Showing posts with label Speech. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Speech. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 25, 2014

Nazi Police KILL 9/11 TRUTH Free Speech part 1/4 - We Are Change San Antonio

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Nazi Police KILL 9/11 TRUTH Free Speech part 1/4 - We Are Change San Antonio

Monday, March 17, 2014

Gary Johnson "It"s A Rigged Game" Speech At Paulfest

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Gary Johnson "It"s A Rigged Game" Speech At Paulfest

Wednesday, March 12, 2014

Veterans Take the Stand in NYC Free Speech Trial

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Veterans Take the Stand in NYC Free Speech Trial

Sunday, February 16, 2014

JFK Secret Society Speech- The speech that killed John F Kennedy



Today this speech would be so relevant and so fitting, JFK was warning us back then of the very things which are happening today behind closed doors and in s…



JFK Secret Society Speech- The speech that killed John F Kennedy

Tuesday, January 28, 2014

Obama vowing to flex presidential powers in speech



(AP) — Frustrated by years of partisan gridlock, President Barack Obama is moving to flex his presidential powers during his sixth year in office. He’s starting by using Tuesday night’s State of the Union address to announce executive actions to raise the minimum wage for new federal contracts, help the long-term unemployed find work and expand job-training programs.


Obama’s go-it-alone strategy, with modest steps for now, is aimed both at jumpstarting his stagnant second term and prodding a divided Congress to take additional action to boost economic opportunity for millions of Americans. But there’s little indication lawmakers are ready to follow along, particularly as the nation barrels toward the midterm elections.


Keenly aware of Congress’ slim record of recent accomplishments, White House officials see a robust rollout of executive actions as the most effective way to show the public that Obama still wields power as the clock ticks on his presidency.


“Congress is slow to action, and we’re not going to wait for that,” White House chief of staff Denis McDonough said in an interview on “CBS This Morning.”


Yet much of what the president can do on his own is limited, as evidenced by the minimum wage proposal officials previewed ahead of Tuesday’s prime-time address, which will be viewed by millions at home. The executive order will increase the minimum hourly payment for new federal contract workers from $ 7.25 to $ 10.10. But because the measure affects only future contracts, its immediate impact will be minimal.


“The question is how many people, Mr. President, will this executive action actually help?” said House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio. “I suspect the answer is somewhere close to zero.”


The White House says the wage hike would most benefit janitors and construction laborers working under new federal contracts, as well as military base workers who wash dishes, serve food and do laundry. But officials did not say how many people would fall into those categories.


Obama will seek to build on the executive order by renewing his call for Congress to pass a minimum wage increase for all American workers, a proposal that gained little traction after he first announced it in last year’s State of the Union address. But White House officials feel somewhat optimistic that they could get backing this year given that some Republican lawmakers have also indicated an interest in working on income inequality and economic mobility issues.


Washington’s current focus on inequality comes as many parts of the economy are gaining strength. But the soaring financial markets and corporate balance sheets stand in contrast to the millions of people still out of work or struggling with stagnant incomes that don’t stretch as far as they used to.


Seeking to address those issues, Obama will also announce executive actions on job training, boosting employment opportunities for the long-term unemployed and expanding retirement savings for low- and middle-income Americans.


The retirement savings proposal is geared toward workers whose employers don’t currently offer such plans. The program would allow first-time savers to start building up savings in Treasury bonds that eventually could be converted into traditional IRAs, according to two people who have discussed the proposal with the administration. Those people weren’t authorized to discuss the plan ahead of the announcement and insisted on anonymity.


Obama will also tout an initiative to secure commitments from big corporations not to discriminate against the long-term unemployed during hiring. Representatives from major companies will join the president at the White House on Friday to promote the effort.


Some Republicans have warned that the president’s focus on executive orders could backfire by angering GOP leaders who already don’t trust the White House.


“The more he tries to do it alone and do confrontation, the less he’s going to be able to get cooperation,” said John Feehery, a former top House Republican aide.


The president will still try to score a few legislative victories this year, namely an overhaul of the nation’s broken immigration laws. The Senate passed landmark legislation last summer, but the effort stalled in the Republican-led House. Conservatives are pushing back against the president’s call to create a pathway to citizenship for the 11 million people living in the U.S. illegally. And some Democrats would prefer to use the unresolved issue to mobilize Hispanic voters for this year’s elections.


Obama will follow his State of the Union address with a quick trip Wednesday and Thursday to Maryland, Pennsylvania, Wisconsin and Tennessee to promote his proposals.


___


Associated Press writers Josh Lederman and Jim Kuhnhenn contributed to this report.


