This blog will recount only facts, no opinions. It will provide links to Sarah Palin's activities on a daily basis, and the news reports on those activities. As the Presidential race heats up, the activies of all Presidential candidates will also be detailed here.

Wednesday, June 27, 2012

Sarah Palin: Obamacare will create a series of death panels

From the Capitol Column:  Sarah Palin: Obamacare will create a series of death panels

Former Alaska governor and vice presidential candidate Sarah Palin revived her argument that President Obama’s key legislative accomplishment — health care — will create a series of death panels.
In a Facebook post published Tuesday, Ms. Palin said that a upcoming ruling from the U.S. Supreme Court is the latest indication that a vast majority of the public.

“It was a pretty long post, but a lot of people seem to have only read two words of it: ‘death panel,’” Ms. Palin wrote Tuesday. “Though I was called a liar for calling it like it is, many of these accusers finally saw that Obamacare did in fact create a panel of faceless bureaucrats who have the power to make life and death decisions about health care funding.”

Ms. Palin’s latest post comes over a year since her first post sprouted outrage from Democrats, who charged Ms. Palin with demagoguery.

In her original post, Ms. Palin said President Obama’s health care measure would create an unnecessary level of bureaucracy that could cost millions of Americans hundreds of millions of dollars each year.

“We must step up and engage in this most crucial debate. Nationalizing our health care system is a point of no return for government interference in the lives of its citizens. If we go down this path, there will be no turning back…. Let’s stop and think and make our voices heard before it’s too late,” Ms. Palin wrote at the time. “The Democrats promise that a government health care system will reduce the cost of health care, but as the economist Thomas Sowell has pointed out, government health care will not reduce the cost; it will simply refuse to pay the cost.”

Writing at the time Ms. Palin faced criticism for referencing her children, one of which has been diagnosed with Down Syndrome. Writing as the health care law was being debated in Congress, Ms. Palin said that the health care law could close off her children from medical access.

“The America I know and love is not one in which my parents or my baby with Down Syndrome will have to stand in front of Obama’s ‘death panel’ so his bureaucrats can decide, based on a subjective judgment of their ‘level of productivity in society’ whether they are worthy of healthcare,” she wrote as the law was being debated. “Such a system in downright evil.”

The U.S. Supreme Court is slated to release its ruling on the constitutionality of Mr. Obama’s health care law on Thursday. It remains unclear how the nine justices will rule on the matter, which could present Mr. Obama with a number of hurdles in his bid for re-election. The stakes cannot be overstated — what the justices decide will have an immediate and long-term impact on all Americans, both in how they get medicine and health care, say analysts.




 

Tuesday, June 26, 2012

Louis C.K. Gets 'Today' Show Introduction, Defends Sarah Palin Jokes

I have to admit I don't even know who this guy is...

From Hollywood Reporter: Louis C.K. Gets 'Today' Show Introduction, Defends Sarah Palin Jokes

Louis C.K. has officially gone mainstream. Not that he seems to care.
The critically-acclaimed comedian, writer and television star featured in a segment on Monday's Today Show, which served for many as an introduction to his raunchy humor and cult hit TV show. During the interview segment, he laughed off the fact that he was named one of Time Magazine's most influential people, saying that he should not be in the magazine and that he had no desire to be world famous.

"I shouldn't be a household name. I'm a filthy comedian," he said. "I deal in subjects that are not popular in every household. A household name is like, ketchup. Everybody wants ketchup."

For many unaware of his Emmy-nominated show -- which starts its third season Thursday night on FX -- he is best known for a series of tweets that slammed, in quite graphic language, former Alaska governor and Vice Presidential candidate Sarah Palin.

"It's caused me some problems, that I wrote s--t about her. But I also, why not, man? But what is she? She's just a person," he insisted; outrage from Fox News host Greta Van Sustren led to C.K. dropping out of a keynote speech at the Radio and Television Congressional Correspondents Dinner. "I don't think she's just some sacred person. And to me, I was writing poems, it was like poetry to me. And I enjoyed writing them."
Would he do it again? Absolutely.

"It still makes me laugh a little bit, the stuff I wrote when I think about it, I think it was well-written," he said, laughing.

C.K. has defended his comments before, telling GQ, "All that other s--t, though -- saying Palin had a Chinese family in her vagina and whatever -- I don't regret that. It's comedy. I have said many indefensible things onstage. It's f---ing comedy. Plus, I do believe if she got elected, she'd really Hitler up the place."

He hasn't stopped at Palin; as a very original marketing tool to promote upcoming comedy shows, he has offered fans the chance to be insulted by him on Twitter.

 

Monday, June 25, 2012

Sarah Palin fiasco casts a long shadow over Mitt Romney's VP selection

This is an op ed piece, not an actual piece of news. Examiner is not an actual news source, but an aggregate of articles. I'm not sure if the author is digging at Romney or Biden or both indescriminately.

From Examiner.com:  Sarah Palin fiasco casts a long shadow over Mitt Romney's VP selection

Senator John McCain's selection of Sarah Palin as his running mate in 2008 cost John McCain his dream of being President of the United States.

