Archive for July, 2009

Cook v Good dismissed

July 16, 2009

July 16, 2009

Updated list of birth certificate posts
Taitz: Application for TRO for Major Cook
Major Cook’s active duty revocation order
Taitz: Application for Injunction (Major Cook)
Major Cook’s plaintiff verification re: Injunction
Orly Taitz re: Cook dismissal (video)

Major Stefan Frederick Cook had his day in court today after all. It was the original scheduled hearing and took place despite the fact the Army revoked his deployment order on Tuesday, July 14th. In providing the relief Major Cook sought, the Army took the case right out of the Judge’s hands and covered any doubt regarding their Commander-in-Chief.

With the case moot, it was mere procedure for Judge Clay Land, US District Court Judge for the Middle District of Georgia to dismiss the case.

JUDGE LAND

Federal court only has authority of actual cases and controversies. The entire action is dismissed for lack of subject matter jurisdiction.

And the barry birther haters will say: See – another judge threw out another worthless case!

Yees. Another case dismissed…before it even got started.

That doesn’t mean barry’s been vindicated or Orly Taitz (and the rest of the conspiracist racist birthers) have been proven wrong or that the challenge to barry’s eligibility is not meritorious.

No judge has allowed discovery.

No judge has asked to investigate or have investigated that worthless COLB – which Robert Gibbs officially stated was NOT A BIRTH CERTIFICATE.

No judge has called Dr Fukino to have her clarify her statement – something she volunteered.

No judge has ruled barry is eligible.

No case has gotten that far because no one has standing to compel barry to prove he is eligible.

He has known that from the very beginning.

It’s what he counted on and it’s why he will never voluntarily produce a single document.

And that’s why Quo Warranto exists.

The “actual cases and controversies” and “lack of subject matter jurisdiction” Judge Land speaks of will be taken as the birth certificate issue is not meritorious — instead of the simple fact that the case was made moot by the Army’s revocation.

The question is why?

Because Major Cook volunteered and as such could change his mind and ask for a revocation up to the day of deployment?

Or because they were so ordered by their Commander-in-Chief?

***

There’s no official paperwork on Scribd as yet – but I imagine that Maj Gen Childers and Lt. Col Graef were ruled against for lack of standing.
SOURCE: Ledger-Enquirer’s LILY GORDON

Sean Hannity re: Major Cook (video)

July 16, 2009

July 15, 2009

Updated list of birth certificate posts
Major Cook’s active duty revocation order
Taitz: Application for Injunction (Major Cook)
Major Cook’s plaintiff verification re: Injunction
Cook v Good dismissed

Sean Hannity mentioning Major Cook and barry’s birth certificate issue.

Mr Pinella goes to Washington, meets barry

July 16, 2009

July 16, 2009

Cubs started a series with the Washington Nationals tonite and earlier today Cubs’ skipper Lou Pinella toured the White House with his family. barry – a SOXfan – took the time to say hello.

LOU PINELLA:

We didn’t talk about baseball. He was very personal with my grandkids and my wife and children. I was very appreciable.

He’s a class man and he has done a really nice job for our country.

It was an honor to be in his presence and we’re very appreciative that he took a few minutes out of his very, very important day to say hello to us.

UPDATE: More info – from PAUL SULLIVAN

Lou Piniella
(Ron Edmonds/ Associated Press)
Lou has made it to the White House before, meeting Presidents Clinton, Carter and both Bushs and was assisted on this trip by Cubfans George Will, David Axelrod and Rahm Emanuel – probably provoked by the sight of barry’s Sox jacket (and mom jeans). And he’s been around long enough to know it’s not worth the time trying to “convert” a Soxfan, though he did say:

His top advisers are Cubs fans. So he has a chance.

What did they do?

We enjoyed the experience, watched the president leave in his helicopter (pix), viewed the Situation Room, went to the Oval Office, went to the Rose Garden.

As for barry?

He’s a picture of class and tranquility. I can see why he has had the success and is enjoying the success he’s having as Commander in chief of this country.

————–

barry’s first pitch at All Star Game (video)
Willie Mays on Air Force One (video)

Taitz: Application for TRO for Major Cook

July 16, 2009

July 14, 2009

Updated list of birth certificate posts
Major Cook’s active duty revocation order
Taitz: Application for Injunction (Major Cook)
Major Cook’s plaintiff verification re: Injunction
Cook v Good dismissed
Orly Taitz re: Cook dismissal (video)

Jackie -

Here is the application for the Temporary Restraining Order filed by Orly Taitz on behalf of Major Stephan Frederick Cook, who is fighting his deployment to Afghanistan on the basis that barry has not shown proof of his eligibility to hold the office of the presidency and hence Commander-in-Chief. Same argument – Cook would be risking his oath to uphold the Constitution above all else – including the President.

Click top right for full screen. Easy to read.

====================-

View this document on Scribd

Gibbs re: Secretary Clinton’s Foreign Policy Address

July 16, 2009

July 15, 2009

Secretary Clinton’s Foreign Policy Address, Council on Foreign Relations (video/text)
Secretary Clinton’s Foreign Policy Address re: Iran
Secretary Clinton’s thoughts on first 6 months at State

Last question taken by Gibbs in his press briefing concerned Secretary Clinton’s speech and her relationship with barry. He did not even refer to Clinton by name and pretended he didn’t see any of the speech himself.

MR. GIBBS: Christina. I’ll take one more.

Q What does the President think of the Secretary of State’s speech today? I know that the timing was about the same time he was talking, but did he see it? And what does he think of some reports that suggest that their relationship isn’t as great as some people would –

MR. GIBBS: I don’t know if they discussed that today in their meeting. But this story has been tried to be written for probably years now. They enjoy a very close relationship. I think the Secretary of State is somebody who the President relies on greatly.

She has an enormously important role in the development of and the execution of a foreign policy that changes our image in the world, some of which we’ve talked about here with the State Department’s Public Diplomacy outfit.

I think the notion that there’s some rift or disagreement is nothing more than silly Washington games.

The President — he was doing interviews during part of the speech, but I know that staff here saw the speech before it was given, and the Secretary of State outlined very forcefully the concept for a framework of changing our foreign policy in the world.

Secretary Clinton’s thoughts on first 6 months at State

July 16, 2009

July 15, 2009

Secretary Clinton’s Foreign Policy Address, Council on Foreign Relations (video/text)
Secretary Clinton’s Foreign Policy Address re: Iran
Gibbs re: Secretary Clinton’s Foreign Policy Address

Secretary Clinton was asked at the end of her  Foreign Policy Address Q & A what she thought of her first 6 months.

RICHARD HAAS: So after six months, what has most struck you about this? Here you are; what’s surprised you the most?

SECRETARY CLINTON:

Well, I’m really impressed by the quality of the people I work with at both the State Department and USAID, just the level of passion and intense commitment, the willingness to work long and all hours; you know that from your own experience. The excitement of being part of the new Administration, which has meant so much to so many people around the world and has certainly caused people to rethink who we are as Americans and maybe give us a break, cut us some slack as we get organized and get going.

I still think it’s hard to justify not having our full government in place six months after we started. That’s something that we’ve got to do something about, I think. (Applause.)

I mean, we are trying to get our political leaders in place to work with our very dedicated Foreign Service and Civil Service employees, but we’re still not there yet. And I had no idea when I was in the Senate asking a million questions of every nominee – (laughter) – how really shortsighted that was. (Laughter.)

It’s amazing; the other thing I didn’t realize is that when all else failed, if there was a problem that had a foreign policy implication, write a letter when you’re in the Congress – Ellen Tauscher, who is our new Under Secretary for Arms Control and Nonproliferation – so I probably, in my eight years, wrote hundreds of letters, and now I have to read them. (Laughter.) And it just depends upon which side of the table you’re sitting.

But it’s been a real privilege and an honor, and I think we’re making a difference, and obviously, we’re going to work as hard as we can to translate that into the results that the American people deserve.

Secretary Clinton’s Foreign Policy Address re: Iran

July 16, 2009

July 15, 2009

Secretary Clinton’s Foreign Policy Address, Council on Foreign Relations (video/text)
Gibbs re: Secretary Clinton’s Foreign Policy Address
Secretary Clinton’s thoughts on first 6 months at State

Secretary Clinton’s Foreign Policy Address at the Council on Foreign Relations – selected quotes on Iran excerpted as well as the pertinent Q & A.


(Speech ends 36:45 – then the Q & A)

SECRETARY CLINTON:

And to these foes and would-be foes, let me say our focus on diplomacy and development is not an alternative to our national security arsenal. Our willingness to talk is not a sign of weakness to be exploited. We will not hesitate to defend our friends, our interests, and above all, our people vigorously and when necessary with the world’s strongest military. This is not an option we seek nor is it a threat; it is a promise to all Americans.

SPECIFIC REMARKS ON IRAN

Appalled by Iranian government’s post election crackdown, G8 partners also appalled, diplomacy may solve nothing, direct talks up to them, they can choose to join in or remain isolated, and that they have no right to military nuclear capacity but can possibly have civil if they follow regulations.

Main message: The time is now, Iran’s behavior after the elections shifted things and the “opportunity will not remain open indefinitely”.

SECRETARY CLINTON:

We watched the energy of Iran’s election with great admiration, only to be appalled by the manner in which the government used violence to quell the voices of the Iranian people, and then tried to hide its actions by arresting foreign journalists and nationals, and expelling them, and cutting off access to technology.