Associated Press



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Top Headlines

Obama vowing to flex presidential powers in speech

Obama vowing to flex presidential powers in speech








President Barack Obama works at his desk in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington, Monday, Jan. 27, 2014, ahead of Tuesday night’s State of the Union speech. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin)





President Barack Obama works at his desk in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington, Monday, Jan. 27, 2014, ahead of Tuesday night’s State of the Union speech. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin)





On the day of President Barack Obama’s State of the Union address, House Speaker John Boehner of Ohio, left, with House Majority Leader Eric Cantor of Va., talks with reporters at Republican National Committee headquarters in Washington, Tuesday, Jan. 28, 2014, after a GOP strategy session. Eager not to be limited by the legislative gridlock that has plagued the divided Congress, Obama is expected to underscore a go-it-alone strategy where he could bypass lawmakers and use executive actions to achieve his policy proposals. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)





As seen from the Rose Garden, President Barack Obama works at his desk in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington, Monday, Jan. 27, 2014, ahead of Tuesday night’s State of the Union speech. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin)





FILE – This Jan. 20, 2014 file photo shows American missionary Kenneth Bae speaking to reporters at Pyongyang Friendship Hospital in Pyongyang. The gallery over the House of Representatives is filling up for President Barack Obama’s State of the Union address. Democratic congressmen Rick Larsen of Washington and Charles Rangel of New York announced Tuesday they will host Bae’s mother and sister. (AP Photo/Kim Kwang Hyon, File)













Buy AP Photo Reprints







(AP) — Frustrated by years of partisan gridlock, President Barack Obama is moving to flex his presidential powers during his sixth year in office. He’s starting by using Tuesday night’s State of the Union address to announce executive actions to raise the minimum wage for new federal contracts, help the long-term unemployed find work and expand job-training programs.


Obama’s go-it-alone strategy, with modest steps for now, is aimed both at jumpstarting his stagnant second term and prodding a divided Congress to take additional action to boost economic opportunity for millions of Americans. But there’s little indication lawmakers are ready to follow along, particularly as the nation barrels toward the midterm elections.


Keenly aware of Congress’ slim record of recent accomplishments, White House officials see a robust rollout of executive actions as the most effective way to show the public that Obama still wields power as the clock ticks on his presidency.


“Congress is slow to action, and we’re not going to wait for that,” White House chief of staff Denis McDonough said in an interview on “CBS This Morning.”


Yet much of what the president can do on his own is limited, as evidenced by the minimum wage proposal officials previewed ahead of Tuesday’s prime-time address, which will be viewed by millions at home. The executive order will increase the minimum hourly payment for new federal contract workers from $ 7.25 to $ 10.10. But because the measure affects only future contracts, its immediate impact will be minimal.


“The question is how many people, Mr. President, will this executive action actually help?” said House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio. “I suspect the answer is somewhere close to zero.”


The White House says the wage hike would most benefit janitors and construction laborers working under new federal contracts, as well as military base workers who wash dishes, serve food and do laundry. But officials did not say how many people would fall into those categories.


Obama will seek to build on the executive order by renewing his call for Congress to pass a minimum wage increase for all American workers, a proposal that gained little traction after he first announced it in last year’s State of the Union address. But White House officials feel somewhat optimistic that they could get backing this year given that some Republican lawmakers have also indicated an interest in working on income inequality and economic mobility issues.


Washington’s current focus on inequality comes as many parts of the economy are gaining strength. But the soaring financial markets and corporate balance sheets stand in contrast to the millions of people still out of work or struggling with stagnant incomes that don’t stretch as far as they used to.


Seeking to address those issues, Obama will also announce executive actions on job training, boosting employment opportunities for the long-term unemployed and expanding retirement savings for low- and middle-income Americans.


The retirement savings proposal is geared toward workers whose employers don’t currently offer such plans. The program would allow first-time savers to start building up savings in Treasury bonds that eventually could be converted into traditional IRAs, according to two people who have discussed the proposal with the administration. Those people weren’t authorized to discuss the plan ahead of the announcement and insisted on anonymity.


Obama will also tout an initiative to secure commitments from big corporations not to discriminate against the long-term unemployed during hiring. Representatives from major companies will join the president at the White House on Friday to promote the effort.


Some Republicans have warned that the president’s focus on executive orders could backfire by angering GOP leaders who already don’t trust the White House.


“The more he tries to do it alone and do confrontation, the less he’s going to be able to get cooperation,” said John Feehery, a former top House Republican aide.


The president will still try to score a few legislative victories this year, namely an overhaul of the nation’s broken immigration laws. The Senate passed landmark legislation last summer, but the effort stalled in the Republican-led House. Conservatives are pushing back against the president’s call to create a pathway to citizenship for the 11 million people living in the U.S. illegally. And some Democrats would prefer to use the unresolved issue to mobilize Hispanic voters for this year’s elections.


Obama will follow his State of the Union address with a quick trip Wednesday and Thursday to Maryland, Pennsylvania, Wisconsin and Tennessee to promote his proposals.


___


Associated Press writers Josh Lederman and Jim Kuhnhenn contributed to this report.


