It’s about Charles Keating, a bailout of banks by U.S. taxpayers, U.S. Senators and Congressional Ethics Committee Charges, oh and John McCain at the center.
It’s 3 A.M. There’s a phone in the White House and it’s ringing…
[ring ring, ring ring]
[SARAH PALIN] You caught the Barracuda. Who is this and what do you want?
[LEVI] Hey Mom, can you come pick me up? My ride left me again.
[SARAH PALIN] Look here Levi, I told you never to call me mom! Where are you anyway? Do you know what time it is?
[LEVI] Yeah, it’s time for you realize what Change really is.
It’s 3 A.M. There’s a phone in the White House and it’s ringing…
[ring ring, ring ring]
[McCAIN] Hello friend.
[BRIMLEY] John, Wilford Brimley here. Would you like to renew your subscription to Oatmeal Monthly?
It’s 3 A.M. There’s a phone in the White House and it’s ringing…
[ring ring, ring ring]
[McCAIN] Hello friend.
[AMERICAN EXPRESS] This is Steve with American Express. I’m calling to inform you that you’ve exceeded your limit at Caesar’s Palace. You need to make a payment immediately.
It’s 3 A.M. There’s a phone in the White House and it’s ringing…
[ring ring, ring ring]
[McCAIN] Hello friend.
[LIFE CALL] This is Steve, your 24HR Emergency Response System Operator. We’ve received your alert (”Hi Friend, I’ve fallen and I can’t get up!). As soon as I confirm your insurance provider, and receive their approval code, we will send a ambulance immediately.
It’s 3 A.M. There’s a phone in the White House and it’s ringing…
[ring ring, ring ring]
[CINDY McCAIN] WaaazzzUuuppp!
[LIMBAUGH] Cindy, dude I’m glad you answered. GW was over last night chillin and he snagged all my “Cotton.” Can you hook me up?
The National Enquirer broke a story about Sarah Palin and an alleged affair with her husband’s business partner, Brad Hanson.
It’s hard to believe the National Enquirer, but their newly acquired reputation as a reliable news source after it broke the John Edwards affair, have people wondering if the Palin affair is true.
Palin has proven so far that she has something to hide by refusing to talk to the media. The American people have a right to know everything about a candidate, public and personal. The candidate’s character and integrity is just as important as their policy views. So far, Palin has done a great job of providing neither.
So far, the media does not have anything to go by other than digging up information on their own. Palin is trying to play victim by blaming the media, but Palin’s refusal to even speak to the media, has many speculating about her honesty.
From Troopergate to Bristol’s baby mama Levi, Palin seems to be more of a “Jerry Springer” mom, than a hockey mom. The McCain camp dismissed the story as a “vicious lie”, but the National Enquirer fired back.
The National Enquirer’s coverage of a vicious war within Sarah Palin’s extended family includes several newsworthy revelations, including the resulting incredible charge of an affair plus details of family strife when the Governor’s daughter revealed her pregnancy. Following our John Edwards’ exclusives, our political reporting has obviously proven to be more detail-oriented than the McCain campaign’s vetting process. Despite the McCain camp’s attempts to control press coverage they find unfavorable, The Enquirer will continue to pursue news on both sides of the political spectrum.
Here is a funny video of the Sarah Palin Affair with a really cool song.
After reading this article and a few other on the “Keating Five Scandal,” it is my hope some reputable news organization does further digging into what exactly happened with Lincoln Savings & Loans, how much did it really cost the American people, and most importantly in this election year, what was McCain’s true role.
WASHINGTON – As William K. Black watches John McCain move toward the Republican presidential nomination, he thinks of a day 21 years ago that he considers one of the most troubling of his life.
A brand new song about Sarah Palin, called “Half-Baked Alaskan” has just surfaced on the web. It is a catchy, melodic tune with funny sound bytes from this Half-Baked Alaskan as well as other commentary.
