Showing posts with label White House. Show all posts
Showing posts with label White House. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 5, 2015

Laura Ingraham tells Govs. Perry, Brewer to ‘saddle up’ and enforce border




http://twitter.com/#!/IngrahamAngle/status/483694508874670080


Laura Ingraham certainly isn’t expecting President Obama to secure the country’s borders anytime soon, but she’d be thrilled if the governors of the border states policed their own states.


http://twitter.com/#!/RightGlockMom/status/483694745202356224

http://twitter.com/#!/JudithAnnDe/status/483695260766183425

http://twitter.com/#!/trikstergod/status/483695324310302720

http://twitter.com/#!/fredbarry/status/483696863049052160

http://twitter.com/#!/ejoseph81/status/483698580432367617

http://twitter.com/#!/deskjet77/status/483703374265606144

http://twitter.com/#!/RJHimself/status/483704087209594880

http://twitter.com/#!/topgun2448/status/483704637787103233


Just about certain:


http://twitter.com/#!/KnucklDraginSam/status/483706500704387072

Read more: http://twitchy.com/2014/06/30/laura-ingraham-tells-govs-perry-brewer-to-saddle-up-and-enforce-border/




Laura Ingraham tells Govs. Perry, Brewer to ‘saddle up’ and enforce border

border states, front door, Laura Ingraham, obama, President Obama, White House, Will La Raza

Saturday, July 25, 2015

Democratic Vets Warn Washington Against New Iraq Entanglement




“We broke the country, and we do need to fix it. But we need to do it without risking more men’s and women’s lives.”

View this image ›


Iraqi military fighters AP Photo/Iraqi Military via AP video


WASHINGTON — The veterans who served in the last war in Iraq and are now seeking Democratic votes in 2014 have been warning their fellow Democrats this week.


They say even limited steps that put U.S. military forces back in harm’s way in Iraq would be a big mistake with ramifications for the future of Middle East foreign policy — and the Democratic Party’s credibility with its progressive base.


“If we have airstrikes, we’ll kill as many civilians as we do fighters. And that’s not right or effective,” said Seth Moulton, a former Marine Corps officer who led forces into combat during four tours of duty in Iraq. “We need to engage this problem. But it needs to be political engagement that comes first.”


Moulton is out of the Marines and running for Congress in Massachusetts, mounting a primary bid against Democratic incumbent Rep. John Tierney. Moulton’s campaign has been endorsed by former Iraq War commanding Gens. Stanley McChrystal and David Petraeus, but Moulton is quick to say unprompted that the war all three men served in “was a mistake.”


More military engagement in Iraq would be doubling down on that mistake, he said.


“You have to make decisions in the present; you can’t just make decisions based on past mistakes,” Moulton said. “But that doesn’t mean we can ignore the past. We have to be very thoughtful about the long-term effects of our actions.”


Progressives have warned the White House in recent days that a new engagement with Iraq could divide the Democratic base ahead of the 2014 elections, turning the anti-war left against Obama (who in 2008 was the movement’s champion). Moulton said a Democratic split over Iraq could be in the cards if Obama goes ahead with military action.


It’s a sentiment shared by Ruben Gallego, a former enlisted Marine and Democratic member of the Arizona state legislature. He’s running in an open Democratic-leaning seat, and has taken a strong stance opposing new military action in Iraq. He said he’s watching the run-up to new military action in Iraq, strongly favored by many advocates of the last Iraq War, in disbelief.


“It’s like a horrible sequel to a horrible movie,” he said. “The people that caused us to launch the invasion of Iraq are coming out for the after vaudeville show and trying to basically recuperate their reputations with further potential bloodshed. It’s ridiculous.”


“The men and women who died on the errors of these men and the hubris of these men should never be forgotten,” he continued. “To think that they have any kind of validity in Washington or in the media in terms of their opinion when it comes to Iraq is absolutely sickening. It would be like asking Bernie Madoff to give advice on how to reform Wall Street.”


Moulton says airstrikes are a bad idea, full stop. Gallego said it’s possible to use military assets in Iraq, but the bar he set for military action was very high.


“[Obama] has to prove that there’s an absolute national interest in us getting involved and that Iraq cannot handle it themselves,” he said. “He has to prove that it will be done with minimal impact to the United States military in terms of putting actual people in harm’s way and also, at the same time, the Iraqi people. We cannot engage in another war where civilians are killed because it’s only going to cause more of a problem.”


