Archive for March 11, 2008

Beware The Craftmatic Bed Scam [Investigations]

crapmaticbed.jpgThe commercial says you can win a free Craftmatic bed, but all you’re likely to win is a salesman worming his way into your home. An Inside Edition investigation revealed some shady high-pressure tactics by Craftmatic bed salesmen targeting the elderly. Typical sales tactics involve starting with a high price, $5,000 and then using a series of phony price drops to get the person to buy today. The salespeople say the bed is so great that it will solve acid reflux and heart disease! And at a seminar where you learn to be a better Craftmatic bed salesperson, a hidden camera showed instructor Carolyn Nilson talking about the lengths she would go to to close a deal, saying “I’ve done it all. Dug checks out of the garbage that they didn’t shred…reactivated credit cards, gone to the bank.” Most contests are just “lead-generation” opportunities for the businesses. Warn elderly friends and family about the sleazy tactics of the Crapmatic sales force.


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Mississippi: Your Moment is Now

Today, for the first time in 20 years, Mississippi will play a major role in selecting the Democratic nominee for president. All across the state voters are heading to the polls to add their voices to the millions calling for change. 

Polls are open today from 7:00 a.m. to 7:00 p.m. and any registered voter can cast their vote for Barack by requesting a Democratic ballot at their polling location.

Find your polling location now, and check the information below to make sure that you know how and where to vote for Barack today.

For more than a year, we’ve worked together and built a grassroots movement for change that’s sweeping across the country. Today, the eyes of the nation turn to Mississippi. This is your moment, your chance to be part of history.

Mississippi Voter Rights:

  • Polls are open from 7:00 a.m. to 7:00 p.m. on Tuesday, March 11th. If you are in line by 7:00 p.m., you must be allowed to vote.
  • In Mississippi, any registered voter can vote for Barack on Tuesday by requesting a Democratic ballot at the polls.
  • If you believe you were left off the voter list or otherwise prevented from regular voting by error, you must be allowed to cast a provisional ballot.
  • No identification is required at the polling place unless you are a first-time voter. If you are a first-time voter in Mississippi who registered by mail and did not provide identification at that time, you should bring a valid photo ID, current utility bill, bank statement, paycheck, government check, or other government document that shows your name and address.
  • If you have problems or questions, call our voter hotline at 1-866-675-2008 and press 4.

 

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Brookstone Will Let You Use Your Sharper Image Gift Card As A 25% Off Coupon [Bankruptcy]

brookstone.jpgBrookstone says they will accept your Sharper Image Gift Card. Sort of.

If you have a small amount of money on a Sharper Image card and don’t want to buy something twice the value in order to use it at the bankrupt retailer, you can surrender it to Brookstone for 25% off.

Currently, Sharper Image does accept gift cards, but they must be used in full in one transaction and the transaction must be for twice the amount of the gift card’s value.

Brookstone Press Release [Brookstone] (Thanks, Richard!)


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Money For Dummy Book Display Reveals State Of The Union [Money]

With all the swirling confusion about whether or not we’re in a recession, this Barnes & Noble display completely devoted to Money For Dummies books is a clarion blast of yellow: we’re in deep doggy doo.

(Thanks to c-side!)


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Memo from Greg Craig

Greg Craig, former director of the Policy Planning Office, U.S. State Department sent out this memo today:

When your entire campaign is based upon a claim of experience, it is important that you have evidence to support that claim.  Hillary Clinton’s argument that she has passed “the Commander- in-Chief test” is simply not supported by her record.

There is no doubt that Hillary Clinton played an important domestic policy role when she was First Lady.  It is well known, for example, that she led the failed effort to pass universal health insurance.  There is no reason to believe, however, that she was a key player in foreign policy at any time during the Clinton Administration.  She did not sit in on National Security Council meetings.  She did not have a security clearance.  She did not attend meetings in the Situation Room.  She did not manage any part of the national security bureaucracy, nor did she have her own national security staff.  She did not do any heavy-lifting with foreign governments, whether they were friendly or not.  She never managed a foreign policy crisis, and there is no evidence to suggest that she participated in the decision-making that occurred in connection with any such crisis.  As far as the record shows, Senator Clinton never answered the phone either to make a decision on any pressing national security issue – not at 3 AM or at any other time of day.

When asked to describe her experience, Senator Clinton has cited a handful of international incidents where she says she played a central role.  But any fair-minded and objective judge of these claims – i.e., by someone not affiliated with the Clinton campaign – would conclude that Senator Clinton’s claims of foreign policy experience are exaggerated.

