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Geoffrey Dunn: Palin Plagiarizes Gingrich in Anchorage Speech Top
Sarah Palin's garbled, often incoherent speech delivered in Anchorage on Wednesday--the one in which she declared "screw political correctness" and wondered why "we have to pussyfoot around our troublesome foes"--was largely lifted from an article written four years ago by Newt Gingrich and Craig Shirley. Palin apparently also felt that she could "screw" intellectual integrity. While Palin twice mentioned Gingrich in the speech (she never once acknowledged Shirley), virtually every single reference she made to Reagan was lifted directly from the Gingrich-Shirley article. It's a pure case of unadulterated plagiarism. A little background: Palin was on the stage at the Alaska Center for the Performing Arts, donning red Franco Sarto high heels (she mentioned them) and introducing Michael Reagan, the rightwing talk show host and son of the former president, Ronald Reagan. Her introduction lasted about 17 minutes and has already garnered significant national attention. Doing real research on Reagan, of course, was a bit much to ask of the busy governor, currently on-tour in New York, so she simply "borrowed" from Gingrich and Shirley--at least eleven times. Our dear Governor, it appears, is a one-source wonder. The indomitable AK Muckraker of The Mudflats undertook the near impossible task of transcribing most of Palin's ramblings (my wife filled in on a couple of spots as well), and after slogging through the muck of verbiage while listening to a recording of the speech (replete with Palin's shrill intonation, stilted phrasing and peculiar syntax), I realized I had read some of this before. So I tracked down the original Gingrich-Shirley article , "Republicans Need to Relearn Lessons of the Reagan Revolution" which appeared in the Union Leader , November 1, 2005, and is also online. During the 2008 presidential campaign, Palin was accused by Daily Kos of plagiarizing a Hillary Clinton passage. In that instance it was, at worse, petty larceny; in this case, it's grand theft. In Anchorage, Palin went through her standard introductions, including the "First Dude," Todd Palin, then said: 1. Palin: First, I think what we're going to learn tonight via Michael is that Ronald Reagan's ideas were the right ideas and all we have to do is look back at his record, his economic record and his national security record to know that his ideas were right. Gingrich/Shirley: What should Americans learn from this remarkable man and his remarkable Presidency?...The "right" ideas really matter (the left was wrong and Reagan was right about virtually every major public policy issue and the historic record is clear for those willing to look at it). After that, Palin acknowledged that "Recently, Newt Gingrich, he had written a good article about Reagan...." (Recently? It was four years ago; and she said "good," with an obvious disdain, since Gingrich has been rather dismissive of her recently.) 2. Palin: He said, regarding your dad Michael, he said that we need to learn from his example that courage and persistence are keys to historic achievement. Gingrich/Shirley: Courage and persistence are the keys to historic achievement. 3. Palin: With Reagan's example, D.C. politicians calling the shots for our country, they had better rely on the good sense of the American people and bag their alliance on the entrenched bureaucrats and the elite self-proclaimed intellectuals, and the smug lobbyists who dominate Washington. Gingrich/Shirley: Relying on the good sense of the American people beats relying on the elite intellectuals, entrenched bureaucrats and smug lobbyists who dominate Washington. 4. Palin: We have to remember first that Ronald Reagan never won any arguments in Washington. He won the arguments by resonating with the American people. Gingrich/Shirley: Reagan never won an argument in Washington. Reagan won his arguments in the country with the American people. 5. Palin: We the American people through him, we imposed our will on Washington... It's our will to be imposed on them. Gingrich/Shirley: [T]hen the American people imposed their will on Washington. 6. Palin: What Newt had written in this article, he wrote: "Remember how refreshing it was with his outrageous directness that Americans loved, and praised and deserved." Gingrich/Shirley: Candidate Ronald Reagan responded to the failures of the left with enormous clarity and directness. 7.Palin: [Regan's] vision for the Cold War?--we win, they lose. Gingrich/Shirley: On the inevitability of the Soviet Union, Reagan responded with a then shocking vision for the Cold War--"we win, they lose." 8. Palin: So Ronald Reagan spoke to us then with us here in our hearts is where he reached us.... He captured our hearts so he could affect positive change by what he did. He focused on our kids, on our children, on their future, Gingrich/Shirley: The key to capturing the attention and, yes, the hearts of Americans is to focus on their future and their children's future. Reagan understood this... 9. Palin: He stood strong on his knowing that the framework through which he believed that positive change that framework for our kids, it was freedom [sic]. Gingrich/Shirley: Successful governance means having a framework through which to lead the American people. For Reagan, that framework was freedom. 10. Palin: We would do so well to look back on those Reagan years as he championed the cause for freedom and then he lived it out as our president --cheerfully, persistently and unapologetically. Gingrich/Shirley: Cheerful persistence rather than easy victories were the keys to Reagan's career. 11. Palin: And with detente, speaking of detente, he used two words: "Evil Empire." Gingrich/Shirley: Reagan replaced the entire vision of detente with two vivid words: "Evil Empire." It's an impressive bit of intellectual larceny, worthy of a high school sophomore. Palin then segued off the beloved Gipper (about whom, it became obvious, she knew nothing), and shifted back to what has become her favorite subject these days: the embattled Sarah Palin. In the end, it's always about Sarah--even when she's introducing someone else. That portion of the speech she didn't plagiarize from Gingrich, who, when asked to name the "emerging leaders" in the GOP this past April in an interview with Christianity Today , refused to name Palin, wondering instead when pressed: "Is she willing to do the kind of development of national issues and development of a national profile that would be required?....[B]ecoming a national leader would take a significant amount of work." This may not have reflected the "significant amount of work" that Gingrich had in mind. Award-winning investigative journalist and documentary filmmaker Geoffrey Dunn is at work on a book about Sarah Palin and her role in American politics, to be published by Macmillan/St. Martin's in 2010. More on Barack Obama
 