As we and our G-8 partners have made clear, these actions are deplorable and unacceptable.

We know very well what we inherited with Iran, because we deal with that inheritance every day. We know that refusing to deal with the Islamic Republic has not succeeded in altering the Iranian march toward a nuclear weapon, reducing Iranian support for terror, or improving Iran’s treatment of its citizens.

Neither the President nor I have any illusions that dialogue with the Islamic Republic will guarantee success of any kind, and the prospects have certainly shifted in the weeks following the election. But we also understand the importance of offering to engage Iran and giving its leaders a clear choice: whether to join the international community as a responsible member or to continue down a path to further isolation.

Direct talks provide the best vehicle for presenting and explaining that choice. That is why we offered Iran’s leaders an unmistakable opportunity: Iran does not have a right to nuclear military capacity, and we’re determined to prevent that. But it does have a right to civil nuclear power if it reestablishes the confidence of the international community that it will use its programs exclusively for peaceful purposes.

Iran can become a constructive actor in the region if it stops threatening its neighbors and supporting terrorism. It can assume a responsible position in the international community if it fulfills its obligations on human rights. The choice is clear. We remain ready to engage with Iran, but the time for action is now. The opportunity will not remain open indefinitely.

QUESTION: Trudy Rubin, the Philadelphia Inquirer.

SECRETARY CLINTON: How are you, Trudy?

QUESTION: Madame Secretary, I wonder if you could elaborate a little on the Administration’s willingness to engage with Iran at this point? First, could you tell us has there been any response from Ayatollah Khamenei or the Iranian Government to the letter that was sent in May? And if the Iranians should show interest in engagement, what if they stonewall? How long could this go on if there was absolutely no give? And finally, could you clarify, after Vice President’s Biden’s remarks, has there been any green, yellow, or red light given to Israel about an attack on Iran?

SECRETARY CLINTON:

Well, those are three easy questions, Trudy. (Laughter.)

With respect to Iran, I’m going to stay within the boundaries of what I said in my speech. We are well aware that the situation after the election puts a different complexion on both the Iranian Government – we really don’t know what their intentions might be at this point in time. We’re very troubled by the repressive actions that they took in the aftermath of their elections, as well as what are most likely a certain amount of electoral irregularities.

But as I said, we have no path that has opened up right now. But we have made it clear that there is a choice for the Iranian Government to make. And we will wait to see how they decide, whether that choice is worth pursuing. If they were to choose to pursue it, we’ve made it very clear that this is not an open-ended engagement. This is not a door that stays open no matter what happens. And I think that until there is some decision on their part, we really won’t know what to expect.

With respect to the Vice President’s remarks, I think that the President and the White House clarified those the next day.

QUESTION: Bob Lieber, Georgetown.

After the easy questions, let me ask you one a tad more challenging. The previous presidents, from Jimmy Carter through Ronald Reagan through Bill Clinton, have sought to reach out to Iran and been rebuffed. Frankly, every president has had that experience. Iran, for 20 years, has been cheating on its obligations under various treaties. If Iran fails to respond positively to these initiatives, and if our friends and allies and others, including Russia and China, are unprepared to countenance really significant sanctions, what happens then? President Obama, either during the campaign or shortly after, said that the U.S. would not be willing to see Iran with a nuclear weapon.

And therefore, I have to ask the question: If these other efforts don’t work, is the Administration prepared to live with a nuclear Iran or not?

SECRETARY CLINTON:

Well, as I said in my speech, as you rightly quoted the president, we have consistently stated that we do not accept a nuclear-armed Iran. We think it is a great threat to the region and beyond.

But as you might guess, I’m not going to negotiate with Iran sitting here. And in most negotiations I’ve ever been a part of, either as a lawyer or as a senator or in any other capacity, I think if you have a clear set of objectives and you begin the process, you have a better idea of what might or might not be possible. We have no illusions about this. I believe, though, that the absence of the United States for much of the last eight years in these negotiations was a mistake. I think we outsourced our policy to Iran and, frankly, it didn’t work very well. That’s how I see it. I want to be in the middle of it, to be able to make our own judgments, to figure out what we know and don’t know, and then to be in a stronger position with respect to other nations.

I think part of the attractiveness of engagement, direct engagement, is not only to make our own judgments, but also to demonstrate to others that we’ve done so, and to make clear what kind of reaction we’ve gotten, which I think lays the groundwork for concerted action. And certainly, in just the last six months in our efforts in talking with other partners, I’ve noticed a turn in attitude by some, a recognition that it’s not just the United States that should be concerned about what Iran is doing, but that there are implications for others who are much closer than we are to Iran.

So I think that, as I said in the speech, our policy is one that we believe makes the most sense for our interests, and we intend to pursue it but we obviously have exits along the way depending upon the consequences of the discussions.

Secretary Clinton’s Foreign Policy Address, Council on Foreign Relations (video/text)

July 16, 2009

July 15, 2009

Secretary Clinton’s Foreign Policy Address re: Iran
Gibbs re: Secretary Clinton’s Foreign Policy Address
Secretary Clinton’s thoughts on first 6 months at State

Links: Official State Dept text, Q & A session text and video of Secretary Clinton’s Foreign Policy Address at the Council on Foreign Relations.

It was a pleasure watching someone who can deliver a speech while demonstrating command of what she is speaking about and then take unscripted open questions and answer them specifically.

In her speech, Secretary Clinton emphasizes the role of diplomacy and “smart power”, the need to strengthen traditional ally relationships, the need to build more through economic development, the need for each country to do their part – especially Europe with respect to Iran, the need to ensure women’s rights and freedoms, and the hope that more people everywhere will be allowed to reach their God-given potential.

Main problem: dealing with everything at once.

Foreign policy goals:

  • Reverse the spread of nuclear weapons, prevent their use, and build a world free of their threat.
  • Isolate and defeat terrorists and counter violent extremists while reaching out to Muslims around the world.
  • Encourage and facilitate the efforts of all parties to pursue and achieve a comprehensive peace in the Middle East.
  • Seek global economic recovery and growth by strengthening our own economy, advancing a robust development agenda, expanding trade that is free and fair, and boosting investment that creates decent jobs.
  • Combat climate change, increase energy security, and lay the foundation for a prosperous clean-energy future.
  • Support and encourage democratic governments that protect the rights and deliver results for their people.
  • Stand up for human rights everywhere.

Smart power – five approaches to accomplish it:

  1. Update and create vehicles for cooperation with our partners;
  2. Pursue principled engagement with those who disagree with us;
  3. Elevate development as a core pillar of American power;
  4. Integrate civilian and military action in conflict areas;
  5. Leverage key sources of American power, including our economic strength and the power of our example.

————————————-

————————–

TEXT unchanged but the spacing was altered and emphasis added to make it more readable (at least for me).

SECRETARY OF STATE HILLARY CLINTON:

Thank you very much, Richard, and I am delighted to be here in these new headquarters. I have been often to, I guess, the mother ship in New York City, but it’s good to have an outpost of the Council right here down the street from the State Department. We get a lot of advice from the Council, so this will mean I won’t have as far to go to be told what we should be doing and how we should think about the future.

Richard just gave what could be described as a mini version of my remarks in talking about the issues that confront us. But I look out at this audience filled with not only many friends and colleagues, but people who have served in prior administrations. And so there is never a time when the in-box is not full.

Shortly before I started at the State Department, a former Secretary of State called me with this advice: Don’t try to do too much.

And it seemed like a wise admonition, if only it were possible. But the international agenda today is unforgiving: two wars, conflict in the Middle East, ongoing threats of violent extremism and nuclear proliferation, global recession, climate change, hunger and disease, and a widening gap between the rich and the poor. All of these challenges affect America’s security and prosperity, and they all threaten global stability and progress.

But they are not reason to despair about the future. The same forces that compound our problems – economic interdependence, open borders, and the speedy movement of information, capital, goods, services and people – are also part of the solution. And with more states facing common challenges, we have the chance, and a profound responsibility, to exercise American leadership to solve problems in concert with others. That is the heart of America’s mission in the world today.

Now, some see the rise of other nations and our economic troubles here at home as signs that American power has waned. Others simply don’t trust us to lead; they view America as an unaccountable power, too quick to impose its will at the expense of their interests and our principles. But they are wrong.

The question is not whether our nation can or should lead, but how it will lead in the 21st century. Rigid ideologies and old formulas don’t apply. We need a new mindset about how America will use its power to safeguard our nation, expand shared prosperity, and help more people in more places live up to their God-given potential.

President Obama has led us to think outside the usual boundaries. He has launched a new era of engagement based on common interests, shared values, and mutual respect. Going forward, capitalizing on America’s unique strengths, we must advance those interests through partnership, and promote universal values through the power of our example and the empowerment of people. In this way, we can forge the global consensus required to defeat the threats, manage the dangers, and seize the opportunities of the 21st century. America will always be a world leader as long as we remain true to our ideals and embrace strategies that match the times. So we will exercise American leadership to build partnerships and solve problems that no nation can solve on its own, and we will pursue policies to mobilize more partners and deliver results.

