Kevin on April 20th, 2010

jeffperry

Jeff Perry returned to WRKO’s Pundit Review Radio this weekend. We discussed the state GOP convention, Scott Brown’s endorsement of his campaign. his outstanding fundraising numbers, the Tea Party and a whole lot more.

I have enormous respect for Jeff because he is fearless. He was one of only two reps on Beacon Hill smart and brave enough to vote against Romney Care. He knows who he is and what he believes in and is willing to fight for it. You don’t want to miss how he handled a hostile caller, just perfect!

We, not just Massachusetts, but the country, need to send men like Jeff Perry to Washington DC to reign in the out of control spending.

Pundit Review Radio Podcast RSS feed can be found here.

What is Pundit Review Radio?

On Boston’s Talk Station WRKO since 2005, Pundit Review Radio is where the old media meets the new. Each week we give voice to the work of the most influential leaders in the new media/citizen journalist revolution. Called “groundbreaking” by Talkers Magazine, this unique show brings the best of the blogs to the radio every Sunday evening from 6-8pm on AM680 WRKO, Boston’s Talk Station.

One of the worst days in American history

On the evening of April 14, 1865, while attending a special performance of the comedy, “Our American Cousin,” President Abraham Lincoln was shot. Accompanying him at Ford’s Theater that night were his wife, Mary Todd Lincoln, a twenty-eight year-old officer named Major Henry R. Rathbone, and Rathbone’s fiancee, Clara Harris. After the play was in progress, a figure with a drawn derringer pistol stepped into the presidential box, aimed, and fired. The president slumped forward.

The assassin, John Wilkes Booth, dropped the pistol and waved a dagger. Rathbone lunged at him, and though slashed in the arm, forced the killer to the railing. Booth leapt from the balcony and caught the spur of his left boot on a flag draped over the rail, and shattered a bone in his leg on landing. Though injured, he rushed out the back door, and disappeared into the night on horseback.

A doctor in the audience immediately went upstairs to the box. The bullet had entered through Lincoln’s left ear and lodged behind his right eye. He was paralyzed and barely breathing. He was carried across Tenth Street, to a boarding-house opposite the theater, but the doctors’ best efforts failed. Nine hours later, at 7:22 AM on April 15th, Lincoln died.

Had some tourist time in DC last year, and headed straight to the Ford Theater and the Petersen House across the street where Lincoln died…

Ford’s Theater
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The President’s Box
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Here is a portion of the tour guides description of events on that terrible evening

This photo below was taken directly in front of the Ford Theater facing the Petersen House, the red brick building. Realizing that Lincoln’s wounds were mortal, they were simply looking for a place where he could rest in peace. The Petersen House at that time was a boarding house and the owner heard the commotion following the assassination and was on those front steps and called for Lincoln to be brought into the home, which he was. He died there some eight hours later.

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You’ll notice the long line of people waiting to get in. By a stroke of good fortune, I was walking by between tours and started chatting up the tour guide. We talked a bit about the book Manhunt and I learned that like me, she was a Massachusetts native, originally from Lowell. Since the house was empty, she agreed to give me a personal tour. It was very cool. It was also kind of creppy to be in the same place where such a monumental and horrible event took place. The lighting gets worse in each successive room, apologies.

Here is the first room, immediately to the left of the door. This is forever known as Mary’s waiting room. She stayed in this room for most of the evening, only a few feet away from her mortally wounded husband.

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Only a few feet away is the room which became The Temporary Seat of Government. In this room, Lincoln’s cabinet waited, prayed and started the investigation into the assassination. It is just stunning to actually see how small and close together these rooms are.

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The third and final room on the first floor is the bedroom at the end of the hall where the greatest American who ever lived, died.

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And here is a replica of the bed where Lincoln drew his last breath,
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“And now he belongs to the ages.”
Edwin M. Stanton, Secretary of War

Kevin on April 12th, 2010

YCR20090912

In hour two, Boston Herald business reporter Jay Fitzgerald and I discussed the Tea party coming to town this week. We began by speculating who would, and would not show up. Jay and I agreed that it was unlikely that Charlie Baker, for example, would be there. According to the people’s paper, The Herald, Scott Brown will not be there.

The discussion took a turn when the inevitable issue of race and the Tea party's came up. Jay said he believed there was an element of racism in the Tea Parties. I countered that whatever that element was, it was no more, and probably less, than it would be in any gathering of a few thousand citizens.