No question about it.

The reasons are many, including the fact that Sarah Palin was not ready to take over as President of the United States. Mitt Romney could not help but notice the flub. Mitt Romney does not want to make that same mistake as John McCain, or Romney's dream of being President of the United States will also die. Romney's team wants someone that would not overshadow Romney and prefers to have someone at least as dull as Romney on the ticket.

The conventional political wisdom is that a VP pick should "do no harm."

The model is Barack Obama's brilliant selection of Joe Biden as VP. Biden is obviously ready to take over as Commander-in-Chief at any moment. Knowledgeable about the issues. National security a real strength of Biden's. And he knows his way around Washington. And he reads the New York Times.

However, Sarah Palin's selection did plenty of harm and did McCain no good.
So many names have emerged during the vetting process, but Romney's vetting process has not gone without its share of controversy. It took an entire day for Mitt Romney to deny a report that Marco Rubio is not being vetted by the campaign.
Rubio could be important on a couple of levels, including with Latinos and winning the key state of Florida.
Mitt Romney had to go out of his way to tell reporters that his vice presidential search team is indeed vetting Sen. Marco Rubio (Fla.).
“Marco Rubio is being thoroughly vetted as part of our process,” Romney said after gathering a press pool for an unannounced campaign stop in Michigan.

“I can’t imagine who such people are,” Romney told reporters. “But I can tell you this: They know nothing about the vice presidential selection or evaluation process. There are only two people in this country who know who are being vetted and who are not, and that’s Beth Myers and myself. And I know Beth well. She doesn’t talk to anybody. The story was entirely false.”

Mitt Romney’s comments came after ABC News reported that his search team had not asked Marco Rubio to complete a questionnaire or submit any personal financial documents. One outside Romney adviser confirmed that report to The Washington Post.

Among the other names being bandied and possibly vetted as possible running mates for Mitt Romney are Governor Chris Christie (R-NJ), Senator Rob Portman (R-OH), Congressman Paul Ryan (R-WI), Senator Kelly Ayotte (R-NH) and former Minnesota Governor Tim Pawlenty.

Senator Rob Portman (R-OH) had been considered the front-runner because of his low-key style. Rob Portman is also important because of Romney's need to win Ohio. Of late, the name of former Governor Tim Pawlenty has been coming up.

Now comes the word that Tim Pawlenty doesn't want to be considered for the nomination. It is noted that Pawlenty meets the Romney criteria of dullness. But Pawlenty says publicly he isn't sure he wants it, telling Bob Schieffer on Sunday's Face the Nation he can serve Mitt Romney in other ways. "I think I can best serve Governor Romney in other ways, particularly as a volunteer and surrogate speaker in places he can't go."
Pawlenty gave a sort of "aw shucks" response. "I have encouraged people who asked this question in the campaign to look at other prospects," he said. "I think I can help him best in other ways." Pawlenty acknowledged, however, that him running alongside Romney isn't completely out of the question. "Anybody who would be asked to serve in a position like that would be honored to be asked."

One thing is certain about Tim Pawlenty: he is no Sarah Palin. He would "do no harm." Pawlenty has the added bonus of having someone on the ticket that would not overshadow Mitt Romney and have someone as dull as Mitt Romney.

Mitt Romney winning the presidency with or without Pawlenty on the ticket, that is quite another matter.


 

Tuesday, June 19, 2012

TheDC Morning: The missing barracuda

From the Daily Caller:  TheDC Morning: The missing barracuda


1.) The missing barracuda – Sarah Palin has become increasingly irrelevant, but her endorsement still remains sought after by GOP candidates. And Mitt Romney has yet to become a recipient of her beneficence, reports TheDC’s Alex Pappas:
“Does Mitt Romney have the full backing of the queen mama grizzly? While Sarah Palin has made it concretely clear that she’s opposed to President Barack Obama’s re-election, the former governor of Alaska has not yet offered a formal endorsement of the presumptive Republican nominee for president.”
Sarah, Sarah where are you?

and the following, just because I thought it was interesting.

2.) North Carolina mindlessness – The Israeli-Palestinian conflict doesn’t much feel like it should be the dominion of North Carolina. But some Democratic activists in the state want to let their voices be heard, reports TheDC’s Matthew Boyle:
“The North Carolina Democratic Party (NCDP) is seriously considering passing a resolution that would criticize Israel for its ‘illegal occupation’ of Palestine, the latest in a long line of controversial moves coming out of one of the major battleground states President Barack Obama’s team is banking on to win re-election. The resolution didn’t pass at this weekend’s NCDP state convention, but was tabled and referred to the executive committee for further consideration later. It attacks the United States for providing Israel with ‘$3 billion annually in military aid,’ while the ‘Israeli occupation, disenfranchisement and impoverishment of significant numbers of the Palestinian population, and Israel’s overwhelming military might and its role as the only nuclear power threaten stability in a region witnessing increased demands for democracy and an end to autocratic rule.’”
Here’s an idea. Perhaps before you provide advice on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, you should actually know what you’re talking about. Maybe read a book or two. Wouldn’t that be nice?