First, though, let me say that while the ideas that shape our foreign policy are critically important, this, for me, is not simply an intellectual exercise. For over 16 years, I’ve had the chance, the privilege, really, to represent our country overseas as First Lady, as a senator, and now as Secretary of State. I’ve seen the bellies of starving children, girls sold into human trafficking, men dying of treatable diseases, women denied the right to own property or vote, and young people without schooling or jobs gripped by a sense of futility about their futures.

I’ve also seen how hope, hard work, and ingenuity can overcome the longest of odds. And for almost 36 years, I have worked as an advocate for children, women and families here at home. I’ve traveled across our country listening to everyday concerns of our citizens. I’ve met parents struggling to keep their jobs, pay their mortgages, cover their children’s college tuitions, and afford healthcare.

And all that I have done and seen has convinced me that our foreign policy must produce results for people – the laid-off auto worker in Detroit whose future will depend on global economic recovery; the farmer or small business owner in the developing world whose lack of opportunity can drive political instability and economic stagnation; the families whose loved ones are risking their lives for our country in Iraq and Afghanistan and elsewhere; children in every land who deserve a brighter future.

These are the people – hundreds of millions of them here in America and billions around the world – whose lives and experiences, hopes and dreams, must inform the decisions we take and the actions that follow. And these are the people who inspire me and my colleagues and the work that we try to do every day.

In approaching our foreign policy priorities, we have to deal with the urgent, the important, and the long-term all at once. But even as we are forced to multi-task – a very gender-related term (laughter) – we must have priorities, which President Obama has outlined in speeches from Prague to Cairo, from Moscow to Accra.

  • We want to reverse the spread of nuclear weapons, prevent their use, and build a world free of their threat.
  • We want to isolate and defeat terrorists and counter violent extremists while reaching out to Muslims around the world.
  • We want to encourage and facilitate the efforts of all parties to pursue and achieve a comprehensive peace in the Middle East.
  • We want to seek global economic recovery and growth by strengthening our own economy, advancing a robust development agenda, expanding trade that is free and fair, and boosting investment that creates decent jobs.
  • We want to combat climate change, increase energy security, and lay the foundation for a prosperous clean-energy future.
  • We want to support and encourage democratic governments that protect the rights and deliver results for their people.
  • And we intend to stand up for human rights everywhere.

Liberty, democracy, justice and opportunity underlie our priorities. Some accuse us of using these ideals to justify actions that contradict their very meaning. Others say we are too often condescending and imperialistic, seeking only to expand our power at the expense of others. And yes, these perceptions have fed anti-Americanism, but they do not reflect who we are. No doubt we lost some ground in recent years, but the damage is temporary. It’s kind of like my elbow – it’s getting better every day. (Laughter.)

Whether in Latin America or Lebanon, Iran or Liberia, those who are inspired by democracy, who understand that democracy is about more than just elections – that it must also protect minority rights and press freedom, develop strong, competent and independent judiciaries, legislatures and executive agencies, and commit for democracy to deliver results – these are the people who will find that Americans are their friends, not adversaries. As President Obama made clear last week in Ghana, this Administration will stand for accountable and transparent governance, and support those who work to build democratic institutions wherever they live.

Our approach to foreign policy must reflect the world as it is, not as it used to be. It does not make sense to adapt a 19th century concert of powers, or a 20th century balance of power strategy. We cannot go back to Cold War containment or to unilateralism.

Today, we must acknowledge two inescapable facts that define our world:

  • First, no nation can meet the world’s challenges alone. The issues are too complex. Too many players are competing for influence, from rising powers to corporations to criminal cartels; from NGOs to al-Qaida; from state-controlled media to individuals using Twitter.
  • Second, most nations worry about the same global threats, from non-proliferation to fighting disease to counter-terrorism, but also face very real obstacles – for reasons of history, geography, ideology, and inertia. They face these obstacles and they stand in the way of turning commonality of interest into common action.

So these two facts demand a different global architecture – one in which states have clear incentives to cooperate and live up to their responsibilities, as well as strong disincentives to sit on the sidelines or sow discord and division.

So we will exercise American leadership to overcome what foreign policy experts at places like the Council call “collective action problems” and what I call obstacles to cooperation. For just as no nation can meet these challenges alone, no challenge can be met without America.

And here’s how we’ll do it:

  • We’ll work through existing institutions and reform them. But we’ll go further.
  • We’ll use our power to convene, our ability to connect countries around the world, and sound foreign policy strategies to create partnerships aimed at solving problems.
  • We’ll go beyond states to create opportunities for non-state actors and individuals to contribute to solutions.

We believe this approach will advance our interests by uniting diverse partners around common concerns. It will make it more difficult for others to abdicate their responsibilities or abuse their power, but will offer a place at the table to any nation, group, or citizen willing to shoulder a fair share of the burden. In short, we will lead by inducing greater cooperation among a greater number of actors and reducing competition, tilting the balance away from a multi-polar world and toward a multi-partner world.

Now, we know this approach is not a panacea. We will remain clear-eyed about our purpose. Not everybody in the world wishes us well or shares our values and interests. And some will actively seek to undermine our efforts. In those cases, our partnerships can become power coalitions to constrain or deter those negative actions.

[Talk is fine but won't hesitate to use military force when necessary to defend the US and allies.]

And to these foes and would-be foes, let me say our focus on diplomacy and development is not an alternative to our national security arsenal. Our willingness to talk is not a sign of weakness to be exploited. We will not hesitate to defend our friends, our interests, and above all, our people vigorously and when necessary with the world’s strongest military. This is not an option we seek nor is it a threat; it is a promise to all Americans.

Building the architecture of global cooperation requires us to devise the right policies and use the right tools. I speak often of smart power because it is so central to our thinking and our decision-making.

  • It means the intelligent use of all means at our disposal, including our ability to convene and connect.
  • It means our economic and military strength; our capacity for entrepreneurship and innovation; and the ability and credibility of our new President and his team.
  • It also means the application of old-fashioned common sense in policymaking.

It’s a blend of principle and pragmatism.

Smart power translates into specific policy approaches in five areas.

  1. First, we intend to update and create vehicles for cooperation with our partners;
  2. second, we will pursue principled engagement with those who disagree with us;
  3. third, we will elevate development as a core pillar of American power;
  4. fourth, we will integrate civilian and military action in conflict areas;
  5. and fifth, we will leverage key sources of American power, including our economic strength and the power of our example.

Our first approach is to build these stronger mechanisms of cooperation with our historic allies, with emerging powers, and with multilateral institutions, and to pursue that cooperation in, as I said, a pragmatic and principled way. We don’t see those as in opposition, but as complementary.

We have started by reinvigorating our bedrock alliances, which did fray in recent years. In Europe, that means improved bilateral relationships, a more productive partnership with the European Union, and a revitalized NATO. I believe NATO is the greatest alliance in history. But it was built for the Cold War. The new NATO is a democratic community of nearly a billion people stretching from the Baltics in the East to Alaska in the West. We’re working to update its strategic concept so that it is as effective in this century as it was in the last.

At the same time, we are working with our key treaty allies Japan and Korea, Australia, Thailand, and the Philippines and other partners to strengthen our bilateral relationships as well as trans-Pacific institutions. We are both a trans-Atlantic and a trans-Pacific nation.

We will also put special emphasis on encouraging major and emerging global powers – China, India, Russia and Brazil, as well as Turkey, Indonesia, and South Africa – to be full partners in tackling the global agenda. I want to underscore the importance of this task, and my personal commitment to it. These states are vital to achieving solutions to the shared problems and advancing our priorities – nonproliferation, counterterrorism, economic growth, climate change, among others. With these states, we will stand firm on our principles even as we seek common ground.

This week, I will travel to India, where External Affairs Minister Krishna and I will lay out a broad-based agenda that calls for a whole-of-government approach to our bilateral relationship. Later this month, Secretary Geithner and I will jointly lead our new strategic and economic dialogue with China. It will cover not just economic issues, but the range of strategic challenges we face together. In the fall, I will travel to Russia to advance the bi-national presidential commission that Foreign Minister Lavrov and I will co-chair.

The fact of these and other meetings does not guarantee results, but they set in motion processes and relationships that will widen our avenues of cooperation and narrow the areas of disagreement without illusion. We know that progress will not likely come quickly, or without bumps in the road, but we are determined to begin and stay on this path.

Now our global and regional institutions were built for a world that has been transformed, so they too must be transformed and reformed. As the President said following the recent G-8 meeting in Italy, we are seeking institutions that “combine the efficiency and capacity for action with inclusiveness.” From the UN to the World Bank, from the IMF to the G-8 and the G-20, from the OAS and the Summit of the Americas to ASEAN and APEC – all of these and other institutions have a role to play, but their continued vitality and relevance depend on their legitimacy and representativeness, and the ability of their members to act swiftly and responsibly when problems arise.

We also will reach out beyond governments, because we believe partnerships with people play a critical role in our 21st century statecraft. President Obama’s Cairo speech is a powerful example of communicating directly with people from the bottom up. And we are following up with a comprehensive agenda of educational exchanges, outreach, and entrepreneurial ventures. In every country I visit, I look for opportunities to bolster civil society and engage with citizens, whether at a town hall in Baghdad – a first in that country; or appearing on local popular television shows that reach a wide and young audience; or meeting with democracy activists, war widows, or students. [Always women and young people]

I have appointed special envoys to focus on a number of specific challenges, including the first Ambassador for Global Women’s Issuesmost innovative technologies not only to speak and listen across borders, not only to keep technologies up and going, but to widen opportunities especially for those who are too often left on the margins. We’re taking these steps because reaching out directly to people will encourage them to embrace cooperation with us, making our partnerships with their governments and with them stronger and more durable. and an ambassador to build new public-private partnerships and to engage Diaspora communities in the United States to increase opportunities in their native lands. And we are working at the State Department to ensure that our government is using the

We’ve also begun to adopt a more flexible and pragmatic posture with our partners. We won’t agree on every issue. Standing firm on our principles shouldn’t prevent us from working together where we can. So we will not tell our partners to take it or leave it, nor will we insist that they’re either with us or against us. In today’s world, that’s global malpractice.