Both Democratic vets favor a political, non-military solution to the current chaos in Iraq — a solution that is a difficult one to see — and insist that military intervention will only cause long-term problems. Moulton and Gallego say Obama needs to consult with Congress before taking military action, but they’re not entirely sure that Congress is all that helpful when it comes to war.


“They’re completely out of touch. We’ve never had fewer veterans in Congress in our nation’s history,” he said. “And there are very few people in Congress today who have any first-hand knowledge or experience with the Middle East.”


“Statistically, that means we’re more likely to go to war,” Moulton said. “Which shouldn’t be hard to understand. Veterans understand the costs. And it means that when we have to make very difficult decisions about places like Syria, Iran, and Iraq, we don’t have as many people in Congress with the background or experience to make those decisions wisely.”


Moulton and Gallego are Democrats running in blue states, where taking an anti-war stance is an easy move for a candidate to make. But some of their concerns about new military action in Iraq are shared by Sen. John Walsh, a Montana Democrat and Iraq War vet appointed to replace Democratic Sen. Max Baucus, who retired. Walsh is in one of the toughest races in country and on Wednesday he took to the Senate floor to urge Obama and Congress to use caution before engaging in new military action.


“America cannot afford another Iraq financially or the human costs that are associated with war,” said Walsh, who earned a Bronze Star after leading his regiment from the Montana Army National Guard in Iraq. Though Walsh didn’t expressly warn against airstrikes, he called on members of Congress itching to put forces back into battle in Iraq to slow down before it’s too late.


“I think that too many of my fellow members of Congress are too abrupt and think too quickly about what we should do in Iraq,” he said. “I think they need to take a a step back and think about the impacts, the second and third order effects of continuing to send our men and women over to Iraq.”


Not all Democratic Iraq War vets are speaking out. Staff for Illinois Rep. Tammy Duckworth, who was severely wounded serving as an Army helicopter pilot in Iraq, did not make her available for an interview. Hawaii Rep. Tusli Gabbard, who served in Iraq, said this week about airstrikes, “Not only will they not be effective, they will actually be counter-productive” because “they will strengthen this Shiite-led government in Iraq, which is a puppet government for Iran, and will strain those tensions and further entrench us in what is a generations-old civil war.”


Obama has ruled out ground troops in Iraq. But just about everything else — including unilateral military action without a vote in Congress — is still on the table. In a meeting with top congressional leaders at the White House Wednesday, Obama reportedly said the options he’s considering don’t need congressional approval.


Meanwhile the White House has been explicit in keeping military options on the table.


“The only thing the president has ruled out, and I want to be clear here, is sending U.S. troops back into combat in Iraq,” White House Press Secretary Jay Carney said at Wednesday’s briefing. “But he continues to consider other options.”


To veterans of the last Iraq War who politically side with Obama, the continued focus on military options is missing point of the the legacy of Iraq War, Gallego said.


“We have to be engaged in Iraq in one manner or another. But we need to be doing it in a constructive manner,” he said. “We broke the country, we violated the Powell doctrine, and we do need to fix it. We need to do it without risking more men and women’s lives, and also to create a sustaining, long-lasting democracy that is accepting of all the tribes and cultures of Iraq.”


Read more: http://buzzfeed.com/evanmcsan/democratic-vets-warn-washington-against-new-iraq-entanglemen




Democratic Vets Warn Washington Against New Iraq Entanglement

Democrats, Iraq, obama, White House

Thursday, July 16, 2015

There"s A New Campaign To Feature A Woman On The $20 Bill




“A woman’s place is on the money,” the nonprofit Women on $20s says.





1. A nonprofit is campaigning for Andrew Jackson to lose his spot on the $20 bill and be replaced with a less controversial female historical figure.



Paul J. Richards / Getty Images




2. U.S. money highlights the achievements of former presidents and founding fathers, which leaves no room for honoring women, aside from Susan B. Anthony on the rare dollar coin and Sacagawea on the gold dollar coin.



Gene Puskar / Associated Press




3. So Barbara Ortiz Howard founded the nonprofit Women On $20s, with the goal of putting a woman on the $20 bill by 2020, the centennial anniversary of women’s suffrage.







4. With help from historians, writers, and even the woman behind National Women’s History Month, Ortiz Howard and executive director Susan Ades Stone came up with a ballot of 15 deserving women in history.


“Our hope is that through this process we expose as many people as possible of all ages and of all political and socioeconomic persuasions to really look at women’s contributions in history,” Ades Stone told BuzzFeed News.





5. Anyone can now vote for women to replace former President Andrew Jackson on the $20 bill.



Associated Press

People have long argued he should lose his spot due to his critical role in the genocide of Native Americans.