My personal opinion is that the Democrats are deliberately trying to stoke racial tension as part of a political strategy. It is despicable and shameful. They have either made up incidents out of whole cloth, or taken the needle in the haystack and used it to smear the entire movement. The callers, tired of being labeled racists, went after Jay pretty good. Jay noted on Hub Blog this morning,

I was called a “moonbat” last night on Kevin’ss show for daring to suggest that there were some racist elements within the Tea Party movement (not a majority; just an element). I suppose it’s only a matter of time before I’m called a hatemonger by some lefties for not believing that the Tea Party is the second coming of Nazi Germany.

We’ll see on Wednesday.

Pundit Review Radio Podcast RSS feed can be found here.

What is Pundit Review Radio?

On Boston’s Talk Station WRKO since 2005, Pundit Review Radio is where the old media meets the new. Each week we give voice to the work of the most influential leaders in the new media/citizen journalist revolution. Called “groundbreaking” by Talkers Magazine, this unique show brings the best of the blogs to the radio every Sunday evening from 6-8pm on AM680 WRKO, Boston’s Talk Station.

Kevin on April 12th, 2010

Last night on WRKO I welcomed back Jay Fitzgerald, business reporter with the people’s paper, the Boston Herald. Jay is also a great blogger at Hub Blog, you should definitely check his blog out.

In the first hour we discussed the three way race for governor and even touched on the gambling issue, which is kind of the same thing.

Pundit Review Radio Podcast RSS feed can be found here.

What is Pundit Review Radio?

On Boston’s Talk Station WRKO since 2005, Pundit Review Radio is where the old media meets the new. Each week we give voice to the work of the most influential leaders in the new media/citizen journalist revolution. Called “groundbreaking” by Talkers Magazine, this unique show brings the best of the blogs to the radio every Sunday evening from 6-8pm on AM680 WRKO, Boston’s Talk Station.

Kevin on March 29th, 2010

reset-button

One of the most hyped aspect of the Age of Obama was how he was going to restore America’s standing in the world with his unique blend of Hope and Change.
It was said that we would enjoy the benefits of better relations with friend and foe alike. Well, fourteen months in, we seem to have to have the same foes, and fewer friends. He and his team came to the job with a reset button, literally, and quite unfortunately,

RUSSIA

BBC: Button gaffe embarrasses Clinton

Russian media have been poking fun at the US secretary of state over a translation error on a gift she presented to her Russian counterpart. Hillary Clinton gave Sergei Lavrov a mock “reset” button, symbolising US hopes to mend frayed ties with Moscow. But he said the word the Americans chose, “peregruzka”, meant “overloaded” or “overcharged”, rather than “reset”

After a not so great start, Russia was handed a gift when the Obama administration announced it was scrapping its missile defense plans in eastern Europe at the expense of longtime allies Poland and Czech Republic (more below). In return, Russia willcooperate with us on Iran

Russia Says No to Iran Nuclear Sanctions

MOSCOW — Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov made it clear Thursday that Moscow wouldn’t back any new rounds of tough sanctions against Iran in the United Nations Security Council, and he dismissed a U.S. timetable for securing progress from Iran on ending its nuclear-fuel program.

To be fair, just this week, Russia said that maybe, just maybe, they might consider sanctions against Iran. That’s a major victory for Hillary and Obama.

POLAND and the CZECH REPUBLIC

U.S. scraps missile defense shield plans
According to CNN, the Obama administration made the “decision likely to appease Russia which had fiercely opposed the plans”. In return, we got nothing.

Prime minister Jan Fischer said in a statement that U.S. President Barack Obama told him in a Wednesday phone call that the United States was shelving its plans. Fischer did not say what reason Obama gave him for reconsidering.

A spokeswoman at the Polish Ministry of Defense also said the program had been suspended.

“This is catastrophic for Poland,” said the spokeswoman, who declined to be named in line with ministry policy.