Our diplomacy regarding North Korea is a case in point. We have invested a significant amount of diplomatic resources to achieve Security Council consensus in response to North Korea’s provocative actions. I spoke numerous times to my counterparts in Japan, South Korea, Russia and China, drawing out their concerns, making our principles and redlines clear, and seeking a path forward. The short-term results were two unanimous Security Council resolutions with real teeth and consequences for North Korea, and then the follow-on active involvement of China, Russia, and India with us in persuading others to comply with the resolutions. The long-term result, we believe, will be a tougher joint effort toward the complete and verifiable denuclearization of the Korean Peninsula.

Cultivating these partnerships and their full range takes time and patience. It also takes persistence. That doesn’t mean procrastinating on urgent issues. Nor is it a justification for delaying efforts that may take years to bear fruit. In one of my favorite observations, Max Weber said, “Politics is the long and slow boring of hard boards. It takes both passion and perspective.” Perspective dictates passion and patience. And of course, passion keeps us from not finding excuses to do nothing.

Now I’m well aware that time alone does not heal all wounds; consider the Palestinian-Israeli conflict. That’s why we wasted no time in starting an intensive effort on day one to realize the rights of Palestinians and Israelis to live in peace and security in two states, which is in America’s interests and the world’s. We’ve been working with the Israelis to deal with the issue of settlements, to ease the living conditions of Palestinians, and create circumstances that can lead to the establishment of a viable Palestinian state. For the last few decades, American administrations have held consistent positions on the settlement issue.

And while we expect action from Israel, we recognize that these decisions are politically challenging.

And we know that progress toward peace cannot be the responsibility of the United States – or Israel – alone. Ending the conflict requires action on all sides. The Palestinians have the responsibility to improve and extend the positive actions already taken on security; to act forcefully against incitement; and to refrain from any action that would make meaningful negotiations less likely.

And Arab states have a responsibility to support the Palestinian Authority with words and deeds, to take steps to improve relations with Israel, and to prepare their publics to embrace peace and accept Israel’s place in the region. The Saudi peace proposal, supported by more than twenty nations, was a positive step. But we believe that more is needed. So we are asking those who embrace the proposal to take meaningful steps now. Anwar Sadat and King Hussein crossed important thresholds, and their boldness and vision mobilized peace constituencies in Israel and paved the way for lasting agreements. By providing support to the Palestinians and offering an opening, however modest, to the Israelis, the Arab states could have the same impact. So I say to all sides: Sending messages of peace is not enough. You must also act against the cultures of hate, intolerance and disrespect that perpetuate conflict.

Our second policy approach is to lead with diplomacy, even in the cases of adversaries or nations with whom we disagree. We believe that doing so advances our interests and puts us in a better position to lead with our other partners. We cannot be afraid or unwilling to engage. Yet some suggest that this is a sign of naiveté or acquiescence to these countries’ repression of their own people. I believe that is wrong. As long as engagement might advance our interests and our values, it is unwise to take it off the table. Negotiations can provide insight into regimes’ calculations and the possibility – even if it seems remote – that a regime will eventually alter its behavior in exchange for the benefits of acceptance into the international community. Libya is one such example. Exhausting the option for dialogue is also more likely to make our partners more willing to exert pressure should persuasion fail.

With this in mind, I want to say a few words about Iran.

We watched the energy of Iran’s election with great admiration, only to be appalled by the manner in which the government used violence to quell the voices of the Iranian people, and then tried to hide its actions by arresting foreign journalists and nationals, and expelling them, and cutting off access to technology.

As we and our G-8 partners have made clear, these actions are deplorable and unacceptable.

We know very well what we inherited with Iran, because we deal with that inheritance every day. We know that refusing to deal with the Islamic Republic has not succeeded in altering the Iranian march toward a nuclear weapon, reducing Iranian support for terror, or improving Iran’s treatment of its citizens.

Neither the President nor I have any illusions that dialogue with the Islamic Republic will guarantee success of any kind, and the prospects have certainly shifted in the weeks following the election. But we also understand the importance of offering to engage Iran and giving its leaders a clear choice: whether to join the international community as a responsible member or to continue down a path to further isolation.

Direct talks provide the best vehicle for presenting and explaining that choice. That is why we offered Iran’s leaders an unmistakable opportunity: Iran does not have a right to nuclear military capacity, and we’re determined to prevent that. But it does have a right to civil nuclear power if it reestablishes the confidence of the international community that it will use its programs exclusively for peaceful purposes.

Iran can become a constructive actor in the region if it stops threatening its neighbors and supporting terrorism. It can assume a responsible position in the international community if it fulfills its obligations on human rights. The choice is clear. We remain ready to engage with Iran, but the time for action is now. The opportunity will not remain open indefinitely.

Our third policy approach, and a personal priority for me as Secretary, is to elevate and integrate development as a core pillar of American power. We advance our security, our prosperity, and our values by improving the material conditions of people’s lives around the world. These efforts also lay the groundwork for greater global cooperation, by building the capacity of new partners and tackling shared problems from the ground up.

A central purpose of the Quadrennial Diplomacy and Development Review that I announced last week is to explore how to effectively design, fund, and implement development and foreign assistance as part of a broader foreign policy. Let’s face it. We have devoted a smaller percentage of our government budget to development than almost any other advanced country. And too little of what we have spent has contributed to genuine and lasting progress. Too much of the money has never reached its intended target, but stayed here in America to pay salaries or fund overhead in contracts. I am committed to more partnerships with NGOs, but I want more of our tax dollars to be used effectively and to deliver tangible results.

As we seek more agile, effective, and creative partnerships for development, we will focus on country-driven solutions, such as those we are launching with Haiti on recovery and sustainable development, and with African states on global hunger. These initiatives must not be designed to help countries scrape by – they are a tool to help countries stand on their own.

Our development agenda will also focus on women as drivers of economic growth and social stability. Women have long comprised the majority of the world’s unhealthy, unschooled, and underfed. They are also the bulk of the world’s poor. The global recession has had a disproportionate effect on women and girls, which in turn has repercussions for families, communities, and even regions.

Until women around the world are accorded their rights – and afforded the opportunities of education, health care, and gainful employment – global progress and prosperity will have its own glass ceiling.

Our fourth approach is to ensure that our civilian and military efforts operate in a coordinated and complementary fashion where we are engaged in conflict. This is the core of our strategy in Afghanistan and Iraq, where we are integrating our efforts with international partners.

In Afghanistan and Pakistan, our goal is to disrupt, dismantle, and ultimately defeat al-Qaida and its extremist allies, and to prevent their return to either country. Yet Americans often ask, why do we ask our young men and women to risk their lives in Afghanistan when al-Qaida’s leadership is in neighboring Pakistan? And that question deserves a good answer: We and our allies fight in Afghanistan because the Taliban protects al-Qaida and depends on it for support, sometimes coordinating activities. In other words, to eliminate al-Qaida, we must also fight the Taliban.

Now, we understand that not all those who fight with the Taliban support al-Qaida, or believe in the extremist policies the Taliban pursued when in power. And today we and our Afghan allies stand ready to welcome anyone supporting the Taliban who renounces al-Qaida, lays down their arms, and is willing to participate in the free and open society that is enshrined in the Afghan Constitution.

To achieve our goals, President Obama is sending an additional 17,000 troops and 4,000 military trainers to Afghanistan. Equally important, we are sending hundreds of direct hire American civilians to lead a new effort to strengthen the Afghan Government, help rebuild the once-vibrant agricultural sector, create jobs, encourage the rule of law, expand opportunities for women, and train the Afghan police. No one should doubt our commitment to Afghanistan and its people. But it is the Afghan people themselves who will determine their own future.

As we proceed, we must not forget that success in Afghanistan also requires close cooperation from neighboring Pakistan, which I will visit this fall. Pakistan is itself under intense pressure from extremist groups. Trilateral cooperation among Afghanistan, Pakistan, and the United States has built confidence and yielded progress on a number of policy fronts. Our national security, as well as the future of Afghanistan, depends on a stable, democratic, and economically viable Pakistan. And we applaud the new Pakistani determination to deal with the militants who threaten their democracy and our shared security.

In Iraq, we are bolstering our diplomacy and development programs while we implement a responsible withdrawal of our troops. Last month our combat troops successfully redeployed from towns and cities. Our principal focus is now shifting from security issues to civilian efforts that promote Iraqi capacity – supporting the work of the Iraqi ministries and aiding in their efforts to achieve national unity. And we are developing a long-term economic and political relationship with Iraq as outlined by the US-Iraq Strategic Framework Agreement. This Agreement forms the basis of our future cooperation with Iraq and the Iraqi people, and I look forward to discussing it and its implementation with Prime Minister Maliki when he comes to Washington next week.