Associated Press




Top Headlines



Obama vowing to flex presidential powers in speech

Tuesday, January 21, 2014

TYT Network Reports - Obama NSA Speech - Was it Good, Bad, or In-Between?

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TYT Network Reports - Obama NSA Speech - Was it Good, Bad, or In-Between?

Friday, January 17, 2014

Obama speech: Miller Lite commercial: less filling, tastes great


Obama speech: Miller Lite commercial: less filling, tastes great


by Jon Rappoport


January 17, 2014


www.nomorefakenews.com


Obama just made a Miller Lite speech, to calm fears that NSA spying is a bother and a problem. Not so. All is well.


He’ll cut down the NSA practice of spying on people connected to people connected to people of interest. The three layers will become only two.


This is great, except that NSA is already spying on everybody. Three, two, 16? What difference does it make?


For the “tastes great” part, the President reminded us that NSA snoops are just regular folks. They’re our “friends and neighbors,” he said.


I know. That’s the point. There are cold-eyed androids among us.


For the “less filling,” Obama proposed that the all-encompassing metadata of NSA-captured phone calls shouldn’t be held by the government. That’s bad. Instead, the phone companies themselves should hold it, and then let the government look at it.


Whew. What a relief.


We all know NSA will do whatever it wants to, in order to keep spying on us. Trim their capability a little over here, they’ll go over there and do the same thing from another vector.


That’s what the Surveillance State is all about.


Obama also jammed in a sideswipe at Snowden, just to keep the traitor narrative alive. And to let us know stealing State secrets is a heinous crime.


You see, the State can steal our information, but we can’t steal its information. That’s the basic principle.


But to quote our leader from an earlier speech(es), “We’re all in this together.”


I guess it depends on what the meaning of “together” is.


NSA won’t bother parsing that. They’ll just keep on watching and compiling and collating. Being Peeping Tom Central is in their blood. “To keep us safe.”


As the pollsters go to the phones and gauge public reaction to Obama’s speech, I have a suggestion. Ask, “Do you believe the President was being forthright and honest?” And then ask, “Okay now, do you REALLY believe he was being forthright and honest?”


And if NSA wants to repair its public image, I have more suggestions. Since you boys are spying on everybody all the time, release the following information to the press:


Conversations involving politicians, at all levels, on the subject of hookers and underage sex targets;


Elite pedophile rings;


Communications (military, intelligence, DOJ, State Dept., White House) re what really happened in Benghazi, what really happened in the Fast&Furious Op;


Brokerage house/banker/billionaire manipulation of the stock market;


Behind the scenes lies among the high-echelon execs at Monsanto.


Just for starters.


Obviously, you have all this info. Release it now. Prove you’re on our side.


What? All those people aren’t your targets?


We are?


Oh.


Gotta go. My refrigerator just told me the toaster said I put hemp butter on my toast this morning. It’s an indicator I could have two tons of pot in my garage.


Jon Rappoport


The author of two explosive collections, THE MATRIX REVEALED and EXIT FROM THE MATRIX, Jon was a candidate for a US Congressional seat in the 29th District of California. He maintains a consulting practice for private clients, the purpose of which is the expansion of personal creative power. Nominated for a Pulitzer Prize, he has worked as an investigative reporter for 30 years, writing articles on politics, medicine, and health for CBS Healthwatch, LA Weekly, Spin Magazine, Stern, and other newspapers and magazines in the US and Europe. Jon has delivered lectures and seminars on global politics, health, logic, and creative power to audiences around the world. You can sign up for his free emails at www.nomorefakenews.com




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Jon Rappoport’s Blog



Obama speech: Miller Lite commercial: less filling, tastes great

Thursday, January 2, 2014

BBC News Archbishop of Canterbury highlights "injustices" in Christmas speech

Featured video on injustices:



Archbishop Welby: “Even this morning in Baghdad… a church was bombed and 15 more people testified to their faith in Jesus Christ with their lives” Continue…



BBC News Archbishop of Canterbury highlights "injustices" in Christmas speech

Saturday, December 28, 2013

Gene Sharp Speech at 2012 Right Livelihood Awards

At A Political Statement, the privacy of our visitors is of extreme importance to us (See this article to learn more about Privacy Policies.). This privacy policy document outlines the types of personal information is received and collected by A Political Statement and how it is used.

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Gene Sharp Speech at 2012 Right Livelihood Awards

Thursday, December 19, 2013

Phil Robertson’s Suspension: FREEDOM OF SPEECH CHILLED

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Phil Robertson’s Suspension: FREEDOM OF SPEECH CHILLED

Wednesday, November 20, 2013

JFK 50th Anniversary: Fight For Free Speech


City of Dallas attempts to crush First Amendment


Paul Joseph Watson
Infowars.com
November 20, 2013


Authorities in Dallas, Texas are attempting to mark the 50th anniversary of the assassination of John F. Kennedy by censoring the First Amendment, cordoning off huge areas of the city and prohibiting anyone who disagrees with the official narrative from entering Dealy Plaza.


