Showing posts with label Done. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Done. Show all posts

Thursday, March 20, 2014

Children of Saturn, Book 1: What Have We Done (Fanfic Trailer)

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Children of Saturn, Book 1: What Have We Done (Fanfic Trailer)

Tuesday, February 4, 2014

President Obama Done Presidenting?

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President Obama Done Presidenting?

Thursday, January 9, 2014

News Analysis: Christie’s Apology, Done His Way

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http://nyti.ms/1d5hHW7

See next articles See previous articles


He was, he said, heartbroken. Embarrassed. Sad. Disappointed. Humiliated.


By the end of an extraordinary and exhaustive 107-minute news conference, Chris Christie had transformed himself from a belligerent chief executive, famed for ridiculing his detractors, into a deeply wronged father figure, shaking his head, whispering his words and verging on tears.


The bravado had vanished. The certitude was gone.


In its place was an entirely new vocabulary of self-doubt and a once unthinkable spectacle: Mr. Christie acknowledging a “crisis in confidence,” sleepless nights, second-guessing and nonstop soul-searching.


Political apologies generally follow a robotic sequence. The public figure caught doing wrong offers a terse, often grudging, sometimes distant and always uncomfortable expression of remorse.


Related Coverage



  • Gov. Chris Christie of New Jersey, appearing contrite, held a nearly two-hour news conference in Trenton on Thursday.

    ‘Very Sad’ Christie Extends Apology in Bridge ScandalJAN. 9, 2014




  • Gov. Chris Christie leaving Borough Hall, in Fort Lee, N.J., on Thursday afternoon, after meeting for about 40 minutes with the borough’s mayor, Mark Sokolich.

    Christie Brings His Remorse to an Inconvenienced BoroughJAN. 9, 2014




But Mr. Christie is not every other politician. He said “sorry” the Christie way: excessively, vaingloriously, in large, vivid and personal terms. At times, he divulged oddly intimate details and reactions — the 8 a.m. home workout session after which he discovered the “heartbreaking” news of his aide’s misconduct, and his late-night chats with his wife about the episode.


Play Video




Video|1:48:00

Richard Perry/The New York Times



Christie’s News Conference


Gov. Chris Christie of New Jersey said he took no part in the lane closings at the George Washington Bridge, but acknowledged the involvement of some of his close aides.


He seemed to want to talk the scandal away, droning on for so long at the State House that reporters started repeating their inquiries, even asking for his response to a news story that had popped up as he was talking.


“What was on display,” said Mike Murphy, a longtime Republican consultant who has advised former Gov. Mitt Romney, “were all the strengths of Chris Christie and all of the weaknesses.”


“He just does not come in small doses,” Mr. Murphy said.


Mr. Christie may have fielded every query tossed his way on Thursday (more than 90), but there remained scores of unanswered questions about his involvement in the imbroglio, which his forceful performance did little to satisfy.


Even as they marveled at his stamina, Republican leaders privately worried that Mr. Christie was cementing a reputation for the most unwelcome quality in the world of political professionals: unpredictability.


There were moments when the straight-talking governor seemed to slip into self-denial. Despite the absence of any concrete evidence, he suggested that perhaps there really had been a traffic study in progress when an aide in his office, working with a Christie appointee, closed lanes and paralyzed traffic in Fort Lee, N.J.


Mostly, he kept apologizing. Twenty times, in all. To the people of New Jersey. To the mayor of Fort Lee. To members of the State Legislature. Even to the news media. He kept finding new ways to flagellate himself, ticking off his “mistakes,” owning up to his “failure” and repeatedly declaring, “I was wrong.”


He seemed to lean on the lectern more than usual, holding himself steady and repeatedly fidgeting with his suit jacket.


His normally voluble and prosecutorial manner, the very attribute that has catapulted him onto the national political stage, was replaced by a newly contemplative and somber tone.


But this version of Chris Christie — the chastened, penitent public official — was hard to keep up, and he occasionally lapsed into a familiar pique.


When out-of-town reporters began to shout questions at him, disrupting his system of calling on journalists, the governor shot them a chilly stare. “Guys,” he said, “we don’t work that way.”


And his temper flared when he denounced, in harsh and scolding terms, the senior staff member who sent the email proposing “some traffic problems in Fort Lee” and who, he said, later misled him about her role.


“I am stunned by the abject stupidity that was shown here,” Mr. Christie said, making clear that he could no longer stand to be in the same room with the now-fired aide, Bridget Anne Kelly. “She was not given the opportunity to explain to me why she lied because it was so obvious that she had,” he said.


That candor won him praise from unexpected quarters. David Axelrod, President Obama’s longtime adviser, said that, at least during his televised appearance, Mr. Christie “came across as candid, regretful and accountable.”