 

 Northern Ireland:

Senator Clinton has said, “I helped to bring peace to Northern Ireland.”  It is a gross overstatement of the facts for her to claim even partial credit for bringing peace to Northern Ireland.  She did travel to Northern Ireland, it is true.  First Ladies often travel to places that are a focus of U.S. foreign policy.  But at no time did she play any role in the critical negotiations that ultimately produced the peace.  As the Associated Press recently reported, “[S]he was not directly involved in negotiating the Good Friday peace accord.”  With regard to her main claim that she helped bring women together, she did participate in a meeting with women, but, according to those who know best, she did not play a pivotal role.  The person in charge of the negotiations, former Senator George Mitchell, said that “[The First Lady] was one of many people who participated in encouraging women to get involved, not the only one.”

News of Senator Clinton’s claims has raised eyebrows across the ocean. Her reference to an important meeting at the Belfast town hall was debunked.  Her only appearance at the Belfast City Hall was to see Christmas lights turned on. She also attended a 50-minute meeting which, according to the Belfast Daily Telegraph’s report at the time, “[was] a little bit stilted, a little prepared at times.”  Brian Feeney, an Irish author and former politician, sums it up: “The road to peace was carefully documented, and she wasn’t on it.”

 

Bosnia:

Senator Clinton has pointed to a March 1996 trip to Bosnia as proof that her foreign travel involved a life-risking mission into a war zone.  She has described dodging sniper fire.  While she did travel to Bosnia in March 1996, the visit was not a high-stakes mission to a war zone.  On March 26, 1996, the New York Times reported that “Hillary Rodham Clinton charmed American troops at a U.S.O. show here, but it didn’t hurt that the singer Sheryl Crow and the comedian Sinbad were also on the stage.”

 

Kosovo:

Senator Clinton has said, “I negotiated open borders to let fleeing refugees into safety from Kosovo.”  It is true that, as First Lady, she traveled to Macedonia and visited a Kosovar refugee camp.  It is also true that she met with government officials while she was there.  First Ladies frequently meet with government officials.  Her claim to have “negotiated open borders to let fleeing refugees into safety from Kosovo,” however, is not true.  Her trip to Macedonia took place on May 14, 1999.  The borders were opened the day before, on May 13, 1999. 

The negotiations that led to the opening of the borders were accomplished by the people who ordinarily conduct negotiations with foreign governments – U.S. diplomats.  President Clinton’s top envoy to the Balkans, former Ambassador Robert Gelbard, said, “I cannot recall any involvement by Senator Clinton in this issue.”  Ivo Daalder worked on the Clinton Administration’s National Security Council and wrote a definitive history of the Kosovo conflict.  He recalls that “she had absolutely no role in the dirty work of negotiations.”

 

Rwanda:

Last year, former President Clinton asserted that his wife pressed him to intervene with U.S. troops to stop the Rwandan genocide.  When asked about this assertion, Hillary Clinton said it was true. There is no evidence, however, to suggest that this ever happened.  Even those individuals who were advocating a much more robust U.S. effort to stop the genocide did not argue for the use of U.S. troops.  No one recalls hearing that Hillary Clinton had any interest in this course of action.  Based on a fair and thorough review of National Security Council deliberations during those tragic months, there is no evidence to suggest that U.S. military intervention was ever discussed.  Prudence Bushnell, the Assistant Secretary of State with responsibility for Africa, has recalled that there was no consideration of U.S. military intervention.

At no time prior to her campaign for the presidency did Senator Clinton ever make the claim that she supported intervening militarily to stop the Rwandan genocide.  It is noteworthy that she failed to mention this anecdote – urging President Clinton to intervene militarily in Rwanda – in her memoirs.  President Clinton makes no mention of such a conversation with his wife in his memoirs.  And Madeline Albright, who was Ambassador to the United Nations at the time, makes no mention of any such event in her memoirs.

Hillary Clinton did visit Rwanda in March 1998 and, during that visit, her husband apologized for America’s failure to do more to prevent the genocide.

 

China

Senator Clinton also points to a speech that she delivered in Beijing in 1995 as proof of her ability to answer a 3 AM crisis phone call. It is strange that Senator Clinton would base her own foreign policy experience on a speech that she gave over a decade ago, since she so frequently belittles Barack Obama’s speeches opposing the Iraq War six years ago.  Let there be no doubt: she gave a good speech in Beijing, and she stood up for women’s rights.  But Senator Obama’s opposition to the War in Iraq in 2002 is relevant to the question of whether he, as Commander-in-Chief, will make wise judgments about the use of military force.  Senator Clinton’s speech in Beijing is not.  