Our fifth approach is to shore up traditional sources of our influence, including economic strength and the power of our example. We renewed our own values by prohibiting torture and beginning to close the Guantanamo Bay detention facility. And we have been straightforward about our own measure of responsibility for problems like drug trafficking in Mexico and global climate change. When I acknowledged the obvious about our role in Mexico’s current conflict with narco-traffickers, some were critical. But they’re missing the point. Our capacity to take responsibility, and our willingness to change, to do the right thing, are themselves hallmarks of our greatness as a nation and strategic assets that can help us forge coalitions in the service of our interests.

That is certainly true when it comes to key priorities like nonproliferation and climate change. President Obama is committed to the vision of a world without nuclear weapons and a series of concrete steps to reduce the threat and spread of these weapons, including working with the Senate to ratify the follow-on START agreement and the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty, taking on greater responsibility within the Non Proliferation Treaty Framework and convening the world’s leaders here in Washington next year for a nuclear summit. Now we must urge others to take practical steps to advance our shared nonproliferation agenda.

Our Administration is also committed to deep reductions in greenhouse gas emissions, with a plan that will dramatically change the way we produce, consume and conserve energy, and in the process spark an explosion of new investment, and millions of jobs. Now we must urge every other nation to meet its obligations and seize the opportunities of a clean energy future.

We are restoring our economy at home to enhance our strength and capacity abroad, especially at this time of economic turmoil. Now, this is not a traditional priority for a Secretary of State, but I vigorously support American recovery and growth as a pillar of our global leadership. And I am committed to restoring a significant role for the State Department within a whole-of-government approach to international economic policy-making. We will work to ensure that our economic statecraft – trade and investment, debt forgiveness, loan guarantees, technical assistance, decent work practices – support our foreign policy objectives. When coupled with a sound development effort, our economic outreach can give us a better form of globalization, reducing the bitter opposition of recent years and lifting millions more out of poverty.

And finally, I am determined to ensure that the men and women of our Foreign and Civil Service have the resources they need to implement our priorities effectively and safely. That’s why I appointed for the first time a Deputy Secretary for Management and Resources. It’s why we worked so hard to secure additional funding for State and USAID. It’s why we have put ourselves on a path to double foreign assistance over the next few years. And it’s why we are implementing a plan to dramatically increase the number of diplomats and development experts.

Just as we would never deny ammunition to American troops headed into battle, we cannot send our civilian personnel into the field underequipped. If we don’t invest in diplomacy and development, we will end up paying a lot more for conflicts and their consequences. As Secretary Gates has said, diplomacy is an indispensable instrument of national security, as it has been since Franklin, Jefferson and Adams won foreign support for Washington’s army.

Now all of this adds up to a very ambitious agenda. But the world does not afford us the luxury of choosing or waiting. As I said at the outset, we must tackle the urgent, the important and the long-term all at once.

We are both witness to and makers of significant change. We cannot and should not be passive observers. We are determined to channel the currents of change toward a world free of violent extremism, nuclear weapons, global warming, poverty, and abuses of human rights, and above all, a world in which more people in more places can live up to their God-given potential.

The architecture of cooperation we seek to build will advance all these goals, using our power not to dominate or divide but to solve problems. It is the architecture of progress for America and all nations.

More than 230 years ago, Thomas Paine said, “We have it within our power to start the world over again.” Today, in a new and very different era, we are called upon to use that power. I believe we have the right strategy, the right priorities, the right policies, we have the right President, and we have the American people, diverse, committed, and open to the future.

Now all we have to do is deliver. Thank you all very much.

(Applause.)

Iraq vets use old uniforms for art

July 16, 2009

July 15, 2009

US Iraq War veterans are using recycled military uniforms to make paper which they then use for art. Interesting process.

Drew Cameron, Project founder – started about 2 years ago..

Karen Zarindast reporting from the BBC

Major Cook’s plaintiff verification re: Injunction

July 15, 2009

July 15, 2009

Updated list of birth certificate posts
Application for TRO
Major Cook’s active duty revocation order
Taitz: Application for Injunction (Major Cook)
Cook v Good dismissed
Orly Taitz re: Cook dismissal (video)

PLAINTIFF’S VERIFICATION

On this 15th day of July, 2009, the undersigned Plaintiff Major Stefan Frederick Cook appeared in person before me and, having been by me duly administered the oath as required by law, and further having been advised that he made all statements under penalty of perjury, he then and there did depose himself and state that he had read the above-and-foregoing Application for Preliminary Injunction to prevent his deployment to Afghanistan under orders of a chain of command headed by Barack Hussein Obama, and that he had personally verified that all the factual statements contained therein.

As required by Rule 65 the same Plaintiff Major Stefan Frederick Cook also stated that Exhibit A is a true and correct copy of his orders of deployment to active duty, requiring him to report to MacDill Airforce Base in Tampa on July 15 and from thence be transferred to Fort Benning, Georgia, and from thence be deployed in Afghanistan.  Exhibits B and C are true and correct copies of the revocation of these orders and e-mail transmittals of the same.  Exhibit D is a true and correct copy of the “Army Values” card Plaintiff carries at all times.

Plaintiff affirmed and acknowledged that he conscientiously objected to serving under orders from the armed forces of the United States on active duty if and as currently headed by Barack Hussein Obama, fearing that the President obtained and held his office under false pretenses and fraudulent statements concerning his constitutional eligibility, personal history, and background, and that Plaintiff would be acting in violation of international law by engaging in military actions outside the United States under this President’s command, and that Plaintiff would thus be simultaneously unable to perform his duties in good conscience and yet be simultaneously subjecting himself to possible prosecution as a war criminal by the faithful execution of these duties.

In conclusion, Plaintiff affirmed and verified that he submitted this Application for Preliminary Injunction solely for the purposes and reasons stated, and not for any fear or reluctance to serve his country in the armed forces, but purely and simply from his complete distrust of the Commander-in-Chief and the constitutional qualifications of this de facto President to lead and serve the army, including but not limited to his legitimate authority and power to establish a de jure chain of command.

This verification and acknowledgement was done and executed on this 15th day of July, 2009, in Tampa, Hillsborough County, Florida.
________________________________

Major Stefan Frederick Cook, U.S. Army

NOTARY’S JURAT

As aforesaid, Plaintiff Stefan Frederick Cook appeared in person before me on July 15, 2009, to acknowledge, execute, sign under oath, and verify the above and foregoing Application for Preliminary Injunction as Required by Rule 65 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure.

I am a notary public, in good standing, authorized and qualified by the State of Florida to administer oaths.
________________________________
Notary Public, State of Florida,
Tampa, Hillsborough County
NOTARIAL SEAL AFFIXED ABOVE
Printed Name of Notary:_______________, address:_________________
My Commission Expires:____________________

CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE

The above-and-foregoing Application for Preliminary Injunction was served by facsimile and/or hand delivery on July 15, 2009, on the following parties:
Colonel Thomas D. MacDonald, Garrison Commander, Fort Benning, Georgia

Colonel Wanda L. Good*, Retired
U. S. Army Human Resources Command-St. Louis
1 Reserve Way St. Louis, MO 63132

Col. Louis B. Wingate,
U. S. Army Human Resources Command-St. Louis
1 Reserve Way, St. Louis, MO 63132 .

Dr. Robert M. Gates, Secretary of Defense, by and through the Pentagon:
1000 Defense Pentagon  Washington, DC 20301-1000
President Barack Hussein Obama,

At

The White House
1600 Pennsylvania Avenue
Washington, D.C. 20500

by and through the Attorney General of the United States, Eric Holder, at

U.S. Department of Justice
950 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW
Washington, DC 20530-0001

and Maxwell Wood, United States Attorney for the Middle District of Georgia, at
U.S. Attorney’s Office 
Gateway Plaza 
300 Mulberry Street, 4th Floor
Macon, Georgia 31201 
Tel: (478) 752-3511

And also at:
Columbus Division  
1246 First Avenue  
SunTrust Building, 3rd Floor  
Columbus, Georgia 31901  
Tel: (706) 649-7700.
________________________________

Attorney Orly Taitz, Esquire,
For the Plaintiff Major Stefan Frederick Cook

Taitz: Application for Injunction (Major Cook)

July 15, 2009

July 15th, 2009

Updated list of birth certificate posts
Application for TRO
Major Cook’s active duty revocation order
Major Cook’s plaintiff verification re: Injunction
Cook v Good dismissed
Orly Taitz re: Cook dismissal (video)

Orly Taitz Application for Injunction on behalf of Major Stefan Frederick Cook, whose deployment orders were revoked on Tuesday the 14th.

Cook received orders mobilizing him to active duty on June 9, 2009. He was  MacDill Air Force Base in Tampa, Fla. on July 15.that he would be deploying to Afghanistan sometime between July 15-18. He filed his original application for TRO on Friday, July 8 and July 10 he took a military leave of absence from his civilian job. He was due to have a hearing on Thursday, July 16th and on Tuesday, July 14th he was told that his orders were revoked and he was no longer being deployed. He also found out he was terminated from his job.

Cook received the orders mobilizing him to active duty on June 9, 2009. According to this document, which accompanies Cook’s July 8 application for a temporary restraining order, he has been ordered to report to MacDill Air Force Base in Tampa, Fla. on July 15.

UPDATE: Found the SCRIBD copy. Much better.