The all but unending news conference seemed to offer Mr. Christie a cathartic public therapy session that was at once confessional and clinically detailed.


He expounded, professorially, on the nature of truth and the difficulty of detecting deceit.


“If you ask for something and someone deceives you and tells you it doesn’t exist, what’s the follow-up?” he asked. “Were you involved in any way? No. Any knowledge? No. Well, after that, what do you do?”


And he sought to clear up what he said were (at least to him) mystifying misimpressions about his temperament, mocking the idea that he becomes a “lunatic when he’s mad about something.”


“It is the rare moment,” he said, “when I raise my voice.”


Near the end of his question-and-answer session, a governor ever in touch with his emotional side acknowledged that he was still grappling with his own layered reactions to the controversy.


“I don’t know what the stages of grief are in exact order,” he said, “but I know anger gets there at some point. I’m sure I’ll have that, too.”


More on nytimes.com




NYT > International Home



News Analysis: Christie’s Apology, Done His Way

Monday, December 9, 2013

Look what they done to my smut, ma

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Look what they done to my smut, ma

Saturday, October 12, 2013

Peter King On Ted Cruz: "No One Has Done More To Strengthen Obamacare"






    








Breitbart Feed



Peter King On Ted Cruz: "No One Has Done More To Strengthen Obamacare"

Boehner, Obama Done Talking; All Eyes on Senate


(Newser) – The last few days have seen the focus of the shutdown/debt ceiling talks shift toward the Senate, and this morning’s developments make that shift complete: John Boehner told his troops that House Republican negotiations with the White House are finished because the two sides couldn’t strike a deal, reports the Washington Post. That means the new point person becomes Maine’s centrist Republican senator, Susan Collins. She’s been floating a deal that would raise the debt ceiling through January and fund the government for six months, reports the Hill. Among the concessions from the White House would be a delay in a tax on medical devices used to fund ObamaCare, reports Politico. The default deadline is Thursday.


Some of the day’s quotes, including some angry-sounding House Republicans via AP:


  • Harry Reid: “I was happy to see the Republicans engaged in talks with the president, the House Republicans. That’s over with. It’s done. They’re not talking anymore. I say to my friends on the Republican side of this Senate, time is running out.”

  • Rep. Paul Ryan: “They are trying to jam us with the Senate, and we are not going to roll over and take that.”

  • Rep. Raul Labrador: “It’s now up to the Senate Republicans to stand up.”

  • Rep. John Fleming: “Perhaps he sees this as the best opportunity for him to win the House in 2014,” he said of Obama. “It’s very clear to us he does not now, and never had, any intentions of negotiating.”




Politics from Newser



Boehner, Obama Done Talking; All Eyes on Senate

Tuesday, August 27, 2013

Miklaszewski: Pentagon Acting Like Strikes On Syria A "Done Deal"





JIM MIKLASZEWSKI, NBC NEWS PENTAGON CORRESPONDENT: “Officially, President Obama has not yet given the order to launch those attacks, but I can tell you that officials here at the Pentagon are operating as if this is, in fact, a done deal, and they expect attacks as early as perhaps the end of this week or early next week. There are actually, Mika, four guided missile destroyers in the Mediterranean, all within easy range of all the targets that they would want to hit inside Syria. And each one of those guided missile cruisers has 56 of these Tomahawk missiles with a range of 1500 miles and a thousand-pound warhead and a GPS locater that can not only take the missile to a building, but pick the window in which to hit.” (Morning Joe, August 27, 2013)




RealClearPolitics Video Log



Miklaszewski: Pentagon Acting Like Strikes On Syria A "Done Deal"

Friday, August 9, 2013

To Repair The Damage Done in NSA Blowup, Start With Clapper



With the conviction of Bradley Manning and asylum granted to Edward Snowden in Russia, it may be time to turn attention away from the controversy over their actions and toward the government — specifically, the intelligence community. Whatever ultimate judgment is leveled on Manning’s or Snowden’s actions, they have raised real questions about the ways that the United States gathers, uses and classifies information.


The first order of business is to restore a semblance of democratic order within the government itself. Somehow amid the hunt for Snowden and the trial of Manning, the misconduct of James Clapper, the director of national intelligence, has seemingly been excused. But if the actions of Manning and Snowden required prosecution, then what Clapper did deserves investigation and censure at the very least.


Testifying on surveillance by the National Security Agency last March, Clapper appeared at a Senate committee hearing where Senator Ron Wyden asked: “Does the NSA collect any type of data at all on millions or hundreds of millions of Americans?”


“No, sir,” Clapper replied. Then he added:”Not wittingly.”


