Pennsylvania that had been trumpeted as the only district won by both John Kerry and John McCain.


Of course, there are also special election upsets that herald nothing. Democrats were riding high in 2004 after winning special elections in South Dakota and central Kentucky, but all of that amounted to nothing in the fall.


But even if all that weren’t the case, I’m still not sure what we could read into this particular race.  As mentioned above, this seat is politically marginal, voting near the national margin in two straight elections.  Democrats fielded a reasonably strong candidate in Sink, who had won statewide office, had very nearly won the governorship in a terrible Democratic year (albeit against a damaged opponent), and who carried this district twice in her statewide bids.  This is a profile more commonly found among Senate candidates than House candidates.


Republicans fielded a first-time candidate, David Jolly, who had served as a lobbyist and who faced a competitive primary — indeed a primary that split Young’s family. While Politico’s “airing of grievances” piece should be taken with a grain of salt — jilted/nervous consultants turn on campaigns with regularity — it does serve as a nice compendium for the public mistakes by Team Jolly.


If we must say something, it is this:  If Sink wins, we will know that a strong Democrat without a voting record, who is running in an open swing district, can defeat a middling Republican candidate.  To be honest, that’s actually a somewhat important data point for Democrats, because it wasn’t clear that there was much of anything that they could do to avoid their drop-off problem. Also, some level of support for Obamacare isn’t an automatic kiss of death. But there are very few competitive House races will fit this mold, and none of the competitive Senate races will.


If Jolly wins: Because this is a seat that Sink should win in a neutral year, should she lose despite all her advantages we’ll have another data point that this is not shaping up as a neutral year. But we already intuited this; there are much better data points highlighting the Democrats’ likely midterm blues.


As for my bottom line? I think the Democrat will win this race, but I think there’s a pretty good chance that it will prove as meaningful as their win in southwestern Pennsylvania in 2010.




RealClearPolitics – Articles



What Should We Read Into FL-13? Maybe Nothing.

Christie used Port Authority to turn 9/11 wreckage into political gifts

New Jersey Governor Chris Christie gives a news conference in Trenton January 9, 2014. Christie on Thursday fired a top aide at the center of a brewing scandal that public officials orchestrated a massive traffic snarl on the busy George Washington Bridge

Just when you thought the list of things New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie is now associated with couldn’t get worse, it gets worse:

For a state that lost hundreds of lives on Sept. 11, the gifts were emotionally resonant: pieces of steel from the ruins of the World Trade Center. They were presented by the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey to 20 carefully chosen New Jersey mayors who sat atop a list of 100 whose endorsements Gov. Chris Christie hoped to win.

At photo opportunities around the mangled pieces of steel, Bill Baroni, Mr. Christie’s top staff appointee at the Port Authority, told audiences how many people wanted a similar remnant of the destroyed buildings, and how special these mayors were.



Can you imagine the scandal that would have erupted if President Obama had given pieces of the Pentagon rubble to Republicans he was trying to woo in his re-election battle? The outrage from the right would be so fierce that Darrell Issa wouldn’t be able to work in a word edgewise about the IRS or Benghazi. Yet when Christie does it, not a peep.



Daily Kos



Christie used Port Authority to turn 9/11 wreckage into political gifts