Click top right for full screen easy to read.

==============

View this document on Scribd

======================

Major Cook’s active duty revocation order

July 15, 2009

July 14, 2009

Updated list of birth certificate posts
Application for TRO
Taitz: Application for Injunction (Major Cook)
Major Cook’s plaintiff verification re: Injunction
Cook v Good dismissed
Orly Taitz re: Cook dismissal (video)

Major Stephan Frederick Cook got a strange surprise today when he found out his deployment orders were revoked. No reason given. He was due to have a hearing on Thursday morning. According to Orly Taitz, Maj Cook returned a call to an unknown telephone call and was told that his services were no longer required in Afghanistan and that he need not report for duty. He then received an email revocation order as below and after that found out he was terminated from his civilian job.

June 10 – mobilized to active duty by Colonel Wanda L. Good

July 8 – filed application for TRO on the basis that barry’s not qualified to be Commander in Chief
July 10 – took military leave of absence from civilian job as senior systems engineer and architect at Simtech, Inc.

July 14 – surprise revocation of his deployment orders by Colonel Louis B. Wingate
July 14 – finds out from Simtech CEO Larry Grice that he has been terminated

July 15 – initial date of order to report for duty

July 16 – scheduled date of hearing

======================

Taitz

DEPARTMENT OF THE ARMY
U.S. ARMY HUMAN RESOURCES COMMAND
1 RESERVE WAY
ST. LOUIS, MO 63132-5200

AHRC-PLM-S

14 JUL 2009

ORDERS  A-06-916551R

COOK STEFAN FREDERICK

EAD8
W096AA

THE FOLLOWING ORDER IS REVOKED OR RESCINDED AS SHOWN.

ACTION: REVOKE

Iraqi PM al-Maliki to visit WH

July 15, 2009

July 15, 2009

Iraqi Prime Minister al-Maliki – the guy doing nothing as two shoes flew at President Bush’s head – is coming to the WH, July 22.

From the WH:

President Obama looks forward to welcoming Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki of Iraq to the White House on Wednesday, July 22.  The United States and Iraq enjoy a close relationship and are partners in building a sovereign, stable and self-reliant Iraq through the responsible withdrawal of U.S. forces and the encouragement of new ties in trade, commerce, culture and education.  The President looks forward to consulting with the Prime Minister on a broad agenda of issues of mutual concern.

Octuplets: Nadya thinks house is haunted

July 15, 2009

July 12, 2009

Updated list of octuplet posts

Hi Callie,

Here’s your Nadya update from radaronline.

She thinks her house is haunted by a child ghost because she heard a whisper saying “Mommy” and thinks the “ghost” lives in a room that’s being used only to store toys, which she describes as “unusually cold”.  A nanny heard a noise upstairs and thought she saw a child that was not there. Another nanny said she saw some movement and a “white thing that was moving in the camera” because “it can pick up on orbs”.

Orbs?

And Nadya said a friend, while walking up the stairs, felt something pulling at her pantleg. Her friend perceives it as “something positive” and “that the spirit is looking over us.”

Some quotes:

There are no such things as ghosts, but that really did scare me.

People have told me they hear noises [in that room] late at night.

I never, ever, want to be alone really in this house. I don’t want the children alone, at all, in this house – ever.

This is something you’re not supposed to believe in if you are a believer in God. But it’s something — I’m a little worried about.

But when you’re not scared and you keep praying and you just ask it kindly to leave, politely, and pray, and hopefully that will work.

There have been – we have felt some energy here and I’d like to – it was blessed once – but I’d like to do it again. Just in case.

I want to place, maybe, up to 20 Bibles throughout the house, in different areas of the house and we have this sign: “Bless these Babies”.

Back in reality the Gloria Allred/Paul Petersen hearing is the 27th (if it hasn’t been changed again).

They don’t film the older children anymore so there’s not much reason to follow her. In this case, Allred had good intentions (still does) but it did exactly opposite what she wanted, which was transparency. Her requested investigation penalized Radaronline, who were the ones documenting the abuse with the older kids and the grandmother’s rage. They can’t in all practicality film the kids anymore. Too many rules that cost money to follow and even more if not followed.

Former Gitmo detainee leading attack against Marines in Afghanistan

July 15, 2009

July 10, 2009

According to FOX, a former Guantanamo Bay detainee, Mullah Zakir (aka Abdullah Ghulam Rasoul) is leading the fight against the Marines’ Operation Khanjar in the Helmand province of Afghanistan.  Zakir surrendered in Afghanistan in 2001 – was transferred to Gitmo in 2006 and then was released to Afghan custody 2007. Not sure what the “custody” entails because he was “released” from it in 2008. Shortly thereafter Taliban chief Mullah Omar appointed him as senior military commander.

Why was he released?

They quote an anonymous defense official:

We were under incredible pressure from the world to release detainees at Gitmo. You just don’t know what people are going to do.

He was no worse than anyone else being held at Guantanamo Bay. He was not going to be tried for war crimes so we decided to release him. Either he was not thought to have committed a crime or we didn’t have enough evidence to prosecute him.

The country which agreed to take him promised to take steps to mitigate the threat he posed.

How are they going to do that and what is their incentive?

In March 2009, 37 ex-detainees had returned to fighting the US. Don’t know the more recent numbers.

Updated video: Willie Mays on Air Force One

July 15, 2009

July 14, 2009

barry’s first pitch at All Star Game (video)

Update: Halperin’s video must change everyday because it’s no longer Mr Mays.

Here is the official White House video where Mr Mays discusses his struggles with barry on Air Force One enroute to the All-Star game in St Louis

Here’s the original video from a St Louis news channel KMOV of Mr Mays talking with Gibbs, Chuckie T and other reporters on Air Force One – just in case something happens to this video, which is from Veoh.com‘s ClipSyndicate.

Mays answered some informal questions while signing baseballs. There was a brave Cubfan in SOX territory who said he was also a Willie Mays fan. What baseball fan, no matter the team, isn’t?

Chuckie Todd asked him how Barry was and Mays said who? Chuckie then said Barry Bonds and asked if he was going to play again. Mays said he didn’t know and thought maybe he was in Europe but he hadn’t talked to him in two months.

Asked what he discussed with barry (above) Mays said he met barry for the first time in Chicago on election night and didn’t think he’d ever see the day a man of his race would be president.

I reminded [barry] that I dreamed about this day. Not being on Air Force One. I dreamed about someone my race being President. Not knowing that anyone would. And I reminded him that I cried most of the night in Chicago. I went to bed around 7-8 in the morning.

He smiled.

I was so proud. That tells me that all the things I went through, it was for good things.

I’m just proud of him. He made me proud. I’m proud of him – what he stands for.

Letterman monologue re: Judge Sotomayor

July 15, 2009

July 14, 2009

Letterman – Gov Palin post

The old standby of female politician shrillness isn’t going work with Judge Sotomayor.

So she’s ugly:

Had the place going crazy…right off the bat she opens up with I Dreamed a Dream.

A reference to Britain’s Got Talent’s Susan Boyle.

He smiles and laughs.

And then it’s the pubic hair –

When everyone settled down Clarence Thomas sent over a mojito.

And then a weird video clip with Lindsay Graham.

After watching dave more than a few times since his disgusting Palin daughter “jokes” I don’t get how he is supposed to be funny.

Take away the 6th Grade, ageist and sexist/sexual objectivication of women “jokes” and there’s what?

barry’s 1st pitch at All-Star Game

July 15, 2009

July 14, 2009

Willie Mays on Air Force One (video)

MLB ALL-STAR Game AL won…again…4-3.

barry came out of the dugout and went over to a golf cart where St Louis great Stan Musial was sitting. He took the ball and then jogged out to the mound. His toss was marginally better than his bowling. Albert Pujols stretched forward to catch the pitch before it bounced.

[When FOX interviewed Pujols (not related to barry) he looked like a kid. He looked like the old-timers did. Nice to see someone actually show a love for the game - not just the fame and money - which of course he already has. I hope he is clean.]

barry was wearing his White Sox jacket. Why?

Everyone knows I’m a White Sox fan and my wife thinks I look cute in this jacket. Between those two things – why not?

Not a very good view of the pitch.

cjk002

barry then had to go into the booth like the other presidents. Nobody can beat Ronald Reagan at Wrigley with Harry Caray.

His excuse for his lob:

I did not play organized baseball when I was a kid and so, you know, I think some of these natural moves aren’t so natural to me.

Throwing a baseball? He’s never thrown a baseball or softball around with his girls?

Secret Service come in handy:

We did a little practicing in the Rose Garden. This is as much fun as I’ve had in quite some time.

barry threw out the first pitch when the White Sox played the Angels in the 2005 AL championship series. He took credit for them winning the World Series.

You know, my general strategy the last time I threw a pitch was at the American League Championship Series and I just wanted to keep it high. Now, there was no clock on it, I don’t know how fast it went — but if it exceeded 30 miles per hour, I’d be surprised. But it did clear the plate.

When you’re a senator, they show you no respect so they just hand you the ball. You don’t get a chance to warm up. Here, at least they had me down with Pujols in the batting cage, practicing a little bit.

Ha e to give barry props for shuttling Hall of Famer Willie Mays to the game in Air Force One. It must have been such an experience for Mr Mays. A man who lived segregation even as a Major Leaguer and played with men who came up through the Negro Leagues (Ernie Banks, for one) got to fly with barry.