Bristol Palin’s ‘Tripp’ to nowhere

From The Edge:  Bristol Palin’s ‘Tripp’ to nowhere

She’s already being sued over her reality show and it hasn’t even aired yet.

Chalk up another dubious achievement for Sarah Palin’s oldest daughter Bristol, the unwed mom, abstinence advocate, memoirist, “Dancing with the Stars” runner-up and “Glee” basher.

Last week, talent manager Stephen Hanks sued her and Lifetime for a bar confrontation in September that is key to the premiere and the episode that follows at 10:30.

As the cameras captured, Hanks viciously heckled Bristol as she rode a mechanical bull in a Los Angeles club.

“Did you ride Levi like that?” he asks, referring to the father of her toddler, Tripp.

He volleys several disgusting vulgarities about the ex-governor of Alaska and the onetime Republican vice presidential nominee.

Encouraged by her friends and no doubt bolstered by the camera crew following her, Bristol confronts Hanks to find out why he doesn’t like her mom.

“Is it because you’re a homosexual?” she demands.

Hanks claims he didn’t give Lifetime permission to film him and that Bristol later defamed him.

Despite the lawsuit, a Lifetime rep said yesterday that the episodes will not be edited.

No one comes off looking good here.

(One tape of the encounter on YouTube has received almost a million hits.)

Controversy aside, “Life” seems to have no meaning beyond giving the 21-year-old a platform for her parenting views and criticism of Los Angeles.

Bristol, for all her whining and tears tonight, has advantages other young single moms can only dream about. Her L.A. “job” is actually a volunteer gig with the charity Help the Children. Her parents’ friends give her the use of their home — a mansion so big it probably could qualify for statehood.

She teases and later berates her 17-year-old sister, Willow, into becoming Tripp’s nanny. Tripp seems like a fun kid, but what teenager wants to be saddled with a toddler full-time? Certainly not Bristol, apparently.
Sarah encourages her to pursue her dreams and acts as mediator between her daughters.
Like a lot of wannabe Kardashians, Bristol loves the spotlight but can’t stand the heat that comes with it.
After the bar incident, Bristol has an ugly meltdown in a parking lot.

“I just cannot believe this is what has become of my (expletive) life.”

There’s an easy solution, but one she won’t want to heed.

Step away from the cameras.


 

Monday, June 18, 2012

Sarah Palin can't help it, she's still running against Barack Obama

From the Hollywood Reporter:  Sarah Palin can't help it, she's still running against Barack Obama

Despite becoming a bestselling author, a highly paid Fox News contributor and a sought-after speaker, in some ways, it’s as if Sarah Palin never stopped running against Barack Obama.

As the Republican vice presidential candidate in 2008, she never really was his actual opponent. But ever since she and Arizona Sen. John McCain lost that election, Palin seems to have carried a sense of grievance. The press, she has maintained, concentrated too much on her and too little on Obama.

And she is not alone.

In a well-received, 35-minute speech Friday evening at a convention of conservative bloggers in the Sands Expo center in Las Vegas, the former Alaska governor returned to a favorite topic: castigating what she likes to call “the lame-stream media” for failing to vet Obama.

“No, the media did not do their job,” said Palin, who wore a beige V-neck sweater, her trademark black pencil skirt and an oversized Star of David necklace, perhaps in deference to the locale’s proprietor, Sheldon Adelson, the Republican mega-donor whose support for Israel has driven his politics.

“But, say for argument, they couldn’t afford to do the job,” Palin said. “Say they couldn’t afford to send a reporter to Chicago, ‘cause they spent all their money in Wasilla to find out what kind of coffee Bristol ordered when she was 17. Why did they not at least read his autobiography? They would have learned a whole lot and not just about that pakalolo smoking and cocaine snorting, and what he ate.” (The last was a sly reference to the passage in Obama’s “Dreams From My Father” about tasting dog meat when he lived in Indonesia as a child.)

“I think it’s funny that the cocktail circuit give me a hard time for eating elk and moose, but come on, anybody here have a pet moose?” asked Palin. “There is a difference.”

Among the appreciative audience members was Shane Kahnke, a 38-year-old stay-at-home mother and blogger whose pink hair and tattoos definitely stood out in the mostly middle-aged crowd.

“I love her snark,” said Kahnke. “'Who has a pet moose?' I love that.”

Few in the crowd expressed disappointment that Palin chose not to run for president.

“If she’s not ready for it, I don’t want her to run,” said Lydia Ruth Vine, 29, an Indianapolis blogger. “She knows what she’s doing. When she is ready, I will back her completely.”

Neva Hervold, a 65-year-old employee of the Las Vegas School District, was so entranced by Palin’s speech that she was surprised when it ended. “I liked that she was so prepared, very personable in her delivery, she wasn’t shrill, she was energetic, humorous. She really took me on a journey.”

Hervold said she also loved that Palin referred to Obama’s history of drug use. “Nobody picked up on it in 2008. The media didn’t want to know what he studied. His associations should be trouble to us as Americans.”