Mark Morford: New Hampshire goes to Hell Top
Surely the news is forthcoming. Surely, this time, the liberal media cannot, will not shirk its responsibility and ignore the shocking facts by pretending nothing's happening and all is fine and good with their scary hippie liberal pervert Obama world. Not with all these charred bodies and screaming kittens about to pour down on our sweet Christian heads. I await the headlines. I await the startling photos and the jittery video clips documenting the various locust swarms, the floods and the hurricanes and exploding puppies, the pretty flowers spontaneously combusting. I await the horrible news of the sudden sprouting of multiple demon heads from once-adorable human babies who suddenly start frothing at the mouth and speaking in what everyone thought was delightful gibberish, but which, when slowed down and played backwards through a tub of raspberry vodka, turned out to be Latin for "Satan is my homeboy." That will be some popular YouTube video, I tell you what. Did you not hear? Did you not see? For indeed, another smallish east coast state has succumbed to the Dark Lord, hath given its soul over to vile temptation, to sodomy and fine lubricants and superlative gin cocktails made by people who wish merely to fall in love and have lots of sex and feel true passion and then get married and, oh yes, they just so happen to be of the same gender. What a world. Surely Armageddon is at hand? Surely a storm is coming , and it will shortly rain down rainbow flags and incest and multiple flyers announcing a fabulous sale on Marc Jacobs eyewear, now that New Hampshire has joined Vermont and Massachusetts and the rest by legalizing gay marriage? Surely. Hmm. Still nothing. Still no signs. No fire, locusts, kittens. I mean, wtf, Lord? How long must we wait, oh Lord, for you to return in a divine rage of vengeful awesomeness? How long until you cleave the sky with thy holy katana and wipe the Earth free of these gay and liberal heathens with thy divine ShamWow? After all, it hath been multiple years. Canada. Brazil. Iowa. Gay marriage is slowly taking over the planet. It's everywhere, and nary a peep from Thou up there in the heavens, much less a big, fun fireshow of doom and wrath and angel spit. Really, what do we have to do to get your attention and help us take care of this, Lord? Legalize pot and practice Wicca and get a genital piercing? Do You not see how soon your beautiful Christian world will soon be turned upside down, how our innocent children will be taught that Muslims and pagans and homosexuals and scary women with tattooed nipples are totally acceptable, whereas fine humanitarians like Dick Cheney and the staff of Fox News are deemed the true monsters? What are you letting us become, Lord? Do you really want a world where genders and nationalities and sexualities and religious beliefs dissolve and intermix and redefine and explode, as the techno-Twitter nutball free-thinkers gleefully push the human experiment forward and backwards in a big, fucked-up, noisy mess of why-the-hell-not? Whoops. Excuse my cursing, Lord. I do get a litttle carried away. But what sort of world will that be? What hath thou created? And where are my goddamn pictures? Mark Morford's SFGate columns are here . Get on his personal newsletter right over here . Email him directly? Absolutely . Twitter and Facebook , too because, well, why not? More on Gay Marriage
 