Here’s Mr Mays answering a few questions on Air Force One. He talks about how he never thought a man “of his race” would be president.

What did he tell barry?

Follow through.

He reassured the press corps about barry:

He’ll be fine. I guarantee it.

Mark Buehrle, who grew up a Cardinal fan and still lives in the area, was the only Sox player. I’m sure they put him in in the third inning so barry could watch. 9 pitches – 7 strikes – 3 batters – 3 outs – including Pujols.

BUEHRLE: [Obama] came in and shook everybody’s hand. He said he was going to wear a White Sox jacket and I thought he was [kidding]. I was real surprised. I looked out and said, ‘Holy cow, he’s actually doing it.’ Everybody around me was giving me a hard time.

Bottom of the fourth barry took off in his motorcade.

MLB Commissioner BUD SELIG:

It’s a big thing. The players will enjoy it. The fans will enjoy it.

But it’s another testament to the meaning of this sport. We are a social institution and whether we want to admit it or not, and for years I don’t think baseball wanted to admit that, we do have enormous social responsibility, and clearly that intrigued the White House and the president.

Source (except Buehrle quote): AP BEN WALKER

Mr Pinella goes to Washington, meets barry

Re: rant of birther hater

July 14, 2009

Another missing post

(more…)

Drew Peterson trial delayed

July 14, 2009

July 14, 2009

The Peterson defense needs more time. Joel Brodsky was worried that if he couldn’t get Drew bail the trial would be expedited. And then there’s the massive amount of discovery he has to wade through: 9,470 investigative reports totaling more that 30K pages, as well as a computer, 127 pieces of physical evidence and hundreds of hours of audiotapes. Last time in court Brodsky asked the judge to make the prosecution give him some hints about when the murder took place and how it was committed.

In court today, Peterson waved his right to a speedy trial, meaning Brodsky could get his extension. The trial was to have started on August 24th – Judge  Stephen White has not yet set a new one.

Will County Prosecutor John Connor didn’t object to the delay.

Prosecutors will give Peterson back the titles of his motorcyle and a lightweight aircraft so he can fund his defense.

Next court date: August 14th.

Peterson defense plans to ask for change of venue and plans to challenge the constitutionality of the so-called Drew Peterson Law that would allow Kathleen Savio’s own words to be used as evidence in the case.

No word in this report what Peterson looked like or who was in attendance as far as the Savio family.

Source: Chicago’s Breaking NewsKIM JANSSEN

UPDATED: Gibbs, official WH record: “I know” [COLB is not birth certificate]

July 14, 2009

July 13, 2009

UPDATED: 7-19

Birth certificate posts
Gibbs: barry’s “birth certificate” is on the internet

Congratulations, again, Mr Kingsolving. Though I must ask: Why the long delay in asking?

Lester Kingsolving of WND asked Gibbs about the recent development with Kapi’olani Medical Center letter how–after 6 months–it suddenly disappeared.

That didn’t get posted yet because I noticed a couple of problems on my own when I checked links for the last post Another anti-birther attack. They’ve gone missing or got changed. Must mean somebody’s getting close or the “real” birth certificate will be making an appearance. I don’t see Taitz’s case getting past standing. Nobody but Congress has standing.

Anyway – Gibbs made Kingsolving wait twice and then gave him the second to last question asking. Gibbs brushed it aside and let his fratboys chuckle and then ended with his usual sarcasm. But in the middle he once again gave the Smithsonian, Supreme Court and the Library of Congress a great quote.

KINGSOLVING says what’s on the internet [what Gibbs previously referred to as barry's birth certificate] is not a birth certificate.

GIBBS: I KNOW.

End of story. He admits on the official record – in the transcript and on video and eyewitness testimony – that he knows that useless COLB is not a birth certificate. He admits he and barry’s campaign have been lying. He proves that Kos, Fight the Smears (has disappeared), Factcheck and Politifact were all lying when they used the term Birth CERTIFICATE. His words make null all their conclusions. His words prove what “birthers” have been saying all along – the COLB is not a birth CERTIFICATE.

What GIBBS said in his May 27th press briefing.

MR. GIBBS: Are you looking for the President’s birth certificate?

KINGSOLVING:  Yes.

MR. GIBBS: It’s on the Internet, Lester.

Call it semantics – call it whatever you like – it’s right from his mouth. He knows and admits – volunteers – that it is not a birth certificate. And by admitting to that he admitted he’s been lying all along

TRANSCRIPT FOLLOWS

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8th of 9 UK Embassy employees to be released

July 14, 2009

July 14, 2009

(more…)

Transparency myth: meeting with Jewish leaders left off WH schedule

July 14, 2009

July 13, 2009

Why?

Are there transparency police? I know Politico noticed it early on but I don’t know if they’ve kept it up. Something tells me no. Politifact with the Obameter? Ha-ha. They’re as much in the bag as factcheck.

Anyway – saw this on the transcript. Still pandering to the arabs by hiding his meeting with Jewish Leaders?

TRANSCRIPT: WH Press Briefing 7-13-09

GIBBS: Let me do Lynn one more question, and then we’ll go.

LYNN: Robert, this is on the meeting at 3:00 p.m. with the American Jewish leaders.  This is the first time that Obama has met with this group of presidents of major organizations. And some, but not all — there’s a division there about the President’s urging Israel to end settlements.

So my question is, what is the message he’s trying to — what is he trying to accomplish in that?  Does he want to just — does he feel he needs to explain more?  By chance, if this subject matter is so sensitive, could there be a transcript of what happens made available to us?  And –

MR. GIBBS:  I could — go ahead, I’m sorry.

LYNN: And this meeting, for some reason, was left off the White House schedule. It was just added on later in the day, though the people were invited last week.  Is there a reason for that?

MR. GIBBS:  Not that I’m aware of.  Obviously, I think the President will use this opportunity to have a discussion with major Jewish leaders about the progress that he believes we’re making toward comprehensive Middle East peace.  And what he has asked each side in this process, the hard decisions that he’s asked each to evaluate as we seek to make more of that progress.

Obviously, this is a very influential group, and I think he looks forward to discussing with them how these efforts are ongoing, the progress that he sees that has been and what he thinks has to be addressed in order to see more progress.  We won’t have a transcript, but we’ll certainly give you a readout.

And I know you know both Rosy and Alan Solow’s cell phone number.  So I will check repeatedly your blog in order to find out as close to an official transcript as one might need.

Lynn Sweet?

UPDATED: Blackhawks fire Dale Tallon

July 14, 2009

July 14, 2009

Have to say I did not see this coming. Tallon’s been GM since June 2005 and the team has gone from crap to playing well against the Stanley Cup Champs in the playoffs. Yes, he screwed up the contracts but what else? And they got signed anyway without any problems.

From Chicago Breaking News CHRIS KUC:

But he [Tallon] came under fire last week for sending qualifying offers to restricted free agents late, causing them to be delivered after the deadline set by the NHL’s Collective Bargaining Agreement.

The eight players, including Kris Versteeg and Cam Barker, were all signed to contracts, and the NHL Players’ Association withdrew its grievance.

Tallon was in the final year of his contract and last Wednesday, in his first comments after the filing snafu, said he had not asked for a contract extension.

When asked if he planned to ask for an extension, Tallon said: “I have a contract. I’m not worried about it. I’ve been here for 32 years. I don’t see any reason to have to do that. That will take care of itself.”

I guess I don’t know enough of the history. What’s John McDonough think when he’s been trying to get the old Hawks back into the picture?

Stan Bowman – son of legendary Scotty Bowman – will be the new GM. Maybe it was part of Bowman Sr’s initial deal.

Bowman, the son of legendary NHL coach and current senior advisor for hockey operations Scotty Bowman, has been with the Hawks organization for eight seasons, including assistant general manager for the past two.

UPDATE 1: NBC 5 News & Chicago Tribune’s CHRIS KUC.

DALE TALLON will remain Senior Advisor, Hockey Operations – the same title Scotty Bowman has.

I have been with this organization in several different capacities since coming over as a player in 1973 and although my position has changed, my goals have not. In my new role as Senior Advisor, Hockey Operations I will continue in any way that will help make this a better product on the ice. I’ve seen Stan come up through our ranks and I’m confident he is the right person to step in. This is what is best for the Chicago Blackhawks.

Hawks’ President JOHN MCDONOUGH was asked if Tallon hadn’t made the mistake with the restricted free agents – would he have been fired. He paused and said “probably not“. His statement:

We are very proud to promote Stan to his new position of general manager. He brings a comprehensive knowledge of hockey, along with a tremendous intellect and methodical approach to building a successful team and sustaining success. His involvement with our organization and strong understanding of our roster and our system create a very natural and strong transition. Dale will continue to be an important part of our organization, as he has been for many years.

ROCKY WIRTZ on the other hand said it was going to happen.

I think this was going to happened regardless. It was just something else that just happened to be in the press that’s all.

STAN BOWMAN:

I’m probably smiling a lot more today than I normally would. But you’ll have to excuse me for that because this is a dream come true for me.

It is an extreme honor to accept this promotion with the Blackhawks, an Original Six franchise. Over the last eight years I have been intricately involved in every facet of our Hockey Operations and take great pride in the talent and character that we have assembled. We will not rest until we reach our goal of winning the Stanley Cup and establishing consistent success for the Chicago Blackhawks and our fans.