Had the “old media” done its job, Palin said, the country would have understood Obama’s “strange attraction to the most radical of leftist ideas, leading to his government-by-intrusion in all aspects of our commercial and private life, all the way up to his war on religion. And we would have known that he actively, proudly sought out Marxist professors and was actually a member of the socialist New Party when he ran for state office in the ‘90s.”

Palin's reference is to a story gaining traction right now in the right-wing blogosphere. On June 7, the conservative journalist Stanley Kurtz wrote a story in the National Review examining Obama’s affiliation in the 1990s with a Chicago organization called the “New Party.” Kurtz says the group is socialist. The group, founded by a University of Wisconsin professor, has disputed that characterization

Palin also seemed still to be stung about stories that arose during the 2008 campaign that her husband, Todd, was until 2002 a member of the Alaska Independence Party, which advocates Alaskan secession from the United States. Reporters made a “big darn deal” about Todd Palin’s political affiliation, she said. “Well, Todd sure as heck never registered as a Socialist,” she said to laughs and applause.

“Had voters known, they would be surprised that our now president thinks the government has the right to redistribute the fruits of your labor. And in the middle of the worst recession of our lifetime, he would be one to declare that the private sector is doing just fine. He doesn’t understand the private sector perhaps because he doesn’t believe in the private sector.”

Palin did not once mention the name of the president’s Republican challenger, former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney. Nor did she urge the troops to support him. But that was not a shocker for this crowd, many of whom are reluctantly supporting Romney because he is Obama’s opponent.

No one seemed to mind. After all, the "Right Online" gathering was not really about the presidential election.

Organized by the anti-tax Americans for Prosperity, a group co-founded by the oil billionaire David Koch, it was an extended seminar for conservative bloggers on how to use social media and blogs to further the conservative cause. Dedicated to the late conservative Internet entrepreneur Andrew Breitbart, the two-day event was both a tribute to him and a pep rally for those learning to use their voices to effect political change.

“Independent, conservative new-media activists,” said Palin, “You are an army of Davids against Goliath, the Old Media that still wants to deceive.... So I just thank you so much from the bottom of my heart for correcting the untruths. I know many of you had my back, I can’t tell you how grateful my family and I are for your efforts.”

 

 

Wednesday, June 13, 2012

Bristol Palin sued for defamation by bar heckler

He calls her a "whore" which could  have traumatized her, but he's traumatized because she asks if he's gay. Get real!

From Reuters.com:  Bristol Palin sued for defamation by bar heckler

(Reuters) - A man who heckled Bristol Palin in a Los Angeles bar and insulted her conservative politician mother, Sarah Palin, filed a lawsuit on Wednesday accusing the single mom of defamation.
Talent manager Stephen Hanks also sued cable channel Lifetime, which includes film of the 2011 incident in Bristol Palin's upcoming reality TV show, claiming he had not given the program's makers his permission to be filmed.
The lawsuit, filed in U.S. federal court in Los Angeles, stems from a widely publicized September 2011 incident at a bar and restaurant on the famous Sunset Strip.
The amount of damages is not specified but Hank's lawyer, Los Angeles-based Michael Gulden, told Reuters the suit had been filed in federal court because the plaintiff was seeking more than $75,000.
Representatives for Palin and Lifetime did not immediately respond to requests for comment.
Palin, who rose to fame because of a teen pregnancy when her mother was running for U.S. vice president in 2008 as a Republican, had just ridden a mechanical bull at the bar when Hanks, who was a customer there, shouted out that her mother was "a whore" and said she was "evil".
Video of the exchange that was widely posted on the Internet shows Palin, 21, confronting Hanks, asking him if he was gay, and getting into a heated exchange with the man who heckled her.
Palin later told celebrity magazine In Touch that the incident was one of the reasons she had decided to leave Los Angeles and return to her home in Wasilla, Alaska.
Hanks claims in his lawsuit, however, that Palin had bought a new house in Alaska in July 2011, and that she had defamed him by publicly blaming their encounter for her decision to leave Los Angeles.
Hanks also says he suffered emotional distress and invasion of privacy over Palin's questions about his sexuality, and the use of the incident in publicity for the TV reality show.
"Bristol Palin's conduct was outrageous", states the lawsuit, a copy of which was obtained by Reuters.
"Bristol Palin first accused Plaintiff off 'being a homosexual' in a degrading manner in front of others ... she then in a magazine article blamed Plaintiff for her decision to leave Los Angeles for Alaska even though she had purchased her home in Alaska ... more than two months before the encounter," the lawsuit adds.
Palin's reality show "Life's a Tripp", which chronicles her stay in Los Angeles with her now 3-year-old son Tripp and her return to Alaska, is scheduled to premiere on the Lifetime cable channel on June 19.
Gulden said Hanks had tried without success to solve the matter outside the courts with Lifetime and its parent company A&E Television Networks, which is owned by NBCUniversal, Disney-ABC Television, and the Hearst Corporation.
"He has communicated with A&E regarding use of the footage, and they were non-responsive. He felt (filing the lawsuit) was all he could do to protects his rights," Gulden told Reuters.
NBCUniversal is controlled by Comcast Corp. and Disney-ABC is owned by The Walt Disney Co..

