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Sen. Tom Harkin held his annual Steak Fry, which of course is one of the signposts for a Presidential election; and with Joe Biden headlining (and San Antonio mayor Julian Castro also speaking), some obvious conclusions are arrived at.

That means the Reagan Dinner is next- the GOPs version of the same thing. Unfortunately, the only news coming out of that (besides that Donal Trump is scheduled to appear, though is record in Iowa of showing up as planned is somewhere between Axl Rose and Morrissey) is that Ted Cruz is headlining, and dinner ticket prices are priced to sell.

With a headline like"Ted Cruz Dinner Tickets Now 25% off", it's bad news for the iowa GOP and worse news for Cruz for pulling a "Tim Pawlenty" by peaking too soon or not peaking at all- which also means he's way too available to Iowans, and he's not drawing campaign contributor interest.

In any case, the real news is the first 2016 Bumper Sticker spotted in Iowa.

Image and video hosting by TinyPic

That isn't it, but that is the first bumper sticker I have seen while stopped at a red light.

No, the first one I recall seeing was one that said Hillary/Michelle 2016.

Which shows how divided the nation is. 

While that sounds perfect to some, according to my Facebook friends' page, that would be a situation (that combo in power) worse
than The Walking Dead  being cancelled.

Or the Walking Dead coming to life.

Nor am I convinced that the Ryan sticker (available through his Prosperity PAC) above is brand new. 

Based on some conversations I have had and expectations at the time, I wouldn't have been surprised if it had been planted before the end of the Romney campaign.

In any case, the 2016 campaign?

It's on!!

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I probably should make some mention of Ray Manzarek's passing.  Cliche as it is, I think the Doors were amazing.

It was last month, CBS Sunday morning had on John Densmore and although it is hardly news, hearing Densmore talk about Jim Morrison's anti-commericalism bent and the band's democracy (every member has a veto, which sounds great, but can be problematic when you want to sell a song to Budweiser for loads of money or you want to tour with Ian Astbury and call yourself The Doors).

Manzarek besides being a great keyboardist and a great writer ( I always heard it was Manzarek's jazz riff that propelled the Doors biggest hit "Light My Fire") also produced X's first 4 albums (which are brilliant0 and produced or performed with Echo & the Bunnymen, Iggy Pop, and Philip Glass.

Still, for the day's news, I am going to go with the story of WWE's Kane that is going around that he is going to run against Lamar Alexander for Lamar's Senate seat.  Kane is a noted Libertarian and would (I guess there's a word for this now) "primary" Lamar running as an alternative to the former governor.

That Kane

http://cdn.bleacherreport.net/images_root/slides/photos/000/173/756/2a39b4bb220efe48c7f90372821597e2_display_image.jpg?1268286553

Which is less ridiculous than it sounds.  Kane has been a vocal Ron Paul supporter for going on a decade.
 
He's made a recent attempt to debate Tennessee's Lt Governor over tax policy on internet sales.

Alexander meanwhile has been an easy target for fiscal conservatives, scoring 68% from the Club of Growth, and supporting (unpopular with Tea Party groups) issues like the Wall Street Bailout and expanding medicare.

Kane meanwhile burned down his childhood home and killed his parents, chased after wrestling superstar Lita, impregnating her and causing her to misscarriage, killed another girlfriend in a car accident, chokeslammed Pete Rose on countless occasions.and caused a lot of dental pain as Isaac Yankem DDS.

Sadly, Bleacher Report concludes the rumor is just that, and that Kane does not intend to run, which is a shame, because that would have been awesome.

That said, he did say he's not running "at this time", which gives some hope we still could see the Big Red Machine and the Red Plaid Governor.

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Politics is hard.

If an ambassador like the Worm can't bring diplomacy to North Korea, what chance does anyone have.

Like the United Nations, I would probably just go and get smashed.

So credit to Rand Paul for his 12 hour Filibuster.

It was as all of your libertarian friends will tell you, just like Mr. Smith Goes to Washington.

That's silly of course, but we live in a world where the best political commentary comes from a show that used to be hosted by Craig Kilborn.

We live in a world where Subway runs an ad that implies on Presidents Day, Abe Lincoln, George Washington and Ben Franklin all celebrate.



So, I suppose I am fine among a society who wishes things were like they were back when Tommy Lee Jones was in the Senate.

Rand Paul's filibuster was an awesome thing.  Even liberal friends were texting me in the same way baseball fans tell you about a perfect game.

Rand's big night was probably the biggest political moment since Clint Eastwoo'd's speech at the GOP convention.  Except more marginal, lost in the higher cable channel number of CSPAN2.