“We think that we should be considering the face already on the $20 bill because it’s one that’s a reminder of pain,” Ades Stone said.





6. The candidates include civil rights activist Rosa Parks.



Women On $20s / Via youtube.com




7. And feminist writer Betty Friedan.



Women On $20s / Via youtube.com




8. And the first black congresswoman, Shirley Chisholm.



Women On $20s / Via youtube.com




9. After two rounds of voting, assuming the petition has at least 100,000 votes, Women on $20s will send their campaign to the White House for consideration.


Approving new currency for printing is “something that can be done with the stroke of the president’s pen or the treasury secretary’s pen,” Ades Stone said. “The beauty of this is it is something that a lot of people think is long overdue that is easily accomplished.”





10. President Barack Obama has even said he thinks putting women on currency is a good idea.



J. Scott Applewhite / Associated Press




11. “It may seem frivolous, but symbols do matter in our culture,” Ades Stone said. “Especially the images that we put on our money.”



Women On $20s / Via youtube.com



update



Thanks to a reader who pointed out the gold Sacagawea dollar coin, meaning two women are featured on U.S. currency. BF_STATIC.timequeue.push(function () document.getElementById(“update_article_update_time_5147084″).innerHTML = UI.dateFormat.get_formatted_date(‘2015-03-03 16:57:29 -0500′, ‘update’); );




Read more: http://www.buzzfeed.com/juliekliegman/theres-a-new-campaign-to-get-a-woman-on-the-20-bill




There"s A New Campaign To Feature A Woman On The $20 Bill

andrew jackson, barbara ortiz howard, betty friedan, campaign, famous women, margaret sanger, rosa parks, susan ades stone, susan b anthony, Treasury, US currency, White House, women on 20s

Saturday, May 23, 2015

USSS considering TSA-style screening of tourists outside the White House




http://twitter.com/#!/PoliticalLaughs/status/513872822381195264


No word yet if tourists will have to take off their shoes while walking by the White House:


Secret Service considering screening tourist blocks away from the White House, http://t.co/1nWmj1rXtJ


— Caren Bohan (@carenbohan) September 22, 2014


From the Times:


The Secret Service is considering screening tourists and other visitors at checkpoints before they enter the public areas in front of the White House in response to the episode Friday in which a man with a knife managed to get through the front door of the president’s home after jumping over the fence on Pennsylvania Avenue, according to law enforcement officials.


As part of the screening, the Secret Service would establish several checkpoints a few blocks from the White House, the officials said. The screening would likely be limited to bag checks and not include measures taken at airports by the Transportation Security Administration, which include metal detectors and body scans.


Along with giving Secret Service agents and uniformed Secret Service officers a chance to check for explosives and weapons in bags, the screening would allow them to interact with the visitors and try to identify those who may pose a problem, the officials said.


Some spot-on observations from Garance Franke-Ruta of Yahoo! News:


The problem at the WH Friday was with @SecretService actions inside the gates. Not how the area outside the gates is cordoned off.


— Garance Franke-Ruta (@thegarance) September 22, 2014


This is how White House fence jumpers have been responded to at other times. http://t.co/c3Aw4PZB1k pic.twitter.com/Ni9nfKDwFP


— Garance Franke-Ruta (@thegarance) September 22, 2014


When I moved to DC folks could learn to drive in Pentagon parking lot, take self-guided tours of WH & play night roller hockey out front.


— Garance Franke-Ruta (@thegarance) September 22, 2014


What’s next? The NSA gets to monitor any mobile phone in D.C. if it comes near a protected building?


We get that the goal here is to give security inside the fence at the White House a sense that anybody who does jump over the fence isn’t armed or carrying explosives, but we need more details, because it’s not clear that TSA-style anything will accomplish what they want.


And as Ms. Franke-Ruta pointed out, security on the grounds of the White House could do a better job without inconveniencing the thousands of tourists who visit D.C. every day.


Related:


Yesterday’s White House fence-jumper identified as Omar J. Gonzalez, a homeless veteran with PTSD


White House: President Obama has ‘full confidence’ in the Secret Service. Just like every other time he said it?


Breaking: Another security incident at the White House; Suspect arrested


Read more: http://twitchy.com/2014/09/22/secret-service-considering-tsa-style-screening-of-tourists-blocks-away-from-the-white-house/




USSS considering TSA-style screening of tourists outside the White House

Garance Franke-Ruta, Secret Service, White House, Yahoo, ‘The White House

Saturday, May 2, 2015

‘Debbie, I think you’re done": Wasserman Schultz is sounding pretty desperate




http://twitter.com/#!/bhweingarten/status/512366283908972545


If not, this is quite the coincidence.