CHINA
Don’t worry, China will help us with Iran Hail ‘close cooperation’ with Iran

Chinese Prime Minister Wen Jiabao has said that his country will maintain cooperation with Iran and foster ‘close coordination in international affairs’. China is willing “to maintain high-level contacts with Iran, encourage mutual understanding and confidence, promote practical cooperation between the two sides and close coordination in international affairs,” Wen said in a meeting with the visiting Iranian First Vice President, Mohammad Reza Rahimi, in Beijing…

China threatens ‘nuclear option’ of dollar sales

The Chinese government has begun a concerted campaign of economic threats against the United States, hinting that it may liquidate its vast holding of US treasuries if Washington imposes trade sanctions to force a yuan revaluation.

ISRAEL
WaPost: Dispute with Israel underscores limits of U.S. power, a shifting alliance

The two-week-old dispute between Israel and the United States over housing construction in East Jerusalem has exposed the limits of American power to pressure Israeli leaders to make decisions they consider politically untenable. But the blowup also shows that the relationship between the two allies is changing, in ways that are unsettling for Israel’s supporters.

How poorly has Obama handled our relationship with Israel? After the incredibly bitter healthcare reform battle royale, Obama got 327 member of Congress to sign a letter urging him to reconsider his current course, from Hot Air,

Barack Obama talks a lot about the “spirit of bipartisanship.” Now he’s had a chance to see it for himself, thanks to a series of diplomatic fumbles between the White House and Israel, usually one of America’s closest allies. More than three-quarters of the US House of Representatives signed a letter expressing dismay over the direction of the alliance, warning that the “highly publicized tensions” aren’t helping America’s interests

NOBODY IS SAFE FROM OBAMA’S REIGN OF ERROR, NOT OUR OLDEST ALLY,

Daily Mail: To my special friend Gordon, 25 DVDs: Obama gives Brown a set of classic movies. Let’s hope he likes the Wizard of Oz

As he headed back home from Washington, Gordon Brown must have rummaged through his party bag with disappointment.
Because all he got was a set of DVDs. Barack Obama, the leader of the world’s richest country, gave the Prime Minister a box set of 25 classic American films – a gift about as exciting as a pair of socks.

Mr Brown is not thought to be a film buff, and his reaction to the box set is unknown. But it didn’t really compare to the thoughtful presents he had brought along with him. The Prime Minister gave Mr Obama an ornamental pen holder made from the timbers of the Victorian anti-slave ship HMS Gannet.

Hillary Clinton slaps Britain in the face over the Falklands

Hillary Clinton’s dire performance in Buenos Aires was not only an appalling display of appeasement towards a corrupt and authoritarian anti-American regime, which barely has the support of 20 percent of the Argentinian people. It was also an astonishing betrayal of the United Kingdom by her closest ally, and yet another slap in the face for Britain from the Obama administration.

EVEN NEW ZELAND! ISN’T SAFE!
Hillary Clinton insults New Zealand, fibs about her namesake

Rachel Morris, writing for the Washington Monthly’s blog, says that “Hillary Clinton may have gravely insulted” New Zealand in a recent Newsweek interview. Asked if a scrapbook she’s been keeping since childhood contains “any good jokes,” Clinton came up with this zinger: Here’s a good one. Helen Clark, former prime minister of New Zealand: her opponents have observed that in the event of a nuclear war, the two things that will emerge from the rubble are the cockroaches and Helen Clark. [Laughs]

Ha ha, I guess? The trouble, as Morris points out, is that “Helen Clark is the current prime minister of New Zealand,” and has been since 1999. “[T]he joke doesn’t get funnier even if you happen to know something about New Zealand politics,” Morris tartly observes.

That’s not Clinton’s worst New Zealand gaffe, however. In the grand scheme of things, it’s hardly a big deal. New Zealand, after all, is a pretty obscure country halfway around the world. This, however, is just plain embarrassing: Mrs Clinton also once said her parents named her after [New Zealand native] Sir Ed Hillary, a nice line till it was pointed out she was born more than five years before he climbed Everest, when he was still a lesser-known beekeeper.

HONDURAS
What can you say about this one except the Obama administration got it 100% wrong. When Honduran president Manuel Zelaya was removed from office in a “coup”, the Obama administration demanded he be allowed to return to power. The Honduran constitution and legislature didn’t agree.

Defying U.S., Honduras won’t let Zelaya return as president

CARACAS, Venezuela — Honduras’ de facto government remains dead-set against the return of Manuel Zelaya as the country’s president, in defiance of the Obama administration and disregard of the U.S. sanctions imposed last week against the poor Central American nation.