Image: ‘Tank Man’.



The city banned filming and the display of signs in the Dealy Plaza area, but under threat of lawsuits by groups such as COPA, authorities have caved to numerous concessions like allowing the handing out of leaflets and t-shirts, and hanging banners, although only in designated areas.


JFK was silenced 50 years ago but Infowars will not allow the truth to be silenced. In response to this egregious assault on constitutional rights, Alex Jones will lead three days of protest at different locations in Dallas.


Citizens in foreign countries are celebrated for standing up for their free speech rights but America is increasingly becoming a place where the right to peaceably assemble and demonstrate requires government permission. If the First Amendment is to be preserved, this authoritarian trend has to be completely reversed.


The first demonstration will take place on Wednesday at 8pm at the Federal Reserve building at the corner of Pearl and Woodall Rodgers Freeway, a location at which Jones has previously protested three separate times with other Americans.


First Amendment marches in downtown Dallas will then take place on Thursday and Friday, with locations and times to be announced here shortly.


“The system would have been wise not to try to assassinate the First Amendment like they did JFK,” declares Alex Jones. “But because they did this, their efforts will backfire and be used instead to further awaken the sleeping giant that is the American people and people of the world.”


Despite a gargantuan effort on behalf of the establishment media to reinforce the official conspiracy theory that a lone gunman and a “magic bullet” were responsible for the death of JFK, polls still show that a clear majority of Americans disbelieve the government narrative.


We are calling on everyone in the Dallas area to join us for three days of demonstrations to reclaim their First Amendment rights in the face of official oppression.


This article was posted: Wednesday, November 20, 2013 at 12:19 pm










Infowars



JFK 50th Anniversary: Fight For Free Speech

JFK 50th Anniversary: Fight For Free Speech

JFK 50th Anniversary: Fight For Free Speech
http://isbigbrotherwatchingyou.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/11/7e99e__nsa_spying__201113tank.jpg


City of Dallas attempts to crush First Amendment


Paul Joseph Watson
Prison Planet.com
November 20, 2013


Authorities in Dallas, Texas are attempting to mark the 50th anniversary of the assassination of John F. Kennedy by censoring the First Amendment, cordoning off huge areas of the city and prohibiting anyone who disagrees with the official narrative from entering Dealy Plaza.


JFK 50th Anniversary: Fight For Free Speech 201113tank

Image: ‘Tank Man’.



The city banned filming and the display of signs in the Dealy Plaza area, but under threat of lawsuits by groups such as COPA, authorities have caved to numerous concessions like allowing the handing out of leaflets and t-shirts, and hanging banners, although only in designated areas.


JFK was silenced 50 years ago but Infowars will not allow the truth to be silenced. In response to this egregious assault on constitutional rights, Alex Jones will lead three days of protest at different locations in Dallas.


Citizens in foreign countries are celebrated for standing up for their free speech rights but America is increasingly becoming a place where the right to peaceably assemble and demonstrate requires government permission. If the First Amendment is to be preserved, this authoritarian trend has to be completely reversed.


The first demonstration will take place on Wednesday at 8pm at the Federal Reserve building at the corner of Pearl and Woodall Rodgers Freeway, a location at which Jones has previously protested three separate times with other Americans.


First Amendment marches in downtown Dallas will then take place on Thursday and Friday, with locations and times to be announced here shortly.


“The system would have been wise not to try to assassinate the First Amendment like they did JFK,” declares Alex Jones. “But because they did this, their efforts will backfire and be used instead to further awaken the sleeping giant that is the American people and people of the world.”


Despite a gargantuan effort on behalf of the establishment media to reinforce the official conspiracy theory that a lone gunman and a “magic bullet” were responsible for the death of JFK, polls still show that a clear majority of Americans disbelieve the government narrative.


We are calling on everyone in the Dallas area to join us for three days of demonstrations to reclaim their First Amendment rights in the face of official oppression.


This article was posted: Wednesday, November 20, 2013 at 1:50 pm









Prison Planet.com




Read more about JFK 50th Anniversary: Fight For Free Speech and other interesting subjects concerning NSA at TheDailyNewsReport.com

Tuesday, November 19, 2013

Texans to Protest Censorship of Free Speech in Dallas JFK Events

Texans to Protest Censorship of Free Speech in Dallas JFK Events
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Alex Jones to lead demonstrations against censorship of First Amendment in Dallas


Adan Salazar
Prison Planet.com
November 19, 2013


Texans to Protest Censorship of Free Speech in Dallas JFK Events tsquareThe anniversary of the death of John Fitzgerald Kennedy, the nation’s 35th president, occurs this Friday in the north Texas city where the shadow government silenced him fifty years ago.


Since his death, countless people have sought answers and disagreed with the government’s portrayal of what took place that day, chiefly that former marine Lee Harvey Oswald was a lone wolf assassin and that he used a “magic bullet” to kill the president.


