Thursday, October 30, 2008

Public Campaign Financing: Voting Problems


Barack Obama has purchased 30 minutes of prime time on almost every TV news outlet. With private funding, he can afford it at a million dollars a pop, but John McCain can't. Wednesday, on To the Point, will this be the last year for public financing of presidential campaigns? That story and voting problems that could make a difference on Election Day.

The To The Point Radio Program hosted by Warren Olney can be heard weekdays starting at 12 PM PT on Bosco Radio News and Informaion. The link is in the sidebar. The show is heard in many markets on Public Radio including KCRW FM 89.9 in the Los Angeles area.

This show is now archived and can be heard via www.kcrw.com

Sunday, October 26, 2008

T Boone Pickens on 60 Minutes


Charlie Rose made his debut as a 60 Minutes contributor this past week with a profile of Texas oil and gas maven T. Boone Pickens. Rose's profile of Pickens was broadcast this past Sunday, Oct. 26, at 7 p.m. ET/PT. Also link to 60 Minutes via the Bosco Radio: News and Information channel in the sidebar at 7 PM PT/10 PM ET each Sunday night.

The profile of Pickens takes Rose to the billionaire's Texas ranch and to the football stadium at Oklahoma State University that Pickens built for his alma mater. Rose and Pickens also go to the Democratic Convention, where he sought support for his "Pickens' Plan" to lessen America's dependence on foreign oil.

There at the convention, 60 Minutes cameras videotaping the report capture the icy moment when Pickens - the man who financed the infamous "swift boat" ads attacking 2004 Democratic presidential candidate John Kerry - runs into Kerry to create a visibly difficult encounter for both men.

Rose later asks Pickens whether he has any reservations over the ads that were roundly criticized and partially blamed for Kerry's loss to George W. Bush. "None," responds Pickens. "You'd do it over again tomorrow?" asks Rose. "What I knew then, I know that same thing now and nothing has changed my mind about what I felt like," he tells Rose.

Rose, who has hosted and produced his own daily interview program, "Charlie Rose," on PBS since 1991, returns to CBS News in a similar role he filled on another CBS news magazine, "60 Minutes II," where he was correspondent from 1999-2005. Rose is scheduled to appear from time to time.

The award-winning journalist will continue as executive producer and executive editor of Charlie Rose, now carried by 215 PBS stations around the country.Charlie Rose can also be seen and heard every weeknight at 9:30 PM PT/12:30 AM ET on Bosco Radio News and Information channel.

Past episodes and segments of 60 Minutes are archived at www.cbs.com

Source: CBS News

Saturday, October 25, 2008

Stereolab on Morning Becomes Eclectic


British Alt-rock group Stereolab brought their bright and shiny music to the Morning Becomes Eclectic radio program on Friday. They chatted with host Nic Harcourt and performed live on the daily radio program featuring new and various types of music.

Morning Becomes Eclectic can be heard live each weekday starting at 9:00 AM PT/12:00 Noon ET. It can be listened to in the Los Angeles area on KCRW FM 89.9 or streamed live on www.kcrw.com. Also link each day via Bosco Radio: Music in our sidebar.

The show with Stereolab is archived at www.kcrw.com

Thursday, October 23, 2008

One Wild and Crazy Book


Born Standing Up By Steve Martin (5 scoops of Bosco)
Reviewed By Allen Bacon, Editor, The Daily Bosco

I've always liked Steve Martin. From the first time I saw him doing his "Ramblin' Guy" banjo routine on the Smothers Brothers Show ("This half of the room sing along. Now this half. Now a quarter of the room. This three quarters. Now, 1/8. ...7/8") I was hooked. Then I found out that he was from my home county Orange County, CA. And I found out that he was a great writer. He has penned some great plays and novelas over the years.

So, it was with interest I read his book "Born Standing Up" a biography of Martin's life in standup comedy. The book is a quick read and not too long. What I found most fascinating is the accounts of his life in Orange County. From going to Garden Grove High School to working at Knott's Berry Farm at the Birdcage Theatre and at Disneyland in the Horseshoe Revue, it was like going on a romp of my childhood as well.

It's like reading a T. Jefferson Parker or Bentley Little novel for me. I know Orange County like the back of my hand and when Martin and the aforementioned authors reference my former childhood haunts, it's fascinating. All the fun he was having as a kid in the OC away from home is juxtaposed against his home life which by his admission was dull and strict and the history of the time (like the JFK assasination and other historical moments) form the backdrop for this book.

I also found interesting his friendships with future music stars like Linda Rondstadt, and Don Henley and the rest of the Eagles before they named themselves. He was intimidated of Rondstadt because of her sexuality and Henley and Martin debated whether the band should be called The Eagles or simply Eagles, as they became. Then of course there is the relationships with the Saturday Night Live casts which are also interesting.

