• Sarah Palin

    Sarah Palin: Newsweek Cover is SEXIST

    Newsweek Magazine Cover

    From Sarah Palin’s Facebook Notes:

    The choice of photo for the cover of this week’s Newsweek is unfortunate. When it comes to Sarah Palin, this “news” magazine has relished focusing on the irrelevant rather than the relevant. The Runner’s World magazine one-page profile for which this photo was taken was all about health and fitness – a subject to which I am devoted and which is critically important to this nation. The out-of-context Newsweek approach is sexist and oh-so-expected by now. If anyone can learn anything from it: it shows why you shouldn’t judge a book by its cover, gender, or color of skin. The media will do anything to draw attention – even if out of context.

    – Sarah Palin

    Flap has to agree.

    Why Newsweek ran with a cover photo from Sarah Palin’s Runner’s World photo shoot can only be called SEXIST and BIASED.

    But, what else is new for the MSM? They simply HATE Sarah Palin.


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  • Del.icio.us Links

    links for 2009-11-16

    • Here's a stimulus success story: In Arizona's 15th congressional district, 30 jobs have been saved or created with just $761,420 in federal stimulus spending. At least that's what the Web site set up by the Obama administration to track the $787 billion stimulus says.
      There's one problem, though: There is no 15th congressional district in Arizona; the state has only eight districts.

      And ABC News has found many more entries for projects like this in places that are incorrectly identified.

      Late Monday, officials with the Recovery Board created to track the stimulus spending, said the mistakes in crediting nonexistent congressional districts were caused by human error.

    • Sarah Palin may be mum about her presidential ambitions, but the former GOP vice presidential candidate is opening up about her campaign experiences and has some harsh words for President Obama.
      In an interview with ABC News' Barbara Walters, Palin, whose book, "Going Rogue: An American Life," lands on bookshelves Tuesday, said she would give the president a mere four for his job performance on a scale of one to 10.

      "There are a lot of decisions being made that I — and probably the majority of Americans — are not impressed with right now," said Palin, the former governor of Alaska. "I think our economy is not being put on the right track, because we're strayed too far from, fundamentally, from free enterprise principles that built our country. And I question, too, some of the dithering, and, hesitation, with some of our national security questions that have got to be answered for our country."

    • Gov. David Paterson openly criticized the White House on Monday, saying he thought it was a terrible idea to move alleged 9/11 mastermind Khalid Sheikh Mohammed and four other suspected terrorists to New York for trial.

      "This is not a decision that I would have made. I think terrorism isn't just attack, it's anxiety and I think you feel the anxiety and frustration of New Yorkers who took the bullet for the rest of the country," he said.

      Paterson's comments break with Democrats, who generally support the President's decision.

    • Conservative Party candidate Doug Hoffman has "unconceded" in New York's special House election after reports that the vote margin between him and Rep. Bill Owens (D) has narrowed.

      Hoffman conceded the race on Election Night after learning he trailed Owens by 5,335 votes. But the Syracuse Post-Standard reported last week that the margin had shrunk to 3,026 votes after recanvassing.

      (tags: Doug_Hoffman)
    • Social-networking site Twitter plans to end a service that links prominent message posters with new users, a service that was criticized in California because of perceived unfairness toward GOP gubernatorial candidates.

      Twitter co-founder Biz Stone said Monday the San Francisco-based company will overhaul its "suggested users" list, which links Twitter users with a pool of about 500 celebrities, sports figures and politicians they might want to follow.

      "That list will be going away," Stone said at a conference in Malaysia. "In its stead will be something that is more programmatically chosen, something that actually delivers more relevant suggestions."

    • Nobody denies that Chuck DeVore is a hard-working candidate. His bid to replace Barbara Boxer as senator is centered on tirelessly driving up and down the state building grassroots support. But he’s also working hard—maybe too hard—at painting his primary opponent, former Hewlett Packard chief Carly Fiorina, as a liberal “Scozzafava” Republican. Being loose with her record simply to score cheap political points threatens to damage his credibility in the long term.

      It’s not that DeVore doesn’t have a case to make—he owns the more conservative resume—it’s that in his zeal to cast Fiorina as a moderate he takes artistic license with the facts.

  • Barack Obama,  Day By Day

    Day By Day November 16, 2009 – Carmen Mirandasized



    Day By Day by Chris Muir

    And… President Obama goes to China to talk about transparency when every statement he makes has an expiration date.

    A little hypocritical, you say?

    But, President Obama sure knows how to bow down to foreign leaders. Remember King Abdullah?

    The European socialist crowd must be going wild with America now being a subservient nation.  All in the name of “Change You Can Believe in.”

    How stupid and dangerous is this?

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