 

Tuesday, June 12, 2012

Father-and-son duo that stalked Sarah Palin sentenced to probation for harassing her family lawyer

From Daily Mail:  Father-and-son duo that stalked  Sarah Palin sentenced to probation for harassing her family lawyer 

A father and son previously ordered to keep away from former Alaska Governor Sarah Palin were sentenced on Friday to five years of probation for harassing her family's attorney.
Craig Christy, aged 48, and his 20-year-old son, Shawn, pleaded guilty in January to placing  hundreds of threatening and obscene phone calls to Fairbanks attorney John Tiemessen, his colleagues and relatives last August. 

The father and son were arrested in home state of Pennsylvania and have been jailed in Alaska for most of the time since then. Sentencing was delayed until court-order psychiatric examinations were completed.

Under the terms of their probation, Shawn Christy would have to spend up to 180 days in a residential treatment center. Both men will also face restrictions on their Internet use, prohibitions on contacting various Alaska residents and limits on contact with state court officials.

Any violation could land them in prison for up to two years, and lead to prosecutors bringing additional criminal charges that they have so far declined to file, U.S. District Judge Timothy Burgess warned the two defendants.

But an outburst by Shawn Christy during the proceedings prompted the judge to express misgivings about the young man's ability to stay out of legal trouble in the future.
‘I'm a little concerned that you are having difficulty coming to grips with the situation you're in today,’ Burgess told the 20-year-old after he interrupted the hearing to declare the case against him illegal and in violation of his civil rights.

Craig Christy, his voice breaking at times, read an apology in court.

‘I take full responsibility for blowing this whole situation out of control and not showing my son better coping skills,’ he told the court. ‘I hope one day, all of those I have hurt and offended can find it in their heart to forgive me.’

Palin's parents, Chuck and Sally Heath, attended the back-to-back sentencing hearings. Their daughter, the former governor and 2008 Republican nominee for U.S. vice president, was not present.

Tiemessen, who also attended, told reporters he and others never wanted to hear from the Christys again. 

‘The only adequate remedy is a remedy that results in our firm, our family and our clients being left alone,’ he said.

The father and son were placed under restraining orders issued by a state court in 2010 and 2011 over repeated calls that authorities said they made to Palin, her parents and a long-time friend of the former governor.


  

 

Monday, June 11, 2012

Bristol Palin Says Reality Show Will Present Her as a ‘Grounded, Normal Mom’

From ABC News : Bristol Palin Says Reality Show Will Present Her as a ‘Grounded, Normal Mom’

Bistol Palin is certainly no shrinking violet. She has appeared on the political stage next to her mother — former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin,  taken center stage on ABC’s “Dancing With the Stars,” and has captured people’s attention, making a few headlines of her own.

Now, with her 3-year-old son, Tripp, in tow, Palin will star in her own reality TV show.  ”Bristol Palin: Life’s a Tripp,” will feature 10 half-hour episodes that will air on the Lifetime network starting June 19.

Palin, 21, sat down recently with “Good Morning America” anchor Robin Roberts to talk about the show.
Asked what it was to have cameras watching her every move, every hour of every day, she replied:  “I don’t really think you get used to all of it but Tripp was used to it the whole time. He’s didn’t care if the cameras were there or not. He’s still going to be rowdy, he’s still going to be a little terror, but it was fun. It was a lot of fun.”
Roberts also asked Palin how her mother felt about her doing the series.

“You know, she supports me and she knows that I have good judgment so she is definitely in support of it,” Palin replied.

And the young woman’s strong support of her mother is clearly demonstrated in the show, when she engages in a heated verbal exchange at a bull-riding bar with a man whose political views are different from those of her famous mother.

“I think if somebody is going to talk poorly about my mom, I am going to pick and choose my battles and a battle like that, I chose to confront him and see what the real problem was,” she said, “and I’m excited for viewers to see the real me in that, because I’m sitting there all tough and shaking and I’m acting tough and instantly when it’s over, it’s like, ‘OK, there’s the real Bristol,’ because I am calling my boyfriend, I’m calling my mom. ‘Ah, get me out of here,’ people are going to see the real Bristol in this show.”
She added that the real Bristol Palin is “a grounded, normal mom.”

Palin has faced criticism for appearing in the reality show, but says she’s prepared for the public’s disapproval.
“I think I have tough skin and I know that God is on my side and my faith is everything to me. It’s just the root of my life and my family’s life and I think it will do well,” she said. “And when people are talking poorly about me, I think it just gives me more motivation to want to do more and want to speak up even louder and they’re just not doing themselves well by doing that.”

She added: “I think the people who don’t like me, I’m not trying to change their opinion on it, but it’s going to be a good show.”