As you would imagine, Martin injects his quirky humor and sensibilities for writing into the book. Complete with a great cover design with dull graytone and Gloss UV coated embossed yellow writing, it looks great. I highly recommend it for an afternoon read. You will not be disappointed if you have enjoyed Martin's career.

Born Standing Up was released in paperback this past week. The Bosco rating system is based on a scale of one to five...five being best.

Wednesday, October 22, 2008

Will Falling Oil Prices Effect Alt Energy?


Both McCain and Obama are touting alternative energy to combat global warming and create new jobs. What about the collapse in the price of oil? Wednesday (Oct. 22), on the To the Point radio program, if oil gets any cheaper, will wind, solar, nuclear and other sources of power be competitive? How will the oil producing countries respond to the economic crisis?

To The Point
, a daily talk show hosted by news broadcast veteran Warren Olney can be heard daily on public radio stations across the country. The show can also be heard via link in Bosco Radio: News and Information starting at 12 noon PT/ 3 PM ET. Archives of this show and past shows are at www.kcrw.com

Tuesday, October 21, 2008

Jackson Browne Comes Back Just In Time


Jackson Browne
Time The Conqueror
Inside Records
5 Scoops of Bosco

By Allen Bacon
Editor, The Daily Bosco


It has been six years since Jackson Browne has released an album of new material. Last month he broke the drought with his 13th studio album, Time the Conqueror. This is the first album under his own independent label Inside Records.

Given the fact that we are a few weeks away from the election and given Browne's political and social activism the timing couldn't be more appropriate.

Time The Conqueror represents some of the most honest, beautiful, emotional, passionate and direct songwriting and music of the Rock and Roll Hall of Famer's 30 plus year career.

Produced by Browne and Paul Dieter, the support group that have been with him since 1996 are back and sounding better than ever: They are Bassist Kevin McCormick, Guitarist Mark Goldenberg, Drummer Mauricio Lewak and keyboard player and singer Jeff Young. They are joined by the beautiful vocal stylings of Chavonne Morris and Alethea Mills. Browne worked with Morris and Mills on the Levite Camp debut album that he co-produced in 2006.

The songs range from the political ("Drums of War", "The Arms of Night", "From the Arms of Hunger" and the hard driving "Where Were You" about the Hurricane Katrina Response) to the beautiful in "Going To Cuba" and "Say Yeah" to the sensual "Live Nude Cabaret".

To all of the Jackson Browne fans who were yearning for an album of new material, the wait is over and it was worth the wait.

The Bosco Rating system is based on a numerical value of one to five. Five is best.

Monday, October 20, 2008

This Is Not The MLB and Fox Celebrating


By Allen Bacon
Editor, The Daily Bosco


Out of all the wonderful and compelling World Series possibilities when the MLB playoffs started, I bet a lot of people were not going..."Boy, I would really like to see a Phillies - Devil Rays World Series".

Not taking anything away from the great accomplishments of the two teams...they are great teams with great stories but...We could have had an all Chicago series. We could have had an all Los Angeles series. We could have had Cubs-Red Sox. We could have had Dodgers-Red Sox. But no, we end up with Phillies- Devil Rays. That collective scream of pain you hear are the folks at Fox and the MLB. Outside of the greater St. Pete-Tampa and the city of Brotherly Love, not too many folks are going to be compelled to watch this when it gets underway on Wednesday night. It's going to be a ratings disaster of monumental proportions.

And before the playoffs fade from memory let me state for the record that putting the playoffs on TBS, a station a lot of us don't receive, is wrong. Another great move from the MLB front office. Like when they charge to listen to their games on mlb.com.

Saturday, October 18, 2008

Aqualung (Matt Hale) on MBE Archived


English singer song writer Aqualung, AKA Matt Hales, performed live and chattted with host Nic Harcourt on the Morning Becomes Eclectic Radio program Friday. He performed songs from his latest release Words and Music.

Aqualung is best known for his song Strange and Beautiful which was featured on a Volkswagen Beetle commercial. His music has been featured in the TV Shows Gossip Girl, The O.C., Grey's Anatomy, Scrubs, CSI, and more.

Morning Becomes Eclectic, a daily exploration of music and sound hosted by Nic Harcourt, can be heard daily on public radio. Listen to the show by linking through Bosco Radio: Music at 9 AM PT/12 Noon ET. The show is heard in the Los Angeles area over KCRW-FM 89.9 and via www.kcrw.com

The show with Aqualung has been archived and can be accessed by going to www.kcrw.com

Thursday, October 16, 2008

Fact-Checking the Third Presidential Debate


By Richard Wolf and Ken Dilanian, USA TODAY

A look at the claims made by Republican John McCain and Democrat Barack Obama at the third and final presidential debate Wednesday:

Tax cuts


The claim: Obama said his tax plan offers three times the tax relief as McCain's plan does for the middle class.