Black, a senior federal savings and loan regulator at the time, attended a meeting at which he felt McCain and four other senators pressured federal regulators to back off from investigating the troubled Lincoln Savings and Loan.
“I remain very upset that what they did caused such damage,” said Black, now a professor at the University of Missouri at Kansas City, recalling how Lincoln’s bankruptcy cost the government $3 billion. Moreover, he said he believes McCain intervened partly because his wife had invested money with Lincoln chairman Charles Keating, a campaign contributor who let the McCains use his home in the Bahamas.Black, however, maintains that the Keating case was a textbook example of politicians, McCain among them, serving a major donor. And Dennis DeConcini, a former Democratic senator from Arizona and another of the Keating Five who hosted the key meeting in his office, said in an interview that McCain has gotten a relatively “free ride” even though DeConcini insists that McCain was the “most culpable” of the senators because he had the closest relationship with Keating.
McCain met Keating in 1982, during McCain’s successful run for Congress, and soon began accepting offers from Keating to fly McCain’s family on a corporate plane to Keating’s house in the Bahamas. McCain did not pay for most of the trips until years later, when the matter became public.
Keating, meanwhile, complained regularly to McCain that a proposed regulation would hurt his business. Known as the “direct investment” rule, it limited the amount that savings-and-loan institutions could invest from their assets. In 1985, after having “heard frequently from Charlie on the matter,” McCain decided that Keating’s complaints “were sound enough to warrant our assistance.” He cosponsored a resolution sought by Keating, but it failed to postpone the regulation, McCain wrote in his autobiography.
By then, Keating was one of McCain’s most important benefactors; McCain received $112,000 in campaign donations from Keating and his Lincoln associates, mostly between 1982 and 1986.
In the summer of 1986, while McCain was running for the Senate, the banking executive wrote him letters castigating the regulators. “The [bank board] is a mad dog turned loose in a police state,” Keating wrote in one of them. Weeks later, McCain accepted another trip aboard Keating’s jet to the Bahamas.
“I genuinely liked him and enjoyed being around him, especially on those occasions when Cindy and I and our oldest child, Meghan, were invited to his family’s vacation home in the Bahamas,” McCain wrote in his book. “I was never concerned that the time I spent enjoying Charlie’s company would raise public doubts about my judgment.”
With McCain having failed to postpone the regulation limiting investments by a savings and loan, Keating wanted him and other senators to get the Federal Home Loan Bank Board to grant Lincoln an exemption from the rule. McCain subsequently attended two meetings with regulators.
McCain said he felt he had a responsibility to a constituent whose company had 2,000 employees. Yet McCain had reason to be wary. His closeness to Keating had been an issue in his 1986 campaign, and aides urged him not to go to the meetings.
Four senators, including McCain, met with Edwin Gray, the chairman of the Federal Home Loan Bank Board in Washington that April in 1987. When Gray returned from the meeting, he told Black he was “very upset” that the senators were trying to pressure him, according to Black’s Senate testimony. Gray told Black to attend a follow-up meeting and take notes. Gray could not be reached for comment.
In the end, McCain received only a mild rebuke from the Ethics Committee for exercising “poor judgment” for intervening with the federal regulators on behalf of Keating. Still, he felt tarred by the affair.
“The appearance of it was wrong,” McCain said. “It’s a wrong appearance when a group of senators appear in a meeting with a group of regulators because it conveys the impression of undue and improper influence. And it was the wrong thing to do.”
McCain noted that Bennett, the independent counsel, recommended that McCain and Glenn be dropped from the investigation.
“For the first time in history, the Ethics Committee overruled the recommendation of the independent counsel,” McCain said. For his part, DeConcini is critical of McCain’s role in the affair. The two senators never were particularly cozy, and the stress of the public scrutiny worsened their relations.
In his memoir Senator Dennis DeConcini: From the Center of the Aisle, he praises the decision to keep McCain on the hook.