Now in an unprecedented effort to squelch free speech, the City of Dallas has moved to cordon off huge areas of the city and has attempted to prohibit citizens from carrying signs with messages countering the official narrative, and even filming in certain downtown areas.


Texans to Protest Censorship of Free Speech in Dallas JFK Events closures


“Due to construction, renovations and preparations for the 50th JFK Anniversary event, extensive filming will not be allowed in Dealey Plaza area from September 1st through November 24, 2013,” a memo from the City of Dallas states.


The moves to cordon off the city and prohibit filming are outrageous in light of polls showing a clear majority still don’t buy the official story. Even Secretary of State John “Skull and Bones” Kerry has come forward professing his doubts.


When Chinese citizens stood up in Tiananmen Square in defense of free speech, they were admired around the world. But when the evisceration of that right happens in the supposed land of the free, home of the brave, it’s not even an issue.


The state run media’s propaganda mechanisms are also in high gear reinforcing the establishment’s view and running sniveling headlines demonizing “conspiracy theorists,” claiming all the Dallas mayor wants is to keep order and decorum.


But under threats of lawsuit by different groups like COPA, the city has caved to numerous concessions like allowing the handing out of leaflets and t-shirts, and hanging banners… but only in designated areas, when all of these activities are clearly free speech.


In attempting to control the events, which will be televised for billions worldwide, the social engineers in Dallas hope to suppress and reverse the huge awakening taking place to the fact that a shadow government and rogue elements within the military industrial complex engaged in a coup d’état, exactly what Dwight D. Eisenhower warned of just two years previous in his farewell address. It’s also imperative to recognize that the real power structure is the private run-for-profit Federal Reserve.


On Wednesday, Alex Jones will kick off three days of demonstrations and protests at the Federal Reserve building at the corner of Pearl and Woodall Rodgers Freeway, a location he has previously demonstrated at three separate times with other Americans.


From 8 to 9PM on Wednesday night, Jones and his crew will hand out thousands of free fliers exposing the violations of free speech. Activist patriots can then descend on downtown Dallas Thursday, and of course the 50th anniversary on Friday, with the powerful, unfiltered information and alert the sleeping citizenry to the attempted censorship.


We’re also planning a First Amendment march on Thursday, which will soon be announced, and on the key day of Friday.


These demonstrations are all about the First Amendment, the freedom of the press, expression and free speech, and we’re going to be there.


“The system would have been wise not to try to assassinate the First Amendment like they did JFK,” states Alex Jones. “But because they did this, their efforts will be used instead to further awaken the sleeping giant that is the American people and people of the world.”


We need everyone out Wednesday night to get the fliers, and to participate in these demonstrations whenever they can, whether it’s all three days or one hour.


We’re calling on people from all over the planet to come down and get those fliers and get them out to people in the downtown area.


This article was posted: Tuesday, November 19, 2013 at 1:15 pm


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Prison Planet.com




Read more about Texans to Protest Censorship of Free Speech in Dallas JFK Events and other interesting subjects concerning NSA at TheDailyNewsReport.com

Wednesday, October 16, 2013

Hillary disses Biden in speech


Hard though it may be to take seriously Joe Biden running for president, evidently Hillary Clinton thinks it important to dump on him. In a speech to convenience store owners (the sort of speech that yields a six figure fee), Hillary stuck the stiletto into Joe’s back and twisted it. Jim Galloway of the Atlanta Journal-Constitution reports:


… state Rep. Tom Taylor, R-Dunwoody, said the former first lady dropped a huge hint. “I know she’s running for president now, because toward the end, she was asked about the Osama bin Laden raid. She took 25 minutes to answer,” Taylor said. “Without turning the knife too deeply, she put it to [Vice President Joe] Biden.”


Time and time again, Taylor said, Clinton mentioned the vice president’s opposition to the raid, while characterizing herself and Leon Panetta, then director of the Central Intelligence Agency, as the action’s most fierce advocates.


About 3,000 to 4,000 convention-goers packed the Thomas Murphy Ballroom in the Georgia World Congress Center to hear Clinton. The bin Laden query was the last of a Q-and-A session with the audience. “She took the rest of the time and went over, answering that question. She was ready to speak on that,” Taylor said.



Perhaps Biden thinks he has a chance for the presidency. After all, he lives in a fine mansion, has a Secret Service detail, and flies in “Air Force two,” which leads to a sense that one is an important person. His reputation for clownishness probably never reaches his eyes and ears. So he may be giving it the old college try when it comes to running against Hillary.


Now that she has dumped on him in public, perhaps the gloves will come off. The upside for us is that his brain can’t keep up with his mouth, so who knows what he will blurt out? He is a born schmoozer, so he will hear lots of rumors and accusations about Hillary, who is feared more than loved in her own party.


Lay in a supply of popcorn. This could get highly amusing.