The facts:
The non-partisan Tax Policy Center shows that is the case for the first year of Obama's plan, but not over the long haul, and only for a narrow slice of the "middle class" — those making between $37,595 and $66,354. The group says Obama's plan would save those families $1,042 in the first year, compared with McCain's $319. In later years, the difference is not nearly as great.

Bill Ayers


The claim: McCain criticized Obama's association with former Chicago radical Bill Ayers, whom McCain called "a guy who in 2001 said he wished he would have bombed more."

The facts:
Ayers was a member of the Weather Underground, a radical group that engaged in domestic bombings to protest the Vietnam War. He was in hiding for years after three Weathermen died in 1970 when bombs they were making exploded. Federal charges against him for crossing state lines to incite riots and conspiracy were dropped because of prosecutorial misconduct.

In a New York Times story published by coincidence on Sept. 11, 2001, about his memoirs, Fugitive Days, he said, "I don't regret setting bombs … I feel we didn't do enough."

These days, Ayers is a professor at the University of Illinois at Chicago who has drawn kind words from the city's mayor.

Ayers and Obama have moved in some of the same circles. Ayers was a founder of the Chicago Annenberg Challenge, a school-reform group. Obama chaired its board from 1995 to 1999. In 1995, Ayers hosted a brunch for Obama, who was running for the Illinois Senate. In 1997, they were on a juvenile justice panel sponsored by the University of Chicago. Ayers gave $200 to Obama's 2001 state Senate campaign, and the two were on a 2002 panel on intellectualism that was co-sponsored by the Chicago Public Library.

Voter-registration fraud


The claim: McCain said the Obama campaign has contributed to an organization that is perpetrating "one of the greatest frauds" in American campaign history.

The facts: The organization — the Association of Community Organizations for Reform Now, or ACORN — says it has registered 1.3 million people this year. Obama's campaign paid an ACORN affiliate, Citizens Services Inc., $832,000 this year for get-out-the-vote efforts in the Democratic primaries, according to the non-partisan CQ MoneyLine, which tracks campaign spending. Republicans have repeatedly accused the group of submitting fraudulent registrations; Obama said it had hired some people who "just filled out a bunch of names." What's not clear is whether any of the fraudulent registrations can lead to fraudulent votes.

Negative advertising


The claim: Obama said McCain's television advertisements have been "100% negative." McCain said that wasn't true.

The facts: Obama's claim apparently was based on an analysis released Oct. 8 by the Wisconsin Advertising Project at the University of Wisconsin. The report said, "During the week of September 28-October 4, nearly 100% of the McCain campaign's advertisements were negative. During the same period, 34% of the Obama campaign's ads were negative." But the report also said that overall 73% of McCain's ads and 61% of Obama's have been negative. The study used information obtained from TNS Media Intelligence/Campaign Media Analysis Group, which analyzes data on the airing of every presidential ad in the top 186 TV markets in the country.

The McCain campaign last night released its own tally of TNS Media Intelligence/Campaign Media Analysis Group data based on total ad spending, saying that the Obama campaign had spent $42 million on negative ads to McCain's $27 million, and that Obama had run 81,638 negative ads to McCain's 59,835.

Iraq


The claim:
McCain said Democratic vice presidential candidate Joe Biden had proposed dividing Iraq into three countries. He called it a "cockamamie idea."

The facts:
In 2006, Biden, as chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, proposed partitioning Iraq into three regions — Kurdish, Shiite and Sunni — with a central government in Baghdad. He said it would "maintain a united Iraq by decentralizing it, giving each ethno-religious group … room to run its own affairs, while leaving the central government in charge of common interests." He did not propose that it become three separate countries.

Supreme Court

The claim: McCain said that Obama voted against Associate Justice Stephen Breyer and Chief Justice John Roberts.

The facts: Obama voted against Roberts, but he was not in the Senate when Breyer was approved by the Senate in 1994. Obama became a senator in 2005.

Health Care


The claim: In discussing his $5,000-per-family tax credit for health care, McCain said the average cost of a health care plan is $5,800.

The facts: The average cost of a family plan purchased by employers this year hit a new high, $12,106, according to an annual survey of nearly 2,000 employers by the non-partisan Kaiser Family Foundation, a research group based in Menlo Park, Calif. Individual coverage premiums averaged $4,479.

Tuesday, October 14, 2008

Presidential Race Enters Last Lap


With 22 days until the presidential election, Barack Obama's ahead in the polls with a chance to make history.

On Tuesday's To the Point radio program, McCain and Palin have been stalled by the economy. Is Obama being straightforward about the crisis? Are voters straightforward with pollsters when it comes to Obama?

To The Point is a daily national talk show on public radio hosted by broadcast journalist Warren Olney. Check local listings for the public radio station in your area that carries it. Or link to the show weekdays via Bosco Radio News and Information starting at 12 noon PT/3 PM ET

This show about the Presidential Election has been archived and can be accessed via www.kcrw.com

Monday, October 13, 2008

The