“It became clear to me, and it was later confirmed by Ethics Committee members, that Bennett was attempting to dismiss the charges against McCain, and in order to appear nonpartisan, he included Glenn in this effort,” DeConcini wrote with co-author Jack August. “Thanks to the three Democrats on the committee and perhaps with the help of Senator (Jesse) Helms (R-N.C.), however, the charges remained in place for all the senators under investigation. So all of us had to attend the 23-day public hearing, which was indeed a trial, before the six-member Senate Ethics Committee.”
In the book, DeConcini reiterates his allegation that McCain leaked to the media “sensitive information” about certain closed proceedings in order to hurt DeConcini, Riegle and Cranston. It’s a fairly serious charge. The Boston Globe revisited the Keating Five leaks in 2000. The story paraphrased a congressional investigator, Clark B. Hall, as personally concluding that “McCain was one of the principal leakers.” The newspaper also reported that McCain, under oath, had denied involvement with the leaks.
McCain owns up to his mistake this way:
“I was judged eventually, after three years, of using, quote, poor judgment, and I agree with that assessment.”
An unknown Wikipedia editor was hard at work late Thursday night overhauling Sarah Palin’s Wikipedia entry. NPR first reported the mysterious update. By Yuki Noguchi Listen Now[3 min 28 sec]
The good news is that Keating5.net was able to obtain the cached Wikipedia entries prior to the overhaul. Definitely some interesting changes. See for yourself.
On Friday, 15 minutes before the rumor that John McCain had picked Palin as his running mate, a Wikipedia editor discovered 30 mostly favorable changes had been made to the Alaska governor’s profile.
She was called “a politician of eye-popping integrity” and sections on her participation in a beauty pageant and her alleged use of influence to get her former brother-in-law fired were diminished.
Wikipedia is now restricting who can alter Palin’s page.”
Perhaps more tellingly, some of the same users editing her page were almost simultaneously updating McCain’s Wiki entry, adding information dealing with accuracy, sources and footnotes to each.
Does John McCain annoy you? He annoys us, too. Did you ever wonder, just what, John McCain does to annoy people? Like, is he the kind of guy who would pop your birthday balloon? Refuse to hold the door open for you? Yes, yes he is. Everyday, this site discovers one more, annoying thing John McCain does.
Three reporters from Arizona, on the condition of anonymity, also let me in on another incident involving McCain’s intemperateness. In his 1992 Senate bid, McCain was joined on the campaign trail by his wife, Cindy, as well as campaign aide Doug Cole and consultant Wes Gullett. At one point, Cindy playfully twirled McCain’s hair and said, ‘You’re getting a little thin up there.’ McCain’s face reddened, and he responded, ‘At least I don’t plaster on the makeup like a trollop, you cunt.’ McCain’s excuse was that it had been a long day. If elected president of the United States, McCain would have many long days.
“The man who was known as ‘McNasty’ in high school has erupted in foul-languaged tirades at political foes and congressional colleagues more-or-less throughout his career, and his quickness to anger has been an issue on the presidential campaign trail as evidence of his fury has surfaced.
“In the book [Schecter] outlines several other examples of McCain loosing his cool and raises the question of how that would affect a McCain presidency.”
What should voters make of this pattern? In February 2008 Tim Russert succinctly described McCain on MSNBC’s Morning Joe. A devilish grin spread from ear to ear as Russert, no McCain hater, leaned forward and spoke in a whisper, ‘He likes to fight.’ Russert got it right. But the big question isn’t whether McCain likes to fight: it’s who, when, and how.
Keating Economics: Bailouts, Ethics Charges & John McCain [video]
October 6, 2008 · Leave a Comment
It’s about Charles Keating, a bailout of banks by U.S. taxpayers, U.S. Senators and Congressional Ethics Committee Charges, oh and John McCain at the center.
Could he be any worse for America?
Read More on Keating Economics
You Tube Video: Keating Economics
→ Leave a CommentCategories: The Keating Five
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