Wednesday, June 6, 2012

"Pallin' Around with Terrorists": Palin's Link to Militia Leader Charged With Conspiracy to Commit Murder

From the Huff Post:  "Pallin' Around with Terrorists": Palin's Link to Militia Leader Charged With Conspiracy to Commit Murder 
According to sworn testimony Thursday during federal court proceedings in Alaska, two close associates of former Governor Sarah Palin -- Joe Miller, a staunch political ally of Palin's whom she supported in his failed bid for the U.S. Senate; and Palin's former director of boards and commissions Frank Bailey, more commonly known in Alaska as Palin's "hatchet man" -- were responsible for introducing FBI Informant William "Drop Zone" Fulton to Schaeffer Cox, the leader of the so-called Alaska Peacekeeper Militia.

Cox and two other Fairbanks-based militiamen have been charged with conspiring to kidnap and murder Alaska judges and law enforcement authorities. They have also been charged with violating various federal weapons laws for owning or attempting to purchase machine guns, silencers, hand grenades and other combat-type weapons.

It's an only-in-Alaska story.

The surreptitious meeting between Fulton, Cox and Palin's associates took place a scant six months before Palin was selected by John McCain to serve as his running mate on the GOP ticket. Cox, a supporter of Palin's, was then a Republican candidate for the Alaska House of Representatives, District 7. He finished with 36 percent of the votes.

Cox's trial, now in its third week, has revealed the bizarre cultural and political milieu in which Palin came to power in Alaska and which eventually catapulted her to a national stage.

The introduction of Fulton to Cox took place in a suite at the Captain Cook hotel in Anchorage during the 2008 Alaska Republican Convention, at which Palin and her minions were trying to execute a political coup d'état against Palin's longtime Republican Party nemesis, Randy Ruedrich.

The convention -- and Palin's sub rosa role in it -- was to become a catalyst for both swelling anti-Palin sentiment in Alaska (well prior to her vice-presidential selection) and for Anchorage-based activist Andree McLeod to launch her own good-government crusade against Palin.

Palin's feud with GOP kingpin Ruedrich was longstanding and well-known throughout Alaska prior to the convention. What wasn't known until now is that Palin's forces at the convention were working in concert with some of Alaska's fringe elements, including Fulton, who testified last week that he, Miller and Bailey had met with Cox to discuss political "strategy" in Anchorage.

McLeod, a former close ally of Palin's who had helped her to launch her statewide political career, was an eye-witness to many of the machinations of Miller, Bailey, Fulton and Palin's longtime gopher, Ivy Frye, at the convention. She said it all had the feel of a "paramilitary operation," replete with Walkie-Talkies and a "strange paranoia."

"I felt like I traveled to the Twilight Zone," McLeod declared. "Having previously attended GOP conventions and meetings, it was surreal to initially observe Fulton's menacing conduct, and then to watch the scenes unfold as if they came straight out of a movie script." Indeed, McLeod was so curious about Fulton's behavior in particular that she queried him about his activities. "He told me that he was providing 'security,'" McLeod recalls. At one point she witnessed Fulton and three other of his associates surround Miller while exiting an elevator "and they marched off in military formation."

McLeod, who also was in direct conversation with Frye at various points throughout the afternoon, contends that Bailey and Frye were in constant contact with Palin via cell phone throughout the convention. "That's when I knew that Sarah wasn't looking out for what was best for Alaska," McLeod asserted. "She was only looking out for what was best for her." McLeod also witnessed Miller and Frye leave the convention together and depart -- again, under Fulton's paramilitary protection -- in a white SUV. "It was all really strange," she said. "It was like Black-Ops."

The troubling nature of the Fulton-Miller-Bailey activities convinced McLeod that Palin had conspired with members of her administration to oust Ruedrich, all while working on government time. She filed her first Freedom of Information Act request against Palin and her administration as a result of her suspicions.
While McLeod wasn't able to identify any emails related to the alleged convention conspiracy (Bailey had by then orchestrated a secret, extra-governmental email system that circumvented Alaska's open government laws) there were two significant outcomes that would eventually lead to Palin's political downfall: 1) McLeod says she discovered emails indicating that Palin and Bailey had violated state personnel protocols in the hiring of a state surveyor. As a result, McLeod filed the first of several Ethics Act complaints against Palin's administration; Bailey eventually was required to undergo "ethics training" because of the "troubling nature" of his emails; and 2) McLeod's resulting cache of some 20,000 Palin emails proved to be a goldmine for national reporters during the 2008 presidential election seeking substantive background information on Palin.

Bailey makes no mention of this extraordinary meeting with Cox and Fulton in his not-so-tell-all book, Blind Allegiance. Nor does he address his, Miller's and Frye's efforts to oust Ruedrich at the convention. It's yet another Bailey cover-up.

In fact, Palin had longtime ties to the right-wing, anti-government fringes of Alaska politics. Despite her duplicities to the contrary, Palin's husband, Todd, had on three separate occasions registered as a member of the Alaska Independence Party, which called, at the time, for the secession of Alaska from the Union. Palin also produced a glowing video on behalf of the AIP welcoming them to Fairbanks for their statewide convention earlier that year.