American Thinker Blog



Hillary disses Biden in speech

Thursday, October 3, 2013

IRS AUDITED CARSON AFTER PRAYER B"FAST SPEECH




Just months after he gave a speech earlier this year that challenged America’s leadership in President Obama’s presence, Dr. Ben Carson was targeted by IRS agents who requested to review his real estate holdings and then conducted a full audit without finding any wrongdoing.


“I guess it could be a coincidence, but I never had been audited before and never really had any encounters with the IRS,” Dr. Carson said in an interview Thursday with The Washington Times. “But it certainly would make one suspicious because we know now the IRS has been used for political purposes and therefore actions like this come under suspicion.”


Dr. Carson is a world-renown neurosurgeon whose rise from poverty and a single family home, and his medical work with pediatric patients was celebrated in a movie called “Gifted Hands.”


He has electrified the conservative world with speeches and columns since his February National Prayer Breakfast speech in front of Mr. Obama, in which he decried the “moral decay and fiscal irresponsibility” of America in recent years. He writes a weekly column for The Times.


Dr. Carson first hinted at the problem earlier this week during a speech in Alabama when he made a vague reference to having his first “encounter with the IRS” earlier this year.


Dr. Carson told The Times that IRS agents contacted him in June — less than four months after the speech — and requested to review his real estate holdings. After finding nothing that concerned them, the agents then informed him they were conducting a full audit of his finances, and then asked to go back an additional year to review his records, he said.


They finally ended the review in August after finding no problems, Dr. Carson said.


“They told me everything was in good standing and left,” he said.


Asked whether he thought the audit was a retaliation for his speech, Dr. Carson quipped: “I guess I’m surprised it took them that long.”


He said the more serious issue is that the IRS has been politicized — “something that should never have happened” — and that leaves all of its activities open to suspicion.



© Copyright 2013 The Washington Times, LLC. Click here for reprint permission.




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IRS AUDITED CARSON AFTER PRAYER B"FAST SPEECH

Wednesday, September 11, 2013

Schultz: Obama Made Progress With Syria Speech


MSNBC’s Ed Schultz and a panel of MSNBC analysts discuss whether President Obama’s address to the nation advanced his argument for military action against Syria and whether progress is being made on the overall challenge of dealing with Syria’s chemical weapons.




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Schultz: Obama Made Progress With Syria Speech

Tuesday, September 10, 2013

A Viewer"s Guide To Obama"s Syria Speech





President Obama walks along the West Wing Colonnade towards the Oval Office of the White House on Tuesday.



Pablo Martinez Monsivais/AP

President Obama walks along the West Wing Colonnade towards the Oval Office of the White House on Tuesday.



President Obama walks along the West Wing Colonnade towards the Oval Office of the White House on Tuesday.


Pablo Martinez Monsivais/AP



If ever a speech seemed to be President Obama’s last, best chance to win public and congressional support for his plan to launch military strikes against Syria, it’s his prime-time Tuesday talk to the nation.


With polls indicating that 60 percent of Americans oppose action against Syria for using sarin gas, and congressional approval looking ever more like a long shot, Obama’s speech is a high-stakes endeavor.


What can viewers expect to hear in the speech? It’s likely they’ve already heard most of the complicated case that Obama and other administration officials have made in recent weeks — though there’s the new twist of a Russian proposal that Syria put its chemical weapons under international supervision.


That latest turn of events is already rippling through the U.S. debate.


Still, the White House has indicated every intention to seek congressional approval for military action. White House deputy national security adviser Tony Blinken essentially laid out the main points at a briefing Monday.


They boil down to these ten words or phrases: Congressional authorization; intel; violated international norms; U.S. laws; national interest; U.S. credibility; a political solution; the new Russian initiative; limited military action, and the risks of inaction.


That’s an undeniably long list of reasons for a U.S. attack on Syria, causing at least one writer to accuse the administration of the equivalent of throwing spaghetti on the wall to see what sticks.


Anyway, let’s move through the points the president will likely make in Tuesday’s big speech, lumping some of the related ones together in order to move through them more quickly.


Congressional authorization, U.S. credibility, U.S. laws and national interest — Obama will likely note that he sought to do the right thing by seeking congressional approval before any attack and that lawmakers should do the same, at least in his eyes, by granting approval.


With the decision to put the question before Congress, “it’s important that he emphasize to both Republicans and Democrats that the country’s prestige is on the line and that failing to deal with Syria would not only have enormous ramifications for our dealings with North Korea but Iran as well,” says Jim Manley, former press secretary to Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, now with the Quinn Gillespie lobbying and communications firm.


The administration notes that Congress passed the Syria Accountability Act in 2003 partly as a response to Assad’s stockpiling of chemical weapons.


By crossing Obama’s “red line” against using them, Assad has now lowered the threshold for their use again, threatening regional U.S. allies like Turkey and Israel, and neighboring Lebanon, all of which run counter to U.S. interests.