Claudia Ricci: A Snow(e) Job for SURE! Top
You know the old saying that this or that GALLS me? Well, I've finally figured where that saying comes from....as in, it comes straight out of the gut. A few days ago, plagued by fever and a pain -- as the docs put it -- in the upper right flank, I went to the ER for treatment. Turns out my gall bladder was inflamed or infected or whatever, and on Wednesday, out it came in one of those tiny-TV-camera surgeries they call laparoscopy. At many points during this very long and woeful week, fevered, in pain, vomiting, dying of pre-op thirst that felt worse than the Mojave Desert, I still kept thinking one thing: thank God, at least, that I have health insurance. I was well enough to come home yesterday and was congratulating myself today thinking gee whiz, I haven't even needed the old pain pills all day long. Isn't that a miracle? And then a few minutes ago, along came this tidbit of news, courtesy of my husband, Richard Kirsch, who is leading a campaign here in DC --called Health Care for America Now-- to get quality affordable health coverage for every American. A cornerstone of this program is a public health insurance option -- option being a critically-important word. Consumers would retain a choice. They could keep their private health insurance plan if they wanted, OR they could opt for a government plan. Big insurance companies of course want to block the public option because, natch, it would cut into profits. Aw, pity pity. President Obama on Wednesday strongly reaffirmed his public commitment to support such a public plan, however. The President asserted that we need this option to keep the insurance companies "honest." HA! Ah, only two days later, Senator Olympia Snowe, Republican of Maine, stepped in, in a very sneaky way, to try to kill the public plan. According to former Clinton Labor Secretary Robert Reich, writing in Politico.com today, Snowe convened a meeting Friday night among lobbyists for the drug and insurance companies to put off the public option, instituting it only if health care costs don't go down. "It's just a way of killing the public plan," my husband said, reading Reich's comments to me from his Blackberry. This infuriated me. When I started to think about all the people who would be hurt NOT having a public insurance plan, I just started to ripple with anger. Yeah, so, that's what galled me. Literally. That's when my gall bladder, now missing for three days, started to ache like hell. Go figure. (And by the way, go read the full article on-line at Politico.com!) We feel what we feel bodily. Our emotions course in biochemical form throughout our bloodstream, saturating our tissues. Literally, we are awash with emotions of one sort or another. All our cells are affected. And sometimes our language tells the tale. OLYMPIA SNOWE YOU SHOULD BE ASHAMED. YOU AND THE REST OF YOUR CRONIES. How would YOU feel if YOU had no health insurance? Huh?
 
Andy Plesser: Nick Denton: A Third of Gawker Media Posts Are Video Centric: NYT's David Carr Explains the Power of the Moving Image Top
Earlier this week, at the much talked about iWantMedia panel on the future of the media, Gawker Media founder Nick Denton said that a third of his company's "posts are video centric." Gawker blogs don't publish much in the way of original videos, the videos are embeds from other sources and videos culled from a rack of DVR's which monitor a number of cable channels, nonetheless, for us over at Beet.TV, this extraordinary degree of video integration into news reporting and blogging is a big deal and very exciting. Nick told the panel that video integration was the biggest development at his company. After the panel ended, I interviewed David Carr, media columnist for the New York Times about the value of the moving image. He also spoke about the evolution of blogging as serious reporting. You can find the original post on Beet.TV More on Video
 
Michael B. Laskoff: One Unrepentant Zionist and the Two State Solution Top
That one Zionist would be me, but I know that I'm not alone. Take President Obama: he sounded like another unrepentant Zionist in Cairo this week. Zionism is an 19th Century political (agrarian socialist) idea that Jews - particularly those residing in Europe - should establish a "Jewish" state in some or all of the area that is currently the footprint of Israel, the Gaza Strip and West Bank. Jews of the day came to the conclusion that the Europeans weren't thrilled with - and never had been - our presence in their counties. The English evicted us, the Spanish offered us the opportunity to convert to Christianity (or die), the Eastern Europeans repressed us and the French scape-goated us in the Dreyfus Affair. (The Crusades weren't too wonderful for us either.) This was all well before Nazi Germany got around to creating the mother of all genocides at our expense. Had it not been for that last fact, the modern state of Israel might not exist. Nevertheless, it is hard to get around the reality that more Jews died in the Holocaust than live in the state of Israel today. Many of those who died, I might add, shared my atheist tendencies and were ethnically identical to those living all around them. But when the whip came down, others decided who was a Jew and who was not: the facts, religious practices or personal beliefs of the individual had little or nothing to do with it. The lesson imparted by this experience is that it doesn't matter whether you think that you are Jewish or not: what matters is the opinion of those who have the power to kill you. Further evidence of this is supplied by the genocides of Rwanda, Cambodia and Sudan - all massive tragedies in their own rights. Knowing all this, I'm thankful for the creation of the modern state of Israel and believe that its continuity is of vital importance to Jews the world over. What I do not support is the idea of a theocratic, apartheid regime that represses the right of Palestinians to have their own state. Small as Israel, the West Bank and Gaza may be - collectively, a bit smaller than the landmass of New Jersey - it is better for the Israelis to help the Palestinians establish their own state than to attempt to be a functioning democracy that denies equality to what will be shortly be the majority of inhabitants. The faster we can all make that a reality the better. Stopping the expansion Jewish settlements in the West Bank will help create the conditions in which a Two State solution is possible. It is not all that the Israelis need to do, but it's a concrete step in the right direction. I believe that this is precisely why the Obama administration is being suitably firm on the issue. Of course, Israel cannot achieve peace on its own and it requires responsible partners in the process. That means that the Palestinians will have to make plenty of difficult concessions of their own; it also means that Israel's Arab neighbors and other Muslim countries will have to stop appealing to their "main streets" with anti-Semitism to distract people from their own theocratic, monarchical and despotic misdeeds. Peace will not easy, but it's only likely to occur when two states exist where currently there is one. More on England
 
Danielle Cavallucci: Thanks, President Obama for Remembering D-Day: From the Granddaughter of a D-Day + 4 soldier Top
I am at once honored and thrilled that the sacrifices and courage of the soldiers who fought through North Africa, into Italy, through circumstances we can scarcely imagine, to give us a life in which m mortgage crises and a faltering economy are the biggest concerns for most of us are being so widely commemorated internationally. My grandfather landed at Normandy 3 days after the first landing, and marveled for years that, after liberating 2 concentration camps and continuing through the Battle of the Bulge and on to Berlin, standing guard at Potsdam, there was never a real national monument to the brave men who fought in the heroic battles of World War II. He died a week after the WWII monument in DC opened and was only able to view the photos of it I sent via digital phone. Viva the modern era of instant communication. The gesture of that monument meant so much to this man whose young adult life was spent fighting for the country he loved. This morning's ceremonial honors and the homage paid by so many have inspired such gratitude and a renewal of hope in our great nation. President Obama's homage to his own grandfather and the grandparents of so many Americans who have enjoyed the spoils of the freedom they bled to preserve is a reminder that, beyond our often disparate views, the common thread of courage, justice and freedom bind us all one to another in this country. Thank you, President Obama, for remembering those brave souls who have gone before us, who have led by example with exemplary lives, whose wisdom and courage we should incite in these trying times to suss out the best answers for a nation whose troubles may dishearten for their density. It is nice to be reminded that we live in a nation, whose essence and history is to thrive in unprecedented situations. Remembering our history gives us strength. It gives us the opportunity to rise above the pettiness of individual desire, and to strive for something greater -- the same vision of a great nation which drove these brave souls forward to protect and serve when duty called. Perhaps we can take some piece of that as we move forward. Perhaps we can raise the bar and pull together the way our grandparents did to make the sacrifices necessary to leave a legacy of love, decency and honor rather than squandery. Perhaps, remembering what wide-spread, no-nonsense heroics look like, we can reach within and break new ground as a nation and as a community of humans working together for the better of the whole world.
 
Katie McCormick Lelyveld, Tommy Vietor Engaged In Paris Top
PARIS — First lady Michelle Obama's spokeswoman got an urgent call Saturday morning, summoning her to the U.S. Embassy ahead of time. An aide told Katie McCormick Lelyveld that Obama's daughters were ready to leave and she had better hurry. But instead of finding Malia and Sasha waiting for her, she saw her boyfriend and an engagement ring. "I thought she was going to pass out," said Tommy Vietor, an assistant White House press secretary who handles State and Defense issues for President Barack Obama. "I was shaking _ he completely surprised me," McCormick Lelyveld said. "I couldn't have picked a more perfect way for this to happen." Vietor 28, took a late Friday afternoon flight from Washington, arrived in Paris at 6:30 a.m. local time, grabbed a taxi and quickly showered and changed into a suit at the U.S. Embassy. The whole operation was executed under thick secrecy. Alyssa Mastromonaco, who manages the White House road show, and Mrs. Obama's scheduler, Franny Starkey, were in on the plan. The first lady's traveling aide, Kristen Jarvis, phoned McCormick Lelyveld, 30, and told her to hustle over to the embassy. Jarvis then led her to a room where she found Vietor, who didn't sleep on the seven-hour flight. McCormick Lelyveld and Vietor met in 2004. She was working for Massachusetts Sen. John Kerry's presidential campaign; he was working for then-North Carolina Sen. John Edwards' rival campaign. After Edwards lost the nomination to Kerry, McCormick Lelyveld interviewed Vietor for a Kerry campaign job he ultimately decided against taking. Instead, he went work as a deputy press secretary for a U.S. Senate candidate from Illinois: Barack Obama. They started dating when Vietor returned to Washington. Vietor says the couple hasn't decided when to marry _ nor have they spoken with the Obamas. He joked that the president and first lady were busy with ceremonies marking the 65th anniversary of the Allied invasion of France at Normandy. When told of the proposal, President Obama told aides Vietor had pulled off a "smooth move." ___ Paris is a world capital that Obama says he would like nothing more than to take advantage of _ strolling down the banks of the Seine, going out for nice meals with his wife, Michelle, and having picnics in Luxembourg Gardens. But unfortunately for him, just not while he is president. "Those days are over, for the moment," Obama told a reporter in Caen who asked whether his brief visits to France and Germany, and lack of private activity in either country, meant Europe was not a priority for him. "What it means is that I have a very tough schedule," he said. "When I take these foreign trips, it's to get business done." Besides, dinner is overrated. Obama said French President Nicolas Sarkozy a friend he can pick up the phone and chat with at anytime. "At some point, I will be the ex-president and then you will find me in France, I'm sure, quite a bit, having fun," Obama said. French media have speculated that Obama and his family, including his daughters, would have dinner atop the Eiffel Tower on Saturday night. ___ Obama scolded French journalists for "reading too much into my schedule." He appeared similarly piqued a day earlier in Germany, where the media there watched intently for signs of tension in his relationship with Chancellor Angela Merkel. In France, Obama noted that his country's unemployment rate has climbed to 9.4 percent, the highest in more than 25 years. He said he still has a lot of work to do turn around the U.S. economy. "That all requires a lot of work, and so my travel schedule is always limited," he said. ___ Obama singled out a few veterans for special mention in his D-Day remarks at the American cemetery at Normandy's Omaha Beach. The story of D-Day was told, he said, by men like Zane Schlemmer, of Kane'ohe in Obama's home state of Hawaii. On Saturday, Sarkozy pinned a French Legion of Honor medal to Schlemmer's chest. Obama said Schlemmer, a member of the 82nd Airborne Division, "parachuted into a dark marsh, far from his objective and his men. Lost and alone, he still managed to fight his way through the gunfire and help liberate the town in which he landed." Then there's Anthony Ruggiero, of Plymouth, Mass., an Army Ranger "who saw half the men on his landing craft drown when it was hit by shellfire just a thousand yards off this beach," Obama said. "He spent three hours in freezing water, and was one of only 90 Rangers to survive out of the 225 who were sent to scale the cliffs of Pointe du Hoc" and destroy the German cannons. Obama also paid tribute to his grandfather, Stanley Dunham, who arrived in Normandy six weeks after D-Day, and his great-uncle, Charles Payne, a member of the first American division to reach and liberate a Nazi concentration camp. Payne _ or "Uncle Charlie," as Obama calls him _ joined the ceremony at Normandy with a group that traveled with Veterans Affairs Secretary Eric Shinseki. Obama saw his uncle on the way into and out of the event. Senior adviser David Axelrod told reporters later that Obama was thankful "for the opportunity to be with his uncle at this place, knowing that this opportunity may not come again." He said it was a "personally emotional time" for the president. ___ A pair of Americans with deep ties to the battle attended the commemoration. Former Sen. Bob Dole, who unsuccessfully ran for president in 1996, got a nod from Obama as "a World War II veteran who returned home from this war to serve a proud and distinguished career as a United States senator and national leader." Although not a veteran, the crowd included a descendant of Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower, a significant figure in D-Day history. Obama noted "Susan Eisenhower, whose grandfather began this mission 65 years ago with a simple charge: 'OK, let's go.'" Other notables present included former Sen. Max Cleland of Georgia, who lost both legs and an arm in Vietnam, and actor Tom Hanks, star of the film, "Saving Private Ryan." Hanks played a World War II Army Ranger company commander in the 1998 film. ___ Prime Minister Gordon Brown says he is close to President Barack Obama. So close, in fact, that when talking about the Normandy beach where Allied forces invaded France, Brown mispronounced Omaha Beach's name. "So intense was the cooperation between our nations was that when Winston Churchill regularly asked to see strategists who were planning D-Day, he never knew until they arrived at 10 Downing St. whether the officer would be British, Canadian or American," Brown said. "And so next to Obama Beach, we join President Obama and pay particular tribute to the spectacular bravery of American soldiers who gave their lives on Omaha Beach for people whose names they never knew, for whose faces they never saw and yet people who have lived in freedom thanks to their sacrifice and valor." Brown continued right past the flub. Obama did not react. ___ Associated Press writers Mark Smith in Omaha Beach and Scott Sayare in Paris, and Philip Elliott in Washington contributed to this report.
 
Election Law Experts Agree: Norm Coleman Doesn't Have A Prayer Top
Seven months after Minnesota's Senate election, the state's highest court hasn't reached a decision but election law experts agree: Norm Coleman doesn't have a prayer. These experts see almost no chance Coleman's lawyers will prevail in their appeal to the state's high court to count more ballots in a bid to erase Al Franken's slim lead. More on Al Franken
 
School For Blind Holds Prom: "They Told Us It Was An 80s Theme" (VIDEO) Top
The Boston Globe offers a sweet story on a prom held for students at the Perkins School for the Blind in Watertown, Massachusetts, the oldest school for young people who are blind in the United States. "Talking about why prom night was so special," the Globe reported, one student "sounded like any high school senior readying herself for this rite of passage." "Getting dressed up. Hanging out with friends. Having a last hurrah," she replied. They danced the night away, too, the Globe notes, with those who could not hear the beat "feeling the music's vibrations through the hall's floorboards." Read the full article here , watch video below: More on Video
 
Stephen Colbert Iraq Trip: US Army Confirms Colbert Has Arrived Top
Via Think Progress , the U.S. Army confirms that Stephen Colbert has arrived in Iraq to film episodes of his popular Comedy Central show "The Colbert Report." The tour was arranged by the United Service Organisations (USO), which organizes entertainment for our troops abroad. The comedian will record a week's worth of episodes and has high-profile interviews lined up with figures such as U.S. General Ray Odierno and Iraqi Deputy Prime Minister Barham Saleh. Of his trip, Colbert said in a statement: "The USO counts this as military service, right? I might want to run for office some day." Colbert's trip to the Middle East had been shrouded in secrecy, although that didn't stop Governor Sarah Palin from inadvertently blowing Colbert's cover by posting this statement on Twitter: Getting ready to tape shout-out for our awesome US troops serving overseas! Will be on 'Colbert Report' next month, broadcast from Iraq... More on Comedy Central
 
Democrats, Republicans Eyeing Virginia, New Jersey Governors Races As 2010 Indicators Top
Off-year elections rarely predict the future -- except when they do. That's why Democratic and Republican leaders will be closely watching the gubernatorial races in New Jersey and especially Virginia between now and November.
 

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