July 4, 2009

July 4th Open Thread

Michael Jackson’s death has moved media focus from their personal savior, Pres Barack Obama, to the life and times of one of the all-time performers in music (regardless of your thoughts of the man, his impact on music has been tremendous).  The resignation of Gov Palin has completely absorbed the political world (as evidenced by the 17 posts on the topic yesterday).

I’m not interested in plowing already-tilled earth here.  Today is the recognized birthday of the greatest country the earth has ever seen.  We are in turmoil within, the world is a dangerous place, and our leaders seem determined to reduce, not increase, our standing in the world through weakening us.  Even with all that, I can’t imagine a country I’d rather live in, and nothing is happening that we won’t be able to turn around in time.  God bless the USA, and thank you, Founding Fathers, for the courage and wisdom you showed 233 years ago that created this country, even if your initial concept is under seige.

by @ 7:26 am. Filed under Saturday Open Thread
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10 Responses to “July 4th Open Thread”

  1. Heath Says:

    3 great countries in the world: Canada, Australia and the US.

    This is why we have to pick our fights carefully lest we be made to look stupid:

    Mass Of New Docs Support White House Reasons For Firing AmeriCorps IG
    By Zachary Roth – July 3, 2009, 1:42PM
    As we noted yesterday, the Washington Post has published the documents turned over by the Corporation for National and Community Service to a Senate committee reviewing the White House’s firing of AmeriCorps IG. Conservatives had charged that the IG, Gerald Walpin, was canned for going too hard after an Obama ally.

    We’ve taken a look through the documents, and it’s fair to say they offer a pretty clear picture of how and why the CNCS board lost confidence in Walpin. They jibe closely with what the White House and the board have already said — to us, among others — about the deterioration of the relationship between the IG and his agency. And they also make clear that this deterioration had begun long before the Obama administration existed.

    Here are the key nuggets we’ve picked out from the 33 documents:

    * Walpin clashed with CNCS General Counsel Frank Trinity over how to handle improper end-of-term service hour certifications for AmeriCorps members. An April 2008 memo by Trinity accuses Walpin of not correctly following the law on the issue.

    * An email from Trinity to other agency employees about the May 2008 parody newsletter put out by Walpin’s office — which, according to the Washington Post, “included racial and sexually-themed jokes” — makes clear that Trinity saw the newsletter as a potential violation of workplace harassment rules, and asked Walpin to “review and take appropriate action” over the issue. Corporation members have said Walpin did not do this, according to the Post.

    * A string of emails from early 2009 shows that Walpin requested to telecommute from New York for part of the week, and was told by board members that doing so would weaken his effectiveness as IG. It appears that Walpin did indeed end up telecommting, despite the board’s clear indication that they didn’t support the idea. This issue was cited by the White House as being one of several reasons for Walpin’s dismissal.

    * The board also included the April 2009 letter from the US Attorney to an overseer for inspectors general, lodging a formal complaint about Walpin’s behavior on the St. HOPE Academy probe. It criticizes Walpin for withholding information from the US Attorney’s office, and for speaking to the media about the case, and accuses Walpin of seeking “to act as the investigator, advocate, judge, jury and town crier.” This, too, was cited by the White House.

    * There’s also a report submitted soon after by Walpin to Congress, in which he defends his actions in the St. HOPE case and accuses CNCS and the US Attorney’s office of having “another agenda — not that of protecting Corporation grant funds.”

    * Another string of emails reveals a dispute between Walpin and Trinity over the legal status and reporting requirements of that special report submitted by Walpin to Congress. Walpin called Trinity’s inquiries, “another demonstration of the hostility you have repeatedly expressed.”

    * Walpin’s performance at a May 20 board meeting has already been cited by the board as having exacerbated their concerns about him. Several accounts of the meeting back this up. In a memo describing the meeting, Trinity wrote:

    For the next ten minutes, during back and forth between Mr. Walpin and Board members, there were long pauses in the discussion while Mr. Walpin reviewed his notes. It did not appear that he was able to process the information on his notes for lengthy periods of time; he would flip the notes and then stop flipping without ever saying anything more from the notes. I was sitting right next to Mr. Walpin and I thought he might be experiencing some type of medical event, perhaps a mini-stroke or series of mini-strokes. I was concerned for his health. Once he finished his presentation, he was unable to engage substantively with the Board on any questions they raised; he simply argued that what they were saying was not the case.
    Board chair Alan Solomont wrote that Walpin “seems totally confused.”

    And another board member, Eric Tannenblatt, wrote: “I wonder if we should shut down the discussion due to the IG’s obvious confusion and let the record reflect so.”

    * In a letter to Sen. Charles Grassley (R-IA), who had requested more information on the firing, the board wrote:

    Over an extended period o f time, we observed how Gerald Walpin’s effectiveness as Inspector General significantly diminished. Without an IG who can focus time and energy on areas of greatest risk, we are hampered in effectively discharging our responsibilities to you and your colleagues. Our concerns became paramount after an event in May involving the full Board of Directors that caused us collectively to question Mr. Walpin’s ongoing ability to carry out his duties. As a result, the entire Board unanimously asked our Chair to convey our concerns to the White House. We support the President’s decision to remove Mr. Walpin.