That said, a comparison to Eastwood seems proper.  Paul's speech was no Mr Smith, and Eastwood was no Grandpa Simpson, but it was the buzz around the event, not the actual event that is the important thing.

Rand's speech wasn't anything that wasn't typical CSPAN fare.  I did tune in to him all through the night.  Indeed, i was impressed that Rand kept talking and seemed to continually bring relevant words out of his mouth, going back and forth with a Wyoming Senator like an experienced tag team.

I didn't stay until the late hours, when things got fun.  Senators bringing Paul apples and water, Ted Cruz reading lines from Patton and Henry V, and GOPers who had earlier in the night been treated to dinner by Obama sharing details.  The thing ended with Paul calling it for an act of nature, which means he hadn't thought of those wacky morning shows think of, wearing an adult diaper.

Of course, at the end of it all, Paul had pissed off both Democrats and Republicans, so he must have done something right.  That said, Paul is obviously gearing towards the 2016 election, and although this is most likely a point in his favor, I can't help but think that Chris Christie struck a better chord with the voter in two minutes than Paul did in twelve hours of work.

For more commentary, I will point you over to defFrog and for a fun history lesson, then head over to Foreign Policy, which contains these all-time gems.

In 1924, a Rhode Island Senate filibuster extended 42 continuous hours over three days and "began with a mass fistfight over control of the gavel and ended when Republican operatives placed a poison-soaked rag behind [Democratic Lieutenant Governor Felix] Toupin to gas him out of the presiding officer's chair," according to Gregory Koger's Filibustering: A Political History of Obstruction in the House and Senate.

...

Perhaps the most dramatic filibuster, though, occurred in April 1963 in the Philippines. With legislators evenly divided between supporters of the Liberal Party incumbent, Diosdado Macapagal, and Nationalist Party up-and-comer Ferdinand Marcos, it came down to the Senate to decide the presidency. The day before the scheduled vote, Marcos visited Liberal Senator Roseller Lim, offering to pay off his home loans in exchange for a swing vote. Lim refused and Marcos, incensed, swore at him and his family before departing.

The next day, the Liberal senators were a man down -- Senator Alejandro Almendras was still en route, returning from a throat operation in the United States. Lim took the podium and spoke for 18 hours and 30 minutes -- he could not sit or eat, and he urinated in his pants at the podium rather than allow the vote to occur without the Liberals' crucial swing vote. Finally, Lim yielded the floor upon hearing that Almendras's fight had landed, and collapsed onto a waiting stretcher after casting his vote

bedsitter23: (Default)
I was watching Fox News Saturday, which i don't do often enough these days.  It is of course silly to take Fox News seriously, but I really enjoyed this particular moment.

I had just finished watching their stock show which features financial advice every week from (no joke) a retired pro wrestler and the guy who played Trapper John from MASH.

Having seemingly covered every angle, Fox news was having Chuck Woolery on to give complete analysis of which of the four Republican Presidential candidates had made a Love Connection with the masses.

Woolery, if you don't recognize the name was a long-time game show host.  Game Show Hosts when i was growing up was one of those jobs that was an automatic punchline.  Seemingly, a job that required perfect hair, a bright white smile, and absolutely no other talent.  It is here where I guess I should make the obligatory Mitt Romney joke.

I doubt kids recognize the 'game show host' slander nowadays.  There are precious few game shows on these days (Judge shows are the new afternoon programming), and the ones that are on, generally are hosted by people who are famous before the fact (Regis Philbin, Guy Fieri).

A shame, I suppose.  Maybe.  I don't know.  Still, it seems like we should have the game show hosts around, even if it has to be a combination of the greatest and worst jobs ever. 

Little wonder, then if that is your day job- there's only two options- 1) Get wasted or 2) moonlight as a CIA assassin.

Anyway, Chuck broke down the GOP field Love connection style. Of course, Chuck, come to find out has started a second career as an advocate for term limits.

Yes, Woolery is starting a second career in the lucrative world of Conservative punditry. 

While it is easy to rip on the guy (and question why anyone should listen to him in the first place), there's good money there whether you are a second tier film critic, a Saturday Night Live bit player, or an actor on a syndicated sci-fi tv show.

So, there you have it.

Hard to say if Woolery is a man of honor and believes what he is saying, or if he's like Gingrich's Contract with America class (25 Representatives including Mark Foley and Rick Santorum were elected in 1994 and were still running for re-election 12 years later in 2006) who thinks limits are for only those they don't like.


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