Not only was that response false, but the nation’s highest ranking intelligence official gave that false answer in public, with ample warning from Wyden that he would be asked about that sensitive issue. Rather than speaking truthfully about the collection of telecom “metadata” — or even deflecting the question — Clapper lied. By doing so he aroused even greater anger and suspicion about the government’s motives when the lie was exposed, although the outlines of the NSA domestic surveillance program have been known for several years.


As Senator Wyden recently told The National Memo, Clapper was repeating the same misleading reassurances about widespread surveillance offered in other public remarks, which disturbed Wyden — who knew better already. And of course Clapper knew that Wyden and other senators were aware of the NSA’s collection programs, which only made his behavior more brazen. By attempting to implicate the Senate in an ongoing attempt to mislead the American people, he mocked the concept of legislative oversight — the only real check against intelligence abuses.


Clapper’s false testimony echoed some of the worst trespasses against democratic governance of the previous administration. While it is wrong to say that the Obama administration is just as arrogant and authoritarian as was the Bush (and Cheney) regime, that moment in the Capitol encouraged those unflattering comparisons. It violated President Obama’s promises of integrity and transparency, and his oath to uphold the Constitution.


A respected nonpartisan watchdog outfit, Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington, is urging the Justice Department to open a criminal investigation of Clapper. That isn’t a bad idea, although the Senate itself also ought to perform its own probe when a ranking official it has confirmed does what Clapper did. As for the president, he might regain some of the public confidence forfeited on this issue — as well as some of the international prestige lost in the NSA blowup — if he simply asked Clapper to resign.


None of this is meant to exonerate the damaging acts and poor judgment of the two leakers targeted by the government for espionage. Manning in particular has harmed innocent people around the world with his indiscriminate exposure of thousands of diplomatic cables. His subsequent mistreatment by the Army was a disgrace, but he — and his dubious sponsors at WikiLeaks — did no favors to the cause they supposedly wanted to advance.


Nor is it to say that American officials don’t need to keep secrets and conduct covert operations, which may well include lawful, circumscribed surveillance of American citizens. That will only be tolerated, however, within the system of congressional oversight established four decades ago, after the historic Church committee hearings revealed rampant CIA abuses and crimes.


Now Manning has been punished and Snowden exiled. But the damage done at the very core of democracy has not begun to be repaired. 




RealClearPolitics – Articles



To Repair The Damage Done in NSA Blowup, Start With Clapper

Sunday, March 24, 2013

Deal Reached, Damage Done


One could tell from the rise in the futures this evening that a deal was reached, but conflicting reports had me wondering “what deal?”


The story now is that president Nicos Anastasiades threatened to resign if the terms were not acceptable (a nice strategy), and euro leaders agreed to a 10 billion euro bailout.


Reuters reports Revamped Cyprus deal to close bank, force losses.

Cyprus clinched a last-ditch deal with international lenders on Monday for a 10 billion euro ($ 13 billion) bailout that will shut down its second largest bank and inflict heavy losses on uninsured depositors, including wealthy Russians.

The agreement emerged after fraught negotiations between President Nicos Anastasiades and heads of the European Union, the European Central Bank and the International Monetary Fund – hours before a deadline to avert a collapse of the banking system.


Deposits above 100,000 euros, which under EU law are not guaranteed, will be frozen and used to resolve debts, and Laiki will effectively be shuttered, with thousands of job losses.


An EU spokesman said no levy would be imposed on any deposits in Cypriot banks. A first attempt at a deal last week collapsed when the Cypriot parliament rejected a proposed levy on all deposits.


A senior source involved in the talks said Anastasiades had threatened to resign at one stage if he was pushed too far.


EU diplomats said the president, flown to Brussels in a private jet chartered by the European Commission, had fought to preserve the country’s business model as an offshore financial centre drawing huge sums from wealthy Russians and Britons.


The revised bailout plan many not require further parliamentary approval since the idea of a levy was dropped.


Damage Done


As I mentioned previously, haircuts on deposits above 100,000 euros are likely to be hammered by anywhere from 30% to 90%. I expect the mid-to-upper end of that range as noted in Bad Bank Losses 30-90%; Food Supplies Down to Two Days; Plenty of Fuel, Not enough Cash.


Regardless, the damage has been done. There should be and can be no trust. Anyone who keeps more money in Southern European banks than they need to pay immediate bills is a fool.


This crisis was resolved, at the last minute, like every other crisis, but I have a prediction.  The next significant crisis will not be resolved easily, if at all, no matter how much blackmail and pressure the nannycrats apply.


In the meantime, the safe thing to do in Southern Europe is to get your money out of banks immediately. Nigel Farage says the same thing. For details, please see UKIP Leader Nigel Farage Says “Get Your Money Out of Spain While You’ve Still Got a Chance”


Mike “Mish” Shedlock
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com


Mish’s Global Economic Trend Analysis



Deal Reached, Damage Done