In 2009, for my book, The Lies of Sarah Palin: The Untold Story Behind her Relentless Quest for Power, I interviewed Mark Chryson, chairman of the AIP from 1995 to 2002, who talked about the various ways his movement supported Palin during her tenure as mayor of Wasilla (he claims Palin attended the AIP convention in 1994.) One former militia member I interviewed in Talkeetna with direct links to Cox said that the Palins -- "especially Todd" -- were "sympathetic to our cause." That Palin and her minions would associate with Cox -- and seek out his counsel for political "strategy" at a time when she was being considered as a potential vice-presidential nominee -- is further reflection not only of her fringe political views but also of her warped political judgment.
2012-06-02-PalinMiller2.jpg
If former Senate candidate Joe Miller is one step to the right of Atilla the Hun, Schaeffer Cox is somewhere out in the ozone. In addition to being a gun rights advocate, he has also run afoul of the law for domestic violence. In 2010, according to the Fairbanks Miner, "Cox pleaded guilty to reckless endangerment and is sentenced to two years probation for allegedly punching and choking his wife during a car ride to visit his mother-in-law in Anchorage." Less than two weeks later he was charged with "fifth-degree weapons misconduct" for carrying a concealed handgun. Cox also believes that the Alaska judicial system is a "for profit private corporation"; some of Cox's supporters held a trial at a Denny's restaurant in which he was "exonerated" of all charges.
Fulton's bio is equally bizarre. In October of 2010, Miller hired Fulton and two of his Drop Zone Security employees to provide security for a campaign forum at a public school. At the event, Fulton and his associates handcuffed and detained Tony Hopfinger of the Alaska Dispatch for alleged trespassing charges -- this while Fulton was acting as an FBI informant. When Fulton suddenly disappeared last year, there was widespread speculation that he may have been murdered. In March of last year, his attorney, Wayne Anthony Ross, a Palin loyalist whom she nominated for Attorney General (he became the first such nominee ever rejected by the Alaska Legislature) announced that Fulton had signed over his two homes to him.

Miller's relationships with Fulton, Cox and, of course, Palin have been well documented. His campaign manager Randy Desoto recently praised Palin in a blog on Miller's web site following her appearance at the Conservative Political Action Conference in Washington, at which Palin delivered the keynote address. Many think that Miller will run against Mark Begich for the U.S. Senate in 2014 and will once again seek Palin's support.

This sordid cast of characters reflects the roots of Palin's support in the Last Frontier -- support, as my friend Phil Munger at Progressive Alaska notes, that has now played out its course. McLeod also says the surreptitious activities involving Cox, Fulton, Miller, Bailey and other Palin cronies at the Captain Cook in March of 2008 reflect another side of Palin as well. "It was a coward's way out," McLeod says of Palin's decision to stay away from the convention while others acted in her stead. "She doesn't have the guts to confront people face-to-face. She uses surrogates. It was another cowardly move on her part."

Tuesday, June 5, 2012

Sarah Palin to rally conservative online army

From the Politico:  Sarah Palin to rally conservative online army
 
The conservative blogosphere has yet to move past the death of patron saint Andrew Breitbart, but it will get a major jolt this month from an equally provocative hero: Sarah Palin.

The former Alaska governor and 2008 GOP vice presidential nominee has committed to delivering the keynote address at Right Online, the annual gathering of conservative bloggers and online activists organized by the Koch-backed non-profit group Americans for Prosperity Foundation.

The June 15-16 conference will be the first time the event is held on a different weekend and in a different city from the liberal online activism conference upon which it was based, Netroots Nation.

And that’s no mere coincidence, say Right Online organizers.

This year’s meeting is focused on higher-level tactics and strategies than past year’s editions of Right Online, which sometimes had the feel of a crash course on blogging 101. The Vegas conference features training on video exposes to be conducted by guerrilla video journalist James O’Keefe, a session on polling featuring conservative’s favorite pollster Scott Rasmussen and a session moderated by columnist Michelle Malkin entitled “How to Use Facebook & Twitter to Win,” which will include instruction on using social media to drive narratives.

It’s an area in which Palin can rightly be considered a pioneer, having mastered a high-impact, communication style that almost completely circumvents a traditional media from which she’s sometimes gotten rough treatment.

In addition to her regular, paid appearances on Fox News, Palin tapped social media such as Facebook and Twitter, combined with her own star power, to deliver endorsements of allies and cutting attacks on opponents that sometimes drove the political debate for days. While her impact had diminished somewhat after she announced that she wouldn’t seek the 2012 GOP presidential nomination, she’s increasingly carved out a place for herself in recent months as a Triple-A level political kingmaker and conservative movement figure.
“Sarah Palin is an expert at harnessing social media technology and tactics to shape the narrative,” Tim Phillips, the president of Americans for Prosperity Foundation, said in a statement announcing Palin’s Right Online keynote address. “Few others have demonstrated Palin’s prowess at breaking the rules of the Old Guard Media.”

The conference is going to be heavy on Breitbart hagiography, with Palin scheduled to introduce the team behind Breitbart’s network of conservative websites to toast his memory at a June 15 tribute.