Intel and violated international norms — Expect Obama to once again assert that intelligence is conclusive that the Syrian military used poison gas against civilians. It’s a level of reassurance necessitated by the nation’s experience of having invaded Iraq on the basis of bad intel.


Tom Perriello, a former Democratic congressman from Virginia who opposed the Iraq War but supports the proposed U.S. action against Syria, said the lawmakers he’s talked to are persuaded.


“The things I’ve heard fairly consistently are, people walk away convinced that the Assad regime committed these atrocities and that there are targets we could hit that would inflict meaningful strategic pain on the Assad regime without significant collateral damage,” said Perriello, president and CEO of the Center for American Progress Action Fund.


Thus, strong intel indicates Syria violated international norms — requiring a response. Obama will likely push this line hard.


“First, I think he’s got to explain why nearly a century ago the United States led the effort to make chemical weapons usage illegal because of the threat we believed it presented to our troops and to innocent civilians across the world,” said Perriello. “Second, I think he has to explain why there’s a value to us of deterring the use of chemical weapons even if it doesn’t solve the larger conflict. If you have cancer and you get shot in the leg you’re going to want medical attention to address the leg wound even as you continue to fight the cancer.”


Limited military action — Obama is a president who mostly appears to share the public’s war weariness. Which is why he will emphasize that military action against Syria isn’t like invading Iraq or Afghanistan.


“He will, of course, be emphasizing that the duration will be limited and he’ll be emphasizing that targeting will also be limited,” said Jim Leach, a former Republican congressman from Iowa who now teaches at the University of Iowa Law School.


While the president will likely make the point that it isn’t his intention to involve the U.S. in another country’s civil war, he has a knotty problem which his speech is unlikely to disentangle, Leach suggests.


“The obvious dilemma is once you intervene in a civil war you take sides,” said Leach, who for years was a senior Republican on the House International Relations Committee. “And so, is that something we should be doing? And if we should be doing it, how should we be doing it? And so he has a terrific challenge. I think it’s going to be a very tough sell. That doesn’t mean it can’t occur.”


A political solution, the Russian initiative and the risks of inaction — Expect Obama to repeat the administration’s position that no military solution exists and that Assad and his regime’s opponents will need to reach a political answer.


Meanwhile, the Russians, Syria’s long-time allies, added a new wrinkle to the situation when they seized on comments by Secretary of State John Kerry that U.S. military action could be avoided if Syrians placed their chemical weapons under international supervision.


In network interviews Monday, Obama held out the possibility that a way forward without U.S. strikes might be possible if the Russian proposal proved real.


That’s a big ‘if’ for some.


“The problem is nobody takes Russia seriously on this,” said Perriello. “If Russia’s willing to back up its word with any indication of something real, I think that would a positive thing. But I’m not holding my breath.”


Obama is likely to acknowledge concerns that there are risks, but also to argue that the risks of inaction outweigh action.


The problem is that so many of those who agree with Obama that Syria’s behavior was abhorrent aren’t willing to take the leap into U.S. military action with him.


“We all have strong feelings and I certainly have strong ones,” Leach said. “I would recommend caution.”


Still, “it’s really key that this be the type of speech that we can all respect, even though many people will differ,” Leach said.




News



A Viewer"s Guide To Obama"s Syria Speech

Friday, September 6, 2013

Obama notes split over Syria attack, plans speech








US President Barack Obama speaks during his news conference at the G-20 Summit in St. Petersburg, Russia, Friday, Sept. 6, 2013. (AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais)





US President Barack Obama speaks during his news conference at the G-20 Summit in St. Petersburg, Russia, Friday, Sept. 6, 2013. (AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais)





US President Barack Obama answers questions during his news conference at the G-20 Summit in St. Petersburg, Russia, Friday, Sept. 6, 2013. (AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais)





U.S. President Barack Obama, left, and China’s President Xi Jinping, right, shake hands before their bilateral meeting at the G20 Summit, Friday, Sept. 6, 2013 in St. Petersburg, Russia. (AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais)





Russia’s President Vladimir Putin, center foreground, stands with G-20 leaders during a group photo outside of the Konstantin Palace in St. Petersburg, Russia on Friday, Sept. 6, 2013. World leaders are discussing Syria’s civil war at the summit but look no closer to agreeing on international military intervention to stop it.(AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais)





President Barack Obama shakes hands with Russian President Vladimir Putin during arrivals for the G-20 summit at the Konstantin Palace in St. Petersburg, Russia, Thursday, Sept. 5, 2013. (AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais/Pool)













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(AP) — President Barack Obama acknowledged deep divisions at home and abroad on Friday over his call for military action in Syria — and conceded the possibility he’ll fail to sway the American public. He refused to say whether he would act without passage of congressional authorization for a strike in response to chemical weapons use.


Setting the stage for an intense week of lobbying in Washington over the strike resolution, Obama said he planned to make his case to the American people in an address Tuesday night.


