The Religious Right's Religious Right
He lays out some choice quotes from Covenant News, the website promoting these extreme views, and observes that this website is the home to contributors such as Gary North and Ron Paul.
Posted by Lippard at 9/16/2008 08:04:00 PM 0 comments
Labels: civil liberties, politics, religion, Ron Paul, Sarah Palin
And Balko concludes:
So here we have a U.S. senator who tried to destroy the guy who blew the whistle on his wife’s crimes, who then used his political power to work out a sweetheart deal with prosecutors to get his wife a slap on the wrist for those crimes (which often send others to prison), and who has then spent his entire career fighting for longer sentences and less leniency for people who commit similar crimes. And he’s now running for president.The Washington Post story is here. Phoenix's New Times covered the story of Cindy McCain's drug addiction and Tom Gosinski whistle-blowing back in 1994. The New Times story contains much more detail than the Post story, including lies told by Cindy McCain as part of the McCains handling of the unwanted media coverage of the story.
Posted by Lippard at 9/15/2008 07:59:00 PM 0 comments
Posted by Lippard at 9/14/2008 05:14:00 PM 0 comments
Labels: Barack Obama, ethics, John McCain, politics, Sarah Palin
Posted by Lippard at 9/14/2008 11:30:00 AM 0 comments
Labels: John McCain, politics, Sarah Palin
Posted by Lippard at 9/14/2008 09:37:00 AM 7 comments
Labels: Arizona, creationism, religion, science
Posted by Einzige at 9/14/2008 06:17:00 AM 0 comments
Labels: Arizona, economics, housing bubble
The Bidens donated $30,704 to 10 charities last year. The largest gift was $10,000 to the Beau Biden Foundation, a nonprofit focused on child abuse that is named after the president's deceased son.
But that's on $607,336 in income, so it's just over 5%. Kamala Harris and Doug Emhoff gave just under 1.6%:
Vice President Kamala Harris and her husband, Douglas Emhoff, also released their 2020 tax filings. They paid a rate of 36.7% on income of $1,695,225 and contributed $27,006 to charity.
Posted by Lippard at 9/12/2008 03:33:00 PM 0 comments
Labels: Barack Obama, charitable giving, economics, John McCain, politics
Posted by Lippard at 9/12/2008 01:22:00 PM 0 comments
Labels: crime, law, security, spam, technology
Foreclosures hit another record high in August: 304,000 homes were in default and 91,000 families lost their houses.More than 770,000 homes have been repossessed by lenders since August 2007, when the credit crunch took hold.
The report from RealtyTrac, an online marketer of foreclosures properties, is the latest in string of bad news for housing.
Foreclosure filings of all kinds, including notices of defaults, notices of auctions and bank repossessions, grew 12% in August over July, and 27% compared with August 2007.
Arizona preforeclosures also set another record in August, according to the Arizona Republic:
...notice of trustee sales, in metropolitan Phoenix hit a new high of 7,271 in August, according to the real-estate-data firm Information Market. Foreclosures in the Valley have been hovering around 4,000 for each of the past few months but are bound to climb if more struggling homeowners don't get help.
So much for seeing July's drop as the start of a trend.
Posted by Lippard at 9/12/2008 09:47:00 AM 0 comments
Labels: Arizona, economics, housing bubble
Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin has charged her state a daily allowance, normally used for official travel, for more than 300 nights spent at her home, The Washington Post reported Tuesday.
An analysis of travel statements filed by the governor, now John McCain's Republican running mate, shows she claimed the per diem allowance on 312 occasions when she was home in Wasilla and that she billed taxpayers $43,490 for travel by her husband and children.Per diem payments are meant for meals and incidental expenses while traveling on state business. State officials told The Post her claims — nearly $17,000 over 19 months — were permitted because her "duty station" is Juneau, the capital, and she was in Wasilla 600 miles away.
Palin spends little time at the governor's mansion in Juneau, especially when the Legislature is out of session, and instead prefers to live in Wasilla and commute to her office in Anchorage.
I think the travel to and from Wasilla is arguably reasonable, depending on frequency, but per diem for meals and incidentals in Wasilla seems as wrong as if she were taking the per diem for meals and incidentals while staying in the governor's mansion.
UPDATE (September 15, 2008): The Palins haven't yet released their tax records, and it may be that she owes taxes on those per diems.
Posted by Lippard at 9/10/2008 02:57:00 PM 0 comments
Labels: ethics, John McCain, law, politics, Sarah Palin, travel