After Breitbart died unexpectedly of heart failure in March, Palin wrote in a piece published on his Big Government website that “the conservative movement didn’t just lose a General — we lost an entire Special Forces Division.”

Palin will introduce the premieres of two Breitbart-related movies at Right Online. “Hating Breitbart” is a documentary two years in the making that chronicles Breitbart’s rise, the controversies he helped spur, and his impact on conservative and mainstream media alike. “Occupy Unmasked,” which features interviews with Breitbart, is billed as an exposé of the Occupy Wall Street protests that “will rock the crazed Left to the core,” according to David Bossie, president of the conservative group Citizens United, which produced the movie.
Americans for Prosperity wouldn’t comment on how much it’s paying Palin to speak. But she commands speaking fees ranging into the low six-figures. And in 2010, AFP spent $253,000 on honoraria, including a $128,000 payment to the speakers’ bureau that represents Palin, with whom AFP had contracted to speak at its Defending the American Dream Summit in Clarkston, Mich., in May 2010.




 

Saturday, June 2, 2012

Analyst: Romney Will Choose ‘Extreme Opposite Of Palin’ As Running Mate

No real news of Sarah Palin today, just opinion pieces.
From CBS  DC: Analyst: Romney Will Choose ‘Extreme Opposite Of Palin’ As Running Mate
WASHINGTON (CBSDC) – Regardless of the political affiliation or level of engagement of a person’s community, most people would be hard pressed to find someone unfamiliar with the name Sarah Palin.
A dynamic and polarizing figure who was often the subject of scrutiny and target of political satire, Palin is the former Alaska governor and vice presidential contender that Americans either love or hate.
The ambivalence she’s inspired in the nation after numerous gaffes and missteps along the way in 2008 has not lessened much over the past four years since her time in the spotlight.
She has also become a figurehead on the prow of the USS Tea Party, a conservative movement responsible for causing its own political divides throughout the nation and keeping her name in a place of prominence.
The fallout from what some have called a disastrous performance during the 2008 election continues to this very day.


Perhaps the most notable and timely example is the repeated appearance of her name in speculations regarding the choice of running mate for official GOP presidential nominee Mitt Romney – usually mentioned as a moral, the personification of a lesson to be learned.



The continued factoring of Palin into such conversations leads many to wonder – how do her words and actions affect politics in 2012, four years after her candidacy?



Her influence is not to be negated outright – after all, as Politico pointed out earlier this week, Palin has made several successful endorsements recently, such as Senate hopeful Deb Fischer of Nebraska and Indiana Treasurer Richard Mourdock. Her support has been perceived to be something of a game-changer for candidates on the receiving end of it, and in a positive way.



She also lent support to Rick Santorum, before ultimately dropping out of the race.



Joanne Bamberger, manager of Pundit Mom and an author of the book “Mothers of Intention,” feels that her influence does exist, but will likely stay isolated to a small sect of the American populace.



“I think her positive is her negative – she is still going to appeal to the really committed Tea Party supporters,” she said to CBSDC. “But if you’re talking about the presidential race, Senate races, local races, whatever they are, the Tea Party is an uber-conservative, small minority of people voting.”



She additionally noted that a Palin endorsement smacks somewhat of Karl Rove-ian politics, in the strategy of appealing to niche voters and galvanizing a passionate but ultimately small sect of Americans toward a candidate, rather than appealing to a larger, broader base of constituents.



Barbara Kellerman, a James MacGregor Burns Lecturer in Leadership of the Kennedy School at Harvard University, agreed when she spoke with CBSDC.



“She remains attractive, sure – in every sense of the world – appealing to many people ideologically and personally,” she said. “But those people are increasingly very much in the minority, very much among the right wing of the Republican Party.”



Added Kellerman, “Are there people in the United States who pay attention to her? Sure. Is her political clout even within a remote distance to what it was a couple of years ago? The answer is no.”



As for Palin’s influence on the selections of a running mate for Romney, both Kellerman and Bamberger see Romney steering clear of a wild card such as Palin.



“I think the level of consciousness regarding the mistake the McCain campaign made … (will cause) the Romney campaign to make extreme efforts to distance itself from it,” Kellerman said. “They will seek someone politically skilled, serious, somber, adult, mature … someone no one will question as a solid pick for the vice presidential slot, who in the event of a calamity would be fit to be president.”



She added, “There has really been an evolution from 2008, a gradual recognition and nationwide acknowledgement of the reckless pick by the McCain campaign. Few defend it anymore – some may have in 2008 and 2009, even 2010, but not in the last year or two.”



Bamberger envisions a male running mate for Romney, but for different reasons.



“Lots of people are saying that Romney has to pick a woman as a running mate because of the perceived war on women, but if I were a betting woman, I would say that he would steer clear of any women and pick someone he is most comfortable with,” she said. “[Not] because of Palin – he’ll choose the extreme opposite of Palin because that’s who Romney is. He’ll pick someone very much like him, in the mold of George H.W. Bush picking Dan Quayle. Another white guy … with a similar background who is not going to overshadow Romney.”