Senator Obama’s speech opposing the war in Iraq shows independence and courage as well as good judgment.  In the speech that Senator Clinton says does not qualify him to be Commander in Chief, Obama criticized what he called “a rash war . . .  a war based not on reason, but on passion, not on principle, but on politics.”  In that speech, he said prophetically:  “[E]ven a successful war against Iraq will require a US occupation of undetermined length, at undetermined cost, with undetermined consequences.”  He predicted that a U.S. invasion of Iraq would “fan the flames of the Middle East,” and “strengthen the recruitment arm of al Qaeda.”   He urged the United States first to “finish the fight with Bin Laden and al Qaeda.”  

If the U.S. government had followed Barack Obama’s advice in 2002, we would have avoided one of the greatest foreign policy catastrophes in our nation’s history.  Some of the most “experienced” men in national security affairs – Vice President Cheney and Secretary Donald Rumsfeld and others – led this nation into that catastrophe.  That lesson should teach us something about the value of judgment over experience.  Longevity in Washington, D.C. does not guarantee either wisdom of judgment.      

 

Conclusion:

The Clinton campaign’s argument is nothing more than mere assertion, dramatized in a scary television commercial with a telephone ringing in the middle of the night.  There is no support for or substance in the claim that Senator Clinton has passed “the Commander-in-Chief test.”  That claim – as the TV ad – consists of nothing more than making the assertion, repeating it frequently to the voters and hoping that they will believe it.

On the most critical foreign policy judgment of our generation – the War in Iraq – Senator Clinton voted in support of a resolution entitled “The Joint Resolution to Authorize the Use of U.S. Military Force Against Iraq.”  As she cast that vote, she said:  “This is probably the hardest decision I have ever had to make — any vote that may lead to war should be hard — but I cast it with conviction.”   In this campaign, Senator Clinton has argued – remarkably – that she wasn’t actually voting for war, she was voting for diplomacy.  That claim is no more credible than her other claims of foreign policy experience.  The real tragedy is that we are still living with the terrible consequences of her misjudgment.  The Bush Administration continues to cite that resolution as its authorization – like a blank check – to fight on with no end in sight.

Barack Obama has a very simple case. On the most important commander in chief test of our generation, he got it right, and Senator Clinton got it wrong.  In truth, Senator Obama has much more foreign policy experience than either Bill Clinton or Ronald Reagan had when they were elected.  Senator Obama has worked to confront 21st century challenges like proliferation and genocide on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee.  He possesses the personal attributes of a great leader – an even temperament, an open-minded approach to even the most challenging problems, a willingness to listen to all views, clarity of vision, the ability to inspire, conviction and courage. 

And Barack Obama does not use false charges and exaggerated claims to play politics with national security.  

Click here to read Barack’s plan to turn the page on foreign policy. 

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This WaMu Confirmation Number Has A Potty Mouth [Rude]

Consumerist,

I logged online to check my Wamu account tonight and I was surprised by the profanity in the “confirmation number” field.

Highly amusing, don’t you think?

–Brad

Brad,
There is a ghost in the machine. Kill it. Skynet. Help. It’s learning at a geometric rate.

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Morning News

From the Clarion Ledger:

A close race between Democratic presidential candidates Hillary Rodham Clinton and Barack Obama will draw more voters to the polls today than the last presidential primary, state officials predict.

… Thousands of volunteers for the candidates are making phone calls and canvassing neighborhoods to secure votes.

… Obama campaigned in Jackson and Columbus on Monday. His supporters also sponsored a gospel concert in Biloxi featuring singer Smokie Norful.

The Obama camp has opened seven offices statewide in the past several weeks, campaign spokesman Kevin Griffis said.

Over the weekend, supporters held events headlined by hip-hop entrepreneur Russell Simmons, former Gov. Ray Mabus and 2nd District U.S. Rep. Bennie Thompson in the Delta. Democratic Kansas Gov. Kathleen Sebelius stumped for Obama on the Gulf Coast.

“The idea … is a community organizing philosophy where you go and meet people where they are and get to know them,” Griffis said. “You figure out a way to engage them in the campaign in a way that incorporates their existing interests.”

From the Associated Press:

Mississippi Democrats are deciding the last in a series presidential contests between Barack Obama and Hillary Rodham Clinton before the two rivals settle in for a six-week battle to win Pennsylvania.

… Obama, the first-term senator from Illinois, spent the day in Mississippi, drawing enthusiastic crowds in Columbus and Jackson, the capital.

… Obama used his Monday morning visit to Columbus to try to squelch speculation that he might accept the vice president’s slot on a ticket headed by Clinton. He noted that he has won more delegates, states and votes than Clinton.