“It’s conceivable at the end of the day I don’t persuade a majority of the American people that it’s the right thing to do,” Obama acknowledged. “And then each member of Congress is going to have to decide.”


Obama, speaking at the end of a two-day Group of 20 economic summit, earlier held a surprise meeting with Russian President Vladimir Putin, a chief opponent of U.S. military action. Both Obama and Putin said that while they still disagreed, the meeting was constructive.


Obama, in his post-summit news conference, seemed to be feeling the burden of the challenge he faces in persuading the American public, the international community and Congress to back military action. But he expressed confidence the American people and lawmakers, weary after long-running wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, would listen.


“I trust my constituents want me to offer my best judgment. That’s why they elected me. That’s why they re-elected me,” he said.


He said he couldn’t honestly claim there was an imminent threat to the United States from the chemical weapons use in Syria. But he argued action was essential to uphold prohibitions against the use of weapons of mass destruction.


Ten members of the Group of 20 joined the United States in a joint statement accusing the Syrian government of carrying out a chemical weapons attack on civilians last month and calling for a strong international response against the government of Syrian President Bashar Assad. The statement stopped short of explicitly calling for military action against Syria.


The countries signing the statement with the U.S. were Australia, Canada, France, Italy, Japan, South Korea, Saudi Arabia, Spain, Turkey and the United Kingdom.


Seeking to rally support back in Washington, the administration planned another classified briefing for all lawmakers next Monday night after Congress returns, and White House Chief of Staff Denis McDonough planned to attend the closed-door Democratic caucus meeting Tuesday morning, according to a congressional aide.


Although surveys showed a significant number of House Republicans and Democrats opposed to military action or leaning against it, officials in the leadership insisted it was premature to say the resolution could not be approved. At this stage, just a third of the House and Senate have participated in classified briefings and Obama is still reaching out to lawmakers.


Still, final passage rests on significant votes from House Republicans and Democrats, and the administration is struggling to reach those numbers.


Obama said he and other leaders at the summit had had a “full airing of views on the issue” during a three-hour dinner Thursday night. He said many foreign nations would be issuing statements on their positions, but he didn’t say whether any specifically had joined France in supporting his move toward U.S. military strikes.


He said the leaders were unanimous in believing that chemical weapons were used in Syria and that international norms against that use must be maintained. He said division comes over how to proceed through the United Nations.


Obama also held an unannounced meeting with Russian President Putin, a staunch ally of Assad.


Putin called the discussion “substantial and constructive.” Likewise, Obama said it was a “candid and constructive conversation.” The U.S. president said they agreed the underlying conflict in Syria could only be resolved through a political transition. Obama also said he thinks it is important that he and Putin work together to urge all sides in the conflict to try to resolve it.


Putin said they didn’t discuss the case of National Security Agency leaker Edward Snowden, who is living in Russia on temporary asylum from prosecution in the United States for leaking classified programs. Instead, he said the entire meeting focused on airing their positions on Syria.


“I don’t agree with his arguments and he doesn’t agree with mine, but we are listening to them and trying to analyze them,” Putin said.


Russia on Friday warned the United States and its allies against striking any chemical weapon storage facilities in Syria. The Russian foreign ministry said such targeting could release toxic chemicals and give militants or terrorist access to chemical weapons.


“This is a step toward proliferation of chemical weapons not only across the Syrian territory but beyond its borders,” the Russian statement said.


Meanwhile, the Kremlin said Russia was boosting its naval presence in the Mediterranean Sea, moving in warships into the area and stoking fears about a larger international conflict if the United States orders airstrikes.


Moreover, China remained a firm no. The European Union is skeptical about whether any military action can be effective. Even Pope Francis weighed in, urging leaders gathered here to abandon what he called a “futile mission.”


Still, Obama was undeterred. He and French President Francois Hollande, the U.S.’s strongest ally on Syria and a vocal advocate for a military intervention, met on the sidelines of the summit about attracting European support for action. “It’s clear that there are many countries that agree with us that international norms must be upheld,” Obama said.


Said Hollande: “To do nothing would mean impunity.”


British Prime Minister David Cameron said his country will not be part of military action because of opposition from Parliament. He said the international opinion is also divided.


“This summit was never going to reach agreement,” he said, but added the case made by Obama and other countries “was extremely powerful.”


Illustrating the risks associated with a strike, the State Department ordered nonessential U.S. diplomats to leave Lebanon, a step under consideration since last week when Obama said he was contemplating military action against the Syrian government.


Before his scheduled return to Washington late Friday, Obama also planned to meet with Russian lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender activists, calling attention to another area of disagreement with Moscow.


___


Associated Press writers Julie Pace, Angela Charlton, Nataliya Vasilyeva and Vladimir Isachenkov in St. Petersburg and Donna Cassata in Washington contributed to this report.


___


Follow Josh Lederman on Twitter at http://twitter.com/joshledermanAP


Associated Press




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Obama notes split over Syria attack, plans speech