@DWStweets timely tweet, since the buzz is that youre on thin ice.


— UnKømmunist (@UnKommonSenz) September 17, 2014


As Twitchy reported, there’s a new article at Politico suggesting that the DNC and White House are ticked off at Debbie Wasserman Schultz. It’s looking like Little Debbie’s got some rough times ahead:


Coordinated "friendly fire" attacks on @DWStweets = pre-emptive #2014 scapegoating? I mean, she"s terrible, but not Dems" top problem.


— Guy Benson (@guypbenson) September 17, 2014


Two months to go and @DWStweets is already being scapegoated. #Bloodbath2014


— Jimmy (@JimmyPrinceton) September 17, 2014


Turns out that when Obama said he had no strategy for ISIL the White House was actually crafting a strategy to go after @DWStweets.


— Elliott Schwartz (@elliosch) September 17, 2014


Wow the knives are out for @DWStweets http://t.co/o5fjPkRMoC


— Nick Riccardi (@NickRiccardi) September 17, 2014


Time for a Hail Mary:


In 3.5 years, we’ve organized 100s of events with voters + raised millions of dollars + reelected a president. So proud to chair this team.


— D Wasserman Schultz (@DWStweets) September 17, 2014


Painful.


Check back on this in November… https://t.co/Q113DDEXIq


— Aaron Gardner (@Aaron_RS) September 17, 2014


Ouch.


@DWStweets Ooh Debbie, I think you"re done. Hahaha.


— Susan Hoover (@Gislana449Susan) September 17, 2014


***


Update:


‘Oh, come ON’! More evidence that Wasserman Schultz is a ‘pathological liar’?


***


Related:


‘Admin is pissed off beyond belief": Time for Debbie Wasserman Schultz to ‘say bye’?


Full Twitchy coverage of Debbie Wasserman Schultz


Read more: http://twitchy.com/2014/09/17/debbie-i-think-youre-done-wasserman-schultz-is-sounding-pretty-desperate/




‘Debbie, I think you’re done": Wasserman Schultz is sounding pretty desperate

Debbie Wasserman Schultz, DNC, Ooh Debbie, Wasserman Schultz, White House

Tuesday, April 21, 2015

Progressive Caucus Chair Expects Congress To Roll Over On Iraq




“People are happy to let the president [move unilateraly] because leadership on both sides of the aisle know pretty well that the American people have Iraq fatigue pretty bad.”

View this image ›


AP Photo/Iraqi0Revolution via AP video


WASHINGTON — A top liberal in the House expects lawmakers will largely relent on the issue of congressional authorization following President Obama’s decision Thursday to send military advisers to Iraq and begin laying the groundwork for possible airstrikes.


In the immediate aftermath of Obama’s announcement there were signs in the Senate that Democrats were going to let the president ramp up U.S. involvement in Iraq without a formal sign-off from Congress.


Arizona Rep. Raul Grijalva, chair of the House Progressive Caucus, said he expects most of the rest of Congress to follow suit, despite bipartisan outcry before Friday from lawmakers demanding a say in future military involvement in Iraq.


Now that the broad outlines of the president’s plan — no ground combat, no commitment to air strikes, reserving the right to launch limited attacks on ISIS — have been sketched out, Grijalva said most members of Congress will be happier not having to go on the record about the military involvement in Iraq one way or the other.


“Because, I believe, public opinion is not for an escalated re-engagement in Iraq by our military, [lawmakers] would rather have the president take whatever heat is coming from this, and there is heat, and take the political hit than have to deal with it [themselves] while we’re in the throngs of a midterm election,” Grijalva said. “And that goes for both sides.”


Grijalva opposes Obama’s moves in Iraq, calling the sending of advisers and the gearing up for airstrikes “a slippery slope.” When it comes to congressional approval, he said demanding it is a “consistent” stance for members like him who complained George W. Bush acted unilaterally in Iraq in violation of the War Powers Act.


Progressives in Congress do have the outlines of a strategy to make their voice heard, but Grijalva Thursday afternoon it was still coming together in the wake of Obama’s announcement. Early plans are to rally votes for a House amendment sponsored by California Democrat Barbara Lee banning “boots on the ground” in Iraq, though there was some disagreement over whether or not the 300 military advisers Obama is planning to send count or not. Grijalva said they did to him but said they didn’t to Lee; Lee’s office was slow to respond to questions about the amendment. The rest of the early plan centers around banging the drum about the War Powers Act and trying to force Obama to bring his plans to Congress for approval.