“I don’t know how somebody who is in second place is offering the vice presidency to the person who is first place,” Obama said, drawing cheers and a lengthy standing ovation from about 1,700 people. He added: “I am not running for vice president. “I am running for president of the United States of America.”

… “I’m here because of the electricity, the energy that seems to form around Barack Obama,” truck driver Jasper Clark, 53, said in an interview before the Jackson rally. “It inspired me, and it’s been a while since I’ve been inspired politically.”

From the New York Times:

At first, the suggestion was a quiet one, raised by their supporters. Soon, Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton and her husband, former President Bill Clinton, lent credence to the idea, telling voters in Mississippi and beyond that Senator Barack Obama would make a fine partner — most likely as No. 2 — on the Democratic ticket.

But when Mr. Obama arrived in [Columbus, Mississippi] Monday, he brusquely discounted the chatter. He suggested that the Clintons were being duplicitous in their offer, implying on one hand that he was not ready to be president, but that on the other, he could solve the party’s political impasse by joining together.

“I don’t know how somebody who’s in second place can offer the vice presidency to someone who’s in first place,” Mr. Obama told a town meeting at the Mississippi University for Women here, alluding to his lead in delegates. As the crowd cheered, he said: “If I’m not ready, how is it that you think I should be such a great vice president? Do you understand that?”

… “With all due respect, I’ve won twice as many states as Senator Clinton,” Mr. Obama said on the eve of the Mississippi primary, speaking over the applause of more than 1,500 people who rose from their seats. “I’ve won more of the popular vote than Senator Clinton. I have more delegates than Senator Clinton.”

… Mr. Obama then added, “They are trying to hoodwink you.”

… “I don’t want anybody here thinking that I, somehow, well you know, maybe I can get both,” Mr. Obama implored his audience. “Don’t think that way. You have to make a choice in this election. Are you going to go along with the past or are you going to go toward the future?”

From WLBT TV:

Senator Barack Obama agreed to an interview with WLBT.

… I asked the Illinois senator about getting Mississippi off the bottom in areas like education, healthcare and Katrina recovery to which he responded, “We cannot neglect Mississippi. We’ve got to make sure that we’re actually building affordable housing. I was concerned when I learned that some of the money was diverted to some other areas by the governor here. I think it’s important that’s been allocated for housing is spent on housing. We’ve got to invest in our education system, early childhood education, increasing our teacher salaries and giving them more support. A $4,000 tuition credit for every student every year, so they can afford to go to schools like Jackson State. If you don’t have health care, you’ll be able to sign on. We’ll subsidize it if you can’t afford it. If you’ve got health insurance, we’ll lower your premium by $2,500. And we’re going to emphasize prevention.”

On the subject of his campaign theme - change - the senator had this to say: “Well, a couple of things. I don’t take PAC money. I don’t take money from federally registered lobbyist, like Senator Clinton does. Which means that I don’t have any strings attached to me. I think that it is important to open up government. Make it transparent.”

Senator Obama cited two people as his heros politically, the late civil rights leader Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. and President Abraham Lincoln.

“One thig I learn from someone like Lincoln is how to disagree without being disagreeable. And that’s something we seem to have lost in our politics. I’d like to return to that kind of approach.”

From KDKA TV:

Behind the scenes in Pennsylvania, camps for both Sens. Barack Obama and Clinton are gearing up for a very hard-fought local battle for votes.

Volunteers for Obama moved lots of chairs into their Pittsburgh headquarters in East Liberty. Inside, tables were set up to handle the dozens of volunteers the campaign expects until the primary.

“It’s going to be a very tight race, and right now we need all the help we can get,” Gayly Crawford, Pitt student and Obama volunteer, said.

It’s clear that the campaign is attracting some devoted supporters.

Ann and Jim Petre, both graduate students from Illinois, just arrived in Pittsburgh Monday.

“We’ve been doing everything we can. We went to Iowa, we went to Missouri, we went to Ohio, and now we’re in Pennsylvania,” Jim told KDKA.

The day’s mission at Obama headquarters was calling Independent voters and encouraging them to register as Democrats so they can vote April 22.

Only registered Democrats can vote in Pennsylvania’s Democratic Primary and Obama, who has done well among Independents, wants them to switch.

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Video: Barack in Jackson, Mississippi

Here’s Barack in Jackson, Mississippi… “They’ve got power and money, but what we’ve got is the American people.”

Are you among the million plus who have joined our movement for change? Own a piece of this movement

And if you’re from Mississippi, find your polling locations. Your moment is now. 

UPDATE: Our calling tool at My.BarackObama.com/call is now activated. Make calls now to help get out the vote in Mississippi. Your voice can make a critical difference today… 

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