    * In a letter to Sen. Harry Reid, the board explained their concerns about Walpin’s habit of making critical public comments about the St. HOPE investigation:

    The fundamental concern of the Inspector General appears to be that he was not consulted during the final week of the settlement discussions. As fully reflected in the referral of Mr. Walpin’ s conduct to the Integrity Committee by the Acting United States Attorney, and as further documented by the attachments to this letter, Mr. Walpin’s limited involvement in management’s deliberative process in the final stages of settlement discussions was the direct result of his own conduct during the course of the St. HOPE matter. Specifically, Mr. Walpin had a marked propensity to make questionable comments on this matter in the media (against the specific direction of the United States Attorney), and to fail to disclose pertinent information to officials who must make decisions on behalf of the federal government.

    You’ve got to assume that this mass of evidence has put to rest once and for all the line that this was a politicized firing — and indeed, the conservative outrage seems to have receded recently.

    Though that may just be because they’ve moved on to their next whistle-blowing hero…

    TPM.

  2. MarkG Says:

    Steynian e-motion:

    Cutting bait [Mark Steyn]
    With respect to many of the Palinologists below, I think they’re getting way too hepatomantic over the entrails.

    As a political move for anything other than the 2010 Senate race, today’s announcement is a disaster. And I’m not sure it’s a plus for the Senate – and, even if it were, the manner and timing suggest it was not a professionally planned event and therefore is unlikely to have any grand strategy behind it.

    So Occam’s Razor leaves us with: Who needs this?

    In states far from the national spotlight, politics still attracts normal people. You’re a mayor or a state senator or even the governor, but you lead a normal life. The local media are tough on you, but they know you, they live where you live, they’re tough on the real you, not on some caricature cooked up by a malign alliance of late-night comics who’d never heard of you a week earlier and media grandees supposedly on your own side who pronounce you a “cancer”.

    Then suddenly you get the call from Washington. You know it’ll mean Secret Service, and speechwriters, and minders vetting your wardrobe. But nobody said it would mean a mainstream network comedy host doing statutory rape gags about your 14-year old daughter. You’ve got a special-needs kid and a son in Iraq and a daughter who’s given you your first grandchild in less than ideal circumstances. That would be enough for most of us. But the special-needs kid and the daughter and most everyone else you love are a national joke, and the PC enforcers are entirely cool with it.

    Most of those who sneer at Sarah Palin have no desire to live her life. But why not try to – what’s the word? – “empathize”? If you like Wasilla and hunting and snowmachining and moose stew and politics, is the last worth giving up everything else in the hopes that one day David Letterman and Maureen Dowd might decide Trig and Bristol and the rest are sufficiently non-risible to enable you to prosper in their world? And, putting aside the odds, would you really like to be the person you’d have to turn into under that scenario?

    National office will dwindle down to the unhealthily singleminded (Clinton, Obama), the timeserving emirs of Incumbistan (Biden, McCain) and dynastic heirs (Bush). Our loss.

    Amen.

  3. DanL Says:

    A hearty thanks to all of our Race members who’ve served their country and to all who have children serving the country. Thank you.

  4. G Says:

    Here’s a post for another day when people feel like having a Romney Huckabee throw down.

    http://www.fivethirtyeight.com/2009/07/is-mike-huckabee-new-jesse-jackson.html

  5. Ann Says:

    I can’t believe you would think the people on this page would make this country safer. What a joke. Pawlenty has ruined Minnesota. All the time you claim family values, sometimes Christain values. Well, Jesus sure wouldn’t be a republican because he wasn’t for violence or trodding on the poor and less privileged, so the few could enjoy life.

    When will our consciences grow so tender that we will act to prevent human misery rather than avenge it? Eleanor Roosevelt

    Please do not post on Michael Jacksons page. He would never have supported your position and it is wrong for you to piggy back off of his death.

  6. Ann Says:

    When will our consciences grow so tender that we will act to prevent human misery rather than avenge it?

    For it isn’t enough to talk about peace. One must believe in it. And it isn’t enough to believe in it. One must work at it.

    Eleanor Roosevelt

    Thank you for those serving our Country.

  7. Ann Says:

    I look at the men and women posted on this page and it is quite amazing that several have had a difficult time with being unfaithful. Not that is it wrong, what is wrong is when they claim to be the conscious of this nation and use God to further their case.

  8. Heath Says:

    Huck won only 8% of non-evangels.

    Hahahahahahahahahaha.

  9. Lisafrequency Says:

    I wonder why Ron Paul’s picture is not up here

  10. GetReal Says:

    5 – cry us a river.
    9 – its for prospective 2012 condidates. He was up for 2008.

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