Some progressive groups have already begun laying the groundwork for organized opposition to Obama’s moves in Iraq. In the hours after Obama’s announcement Thursday, a couple of liberal groups put out statements condemning the president’s plan while other groups said they were taking time to consider Obama’s plan before putting out their own statements.


Both inside Congress and without, Grijalva says he doesn’t expect the level of complaints to reach anywhere near what it was in the early 2000s.


“There are going to be the predictable voices,” he said. “But the fact that [members] aren’t saying anything about it should be an indication that they are worried a little bit about what their own constituencies are thinking in their individual districts. I don’t think there will be the human cry. It’s a very limited engagement. But like I said, it’s a slippery slope…and if it escalates, then I think the volume of the opposition is going to increase.”


Progressive stalwarts in the House were already expressing fretting that the president may soon find himself in another war — whether he wants one or not.


“The President does not want to get into another endless war. When you start increasing the advisors there, things happen, you get sucked deeper and deeper and deeper,” said Rep. Jm McGovern, a Democrat from Massachusetts. “I have no doubt the president doesn’t want to get into another pro-longed war but I worry that we may be positioning ourselves where we may get sucked into one. I hope I’m wrong but thats where my anxiety is.”


Kate Nocera contributed to this report.


Read more: http://buzzfeed.com/evanmcsan/progressive-caucus-chair-expects-congress-to-roll-over-on-ir




Progressive Caucus Chair Expects Congress To Roll Over On Iraq

Iraq, obama, progressives, raul grijalva, White House

Thursday, March 5, 2015

Journo SHOCKED the WH can’t be trusted; See the most unreal statement ever




http://twitter.com/#!/andylevy/status/520046458348007424


@andylevy finally someone in the press has the courage to be cynical about politicians. This will change everything


— MattyTalks (@mattytalks) October 9, 2014


You really won’t believe this absurdity from the politics editor for National Journal, Josh Kraushaar. As Twitchy reported, news broke that the White House had done a “full court press cover-up on” the Secret Service prostitution scandal prior to the election. Shocked? The sane aren’t, but apparently that doesn’t include Kraushaar.


Here’s what Kraushaar had to say:


First instinct is to trust what the WH is saying, but they"ve squandered a lot of that trust lately.


— Josh Kraushaar (@HotlineJosh) October 9, 2014


What in the actual hell?


Twitter users quickly schooled the fool.


Are you kidding me? First instinct is to *trust* the WH? Wow @HotlineJosh


— Katie Pavlich (@KatiePavlich) October 9, 2014


Wait, stop…on what possible basis could you say this? RT @HotlineJosh: First instinct is to trust what the WH is saying…


— John Groves (@jfgroves) October 9, 2014


Heh. Patterns upon patterns.


@HotlineJosh Why, exactly, is that your first instinct?


— Jimmie (@jimmiebjr) October 9, 2014


@HotlineJosh The hell has the White House done since forever for you to say trust them? They obfuscate everything!


— #HTTR (@TheDavidBohm) October 9, 2014


@KatiePavlich @HotlineJosh You have terrible instincts Josh. Stop using them.


— Benjamin Williams (@NCBenWilliams) October 9, 2014


@HotlineJosh LATELY? Fucking LATELY?


— Harry (@Tark31) October 9, 2014


You"re a reporter of some type yes? @HotlineJosh


— Keep Calm and Carry (@johnnyfriegas) October 9, 2014


You"re a journalist? RT @HotlineJosh First instinct is to trust what the WH is saying, but they"ve squandered a lot of that trust lately.


— Will Antonin (@Will_Antonin) October 9, 2014


“Real journalist,” guys!


How old are you, twelve? What adult would EVER assume politicians told the truth by default? @HotlineJosh


— Morlock Publishing (@MorlockP) October 9, 2014


You’re a fucking reporter. Your first instinct should be the OPPOSITE. This isn’t hard. @HotlineJosh


— RB (@RBPundit) October 9, 2014


Ding, ding, ding!


.@HotlineJosh you"re in the wrong profession.


— American Elephant (@AmericnElephant) October 9, 2014


Yep. Of course, the Fourth Estate is dead so he does fit right in as a bootlicker.


Related:


Activate shocked faces: White House buried prostitution scandal, IG report before election


Read more: http://twitchy.com/2014/10/09/this-journo-is-shocked-the-wh-cant-be-trusted-this-has-to-be-the-most-unreal-statement-ever/




Journo SHOCKED the WH can’t be trusted; See the most unreal statement ever

instinct, Josh Kraushaar, Twitchy, White House