Honduras Congress rejects return of ousted leader

TEGUCIGALPA — Honduran lawmakers late Wednesday roundly rejected the reinstatement of ousted President Manuel Zelaya during a heated debate revisiting details of the June 28 coup which polarized the nation.

David Fredosso explains just how wrong they were,

In response to the ouster of Honduran President Manuel Zelaya, the U.S. State Department cut off foreign aid to Honduras and stopped approving visas for government officials. The U.S. is even threatening now to de-legitimize that nation’s upcoming November elections, and has been treating the interim government of Roberto Micheletti as a rogue regime.

But State’s is not the only opinion. By way of contrast, a new report (click here for the pdf) from the Congressional Research Service bears out what our editorial board has been pointing out for months now: The situation in Honduras should not be a cause for concern in Washington. It should a relief.

President Zelaya, who was attempting to subvert the constitutional order of Honduras by seeking re-election (considered a crime there) was removed from office by the order of civilian authorities, and the constitutional order of succession was honored afterward.

The legal arguments made in the report, which was prepared by Senior Foreign Law Specialist Norma Gutierrez, are quite intricate and based in Honduran law. But the bottom line is this: The Honduran Congress appears to have acted properly in deposing President Manuel Zelaya.

Are we better off now than we were thirteen months ago? The American people don’t think so,

A majority of Americans say the United States is less respected in the world than it was two years ago and think President Obama and other Democrats fall short of Republicans on the issue of national security, a new poll finds. The Democracy Corps-Third Way survey released Monday finds that by a 10-point margin — 51 percent to 41 percent — Americans think the standing of the U.S. dropped during the first 13 months of Mr. Obama’s presidency.

The great Michael Barone neatly summarizes these past thirteen months,

Obama proclaims that through persistence he can make the leaders of Iran, North Korea, Russia, China and the Palestinians see things our way. The evidence so far is that they are making him do things their way — and that our friends are wondering whether it pays to be on America’s side.

IT’S BEEN A BOW WOW WOW KIND OF PERFORMANCE

Hard to believe this happened…
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…maybe it should have gone like this this?
kanye_west_interrupts_obama_nobel_peace_prize

Kevin on March 29th, 2010

We first met John Noonan through his blog Op-For. I had the chance to meet him at the milblog conference in Washington a few years ago and have been reading him in places like The Washington Post, National Review and the Weekly Standard ever since. John recently joined the Foreign Policy Initiative, a new DC think tank.

John has a background in nuclear weapons from his Air Force career so when we had him on about five years ago we asked how close Iran was to having nukes. He said about five years. Time for an update.

What is Pundit Review Radio?

On Boston’s Talk Station WRKO since 2005, Pundit Review Radio is where the old media meets the new. Each week we give voice to the work of the most influential leaders in the new media/citizen journalist revolution. Called “groundbreaking” by Talkers Magazine, this unique show brings the best of the blogs to the radio every Sunday evening from 6-8pm on AM680 WRKO, Boston’s Talk Station.

Bruce McQuain from Blackfive joined us once again for Someone You Should Know, our weekly tribute to the troops. Bruce spent 28 years in the U.S. Army and he is a veteran of the Vietnam war. He brings a perspective and understanding to these stories that we could never match.

This week Bruce told us about two members of Company A, 3rd Battalion, 20th Special Forces Group, Florida National Guard,

Sgt. 1st Class Andrew Lewis
Lewis

Sgt. 1st Class Joshua D. Betten
Betten

Once rescued, their report made it obvious that a large (at least 30-man) enemy force was massing to attack the base. But the quick and determined actions of these two Soldiers gave enough advanced warning that the base was spared an attack. Both men defended not only each other, but all of the men in the base by their quick and effective actions, and each was awarded the Silver Star for their bravery and quick response in the face of an overwhelming enemy assault

The Someone You Should Know radio collaboration began as an extension of Matt Burden’s series at Blackfive. Bruce does an incredible job with the series every week. The Pundit Review Radio Podcast RSS feed can be found here.

What is Pundit Review Radio?

On Boston’s Talk Station WRKO since 2005, Pundit Review Radio is where the old media meets the new. Each week we give voice to the work of the most influential leaders in the new media/citizen journalist revolution. Called “groundbreaking” by Talkers Magazine, this unique show brings the best of the blogs to the radio every Sunday evening from 6-8pm on AM680 WRKO, Boston’s Talk Station.