UPDATE 2: DALE TALLON phone comment re: JOHN MCDONOUGH:

It was a situation where we both agreed that it was best for the franchise. So we had a cordial discussion – John and I – and he wanted to take the team in a different direction. And I was fine with it. And I don’t care. It’s not about the position or the title – it’s about having success and it’s about the team. It’s about the Chicago Blackhawks. Period.

Judge Sotomayor opening statements (video/text)

July 14, 2009

July 13, 2009

Judge Sonia Sotomayor’s opening statements – Day 1 Senate confirmation Hearings.

Sotomayor’s backgroundVideo/text of announcement of nomination.

VIDEO of statement: Politico44

Also noted at Politico: Norma McCorvey aka Jane Roe [as in Roe v Wade] was one of four people arrested for “shouting anti-abortion slogans”. Wonder of Fr Weslin was there too. Have to do a follow up on Notre Dame.

TRANSCRIPT of statement: The Washington Post

————–

SEN PATRICK LEAHY (D-VT): Judge, now we will administer the oath, and I’ll let the two senators step back, if they’d like, if we can. Please raise your right hand. Do you swear the testimony you are about to give before the committee will be the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth, so help you God?

SOTOMAYOR: I do.

LEAHY: Thank you. Please be seated. And I thank my two colleagues from New York for the introduction. And I — I appreciated it, because I know both have known you for some time. Judge, you’ve also introduced a number — members of your family. And now the floor is yours.

SOTOMAYOR:

Thank you, Mr. Chairman.

I also want to thank Senators Schumer and Gillibrand for their kind introductions.

In recent weeks, I have had the privilege and pleasure of meeting 89 senators, including all of the members of this committee. Each of you has been gracious to me, and I have so much enjoyed meeting you. Our meetings have given me an illuminating tour of the 50 states and invaluable insights into the American people.

There are countless family members and friends who have done so much over the years to make this day possible. I am deeply appreciative for their love and support. I want to make one special note of thanks to my mother. I am here, as many of you have noted, because of her aspirations and sacrifices for both my brother, Juan, and me.

Mom, thank you.

I am very grateful to the president and humbled to be here today as a nominee to the United States Supreme Court.

The progression of my life has been uniquely American. My parents left Puerto Rico during World War II. I grew up in modest circumstances in a Bronx housing project. My father, a factory worker with a third-grade education, passed away when I was 9 years old.

On her own, my mother raised my brother and me. She taught us that the key to success in America is a good education. And she set the example, studying alongside my brother and me at our kitchen table so that she could become a registered nurse.

We worked hard. I poured myself into my studies at Cardinal Spellman High School, earning scholarships to Princeton University and then Yale Law School, while my brother went on to medical school. Our achievements are due to the values that we learned as children, and they have continued to guide my life’s endeavors. I try to pass on this legacy by serving as a mentor and friend to my many godchildren and to students of all backgrounds.

Over the past three decades, I have seen our judicial system from a number of different perspectives — as a big-city prosecutor, as a corporate litigator, as a trial judge, and as an appellate judge. My first job after law school was as an assistant district attorney in New York.

There I saw children exploited and abused. I felt the pain and suffering of families torn apart by the needless death of loved ones. I saw and learned the tough job law enforcement has in protecting the public.

In my next legal job, I focused on commercial instead of criminal matters. I litigated issues on behalf of national and international businesses and advised them on matters ranging from contracts to trademarks.

My career as an advocate ended, and my career as a judge began, when I was appointed by President George H.W. Bush to the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York. As a trial judge, I did decide over 450 cases and presided over dozens of trials, with perhaps my most famous case being the Major League Baseball strike in 1995.

After six extraordinary years on the district court, I was appointed by President Clinton to the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit. On that court, I have enjoyed the benefit of sharing ideas and perspectives with wonderful colleagues as we have worked together to resolve the issues before us.

I have now served as an appellate judge for over a decade, deciding a wide range of constitutional, statutory and other legal questions. Throughout my 17 years on the bench, I have witnessed the human consequences of my decisions. Those decisions have not been made to serve the interests of any one litigant, but always to serve the larger interests of impartial justice.

In the past month, many senators have asked me about my judicial philosophy. Simple: fidelity to the law. The task of a judge is not to make law. It is to apply the law.

And it is clear, I believe, that my record in two courts reflects my rigorous commitment to interpreting the constitution according to its terms, interpreting statutes according to their terms and Congress’s intent, and hewing faithfully to precedents established by the Supreme Court and by my circuit court.

In each case I have heard, I have applied the law to the facts at hand. The process of judging is enhanced when the arguments and concerns of the parties to the litigation are understood and acknowledged.

That is why I generally structure my opinions by setting out what the law requires and then explaining why a contrary position, sympathetic or not, is accepted or rejected. That is how I seek to strengthen both the rule of law and faith in the impartiality of our judicial system. My personal and professional experiences helped me to listen and understand, with the law always commanding the result in every case.

Since President Obama announced my nomination in May, I have received letters from people all over this country. Many tell a unique story of hope in spite of struggle. Each letter has deeply touched me. Each reflects a dream — a belief in the dream that led my parents to come to New York all those years ago. It is our Constitution that makes that dream possible, and I now seek the honor of upholding the Constitution as a justice on the Supreme Court.

Senators, I look forward in the next few days to answering your questions, to having the American people learn more about me, and to being part of a process that reflects the greatness of our Constitution and of our nation.

Thank you all.

Orly Taitz case continues

July 13, 2009

July 13, 2009

Updated list of birth certificate posts

UPDATE 1: 21:00 WND : “U.S. District Judge David O. Carter ruled in  hearing today that her [Orly Taitz] case will move forward”

UPDATE 2: 21:39 Same post as below is posted on ORLY TAITZ site.

UPDATE 3: 22:57 Dr Alan Keyes has left an attachment for Taitz that shows he doesn’t know the results 100%.

UPDATE 4: 12:45 Yes, Judge Carter will hear the merits of the case – but that does not necessarily mean it gets to trial. It means Taitz gets to refile the paperwork and barry gets 60 days to respond.

————-

Sorry folks. I can’t get into the California system to get at Taitz’s docket to see what happened and nothing is on her site. I found this information on THE MICHIGAN GRAPEVINE – a site I know nothing about.

So I CAN’T VOUCH FOR THIS. But maybe it’ll stop the emails. As soon as there is something on Taitz’s site – I’ll post it.

DEBRA3401

Just got off the phone with Orly Taitz, the attorney in Keyes v. Obama.

At the hearing today at the Federal Court building in Santa Ana, Judge Carter said the following:
1. There will be a trial.
2. It will be heard on the merits.
3. Nothing will be dismissed on proceedural issues.
4. The trial will be expeditious, and the judge pledged to give case priority.
5. Being a former Marine he realizes the importance of having a Constitutionally qualified POTUS/CINC.
6. Judge stated that if Obama isn’t Constitutionally qualifed he needs to leave the White House.

The DOJ will be involved with the case also…. I wasn’t clear if they would be trying to get to the truth or they would just be blindly representing Obama.

Orly will be adding members of the military from California as plaintiffs also.This is from what my interpretation of our conversation.Orly, asked me to disseminate this information out for her, she will be doing a posting later after she gets some sleep.

=============

barry’s teleprompter shatters

July 13, 2009

July 13, 2009

Wonder who’ll get fired for this.

SURPRISE – VIDEO REMOVED

NewsPoliticsNews

Mid-speech barry’s teleprompter slips and crashes to the floor. His reaction.

Oh, goodness. Sorry about that, guys.

Biden was a whole lot funnier when he ran in to teleprompter problems.

Surgeon General: Dr Regina Benjamin

July 13, 2009

July 13, 2009

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Taitz Hearing re: barry default

July 12, 2009

July 12, 2009

7-13 Orly Taitz case continues

Updated list of birth certificate posts

Yes, Carpitrato, as far as I know Orly Taitz’s case will be heard tomorrow. It is the same case on behalf of Keyes, Drake and Markham of the American Independent Party. Taitz contends that barry defaulted – his people contend they weren’t properly served. Worked with the Occidental College subpoenas – among other things – so why not try it again. Taitz says she served barry before he was President – his people say the government should have been served also. A procedural matter. Yes it is the case where the process server was sent from the WH — Secret Service refused service — to the DOJ.

From ORLY TAITZ:

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT, CENTRAL DISTRICT OF CALIFORNIA

Notice of Electronic Filing

The following transaction was entered on 6/22/2009 at 11:59 AM PDT and filed on 6/22/2009

Case Name:     Keyes et al v. Obama et al
Case Number: 8:09-cv-82
Filer:
Document Number:     16
Docket Text:

MINUTES OF IN CHAMBERS ORDER by Judge David O. Carter

SETTING HEARING ON MOTION:

Before the Court is a Motion by Plaintiffs for Reconsideration of Order to Show Cause or in the Alternative to Certify Question for Appeal. Court sets this matter for hearing on July 13, 2009 at 8:30a.m. in Courtroom 9D. Plaintiffs are directed to make every effort possible to ensure that all remaining defendants are aware of the hearing and provide documentation that the individual receiving service is authorized to accept on defendants’ behalf. (rla)

8:09-cv-82 Notice

Another anti-birther attack

July 12, 2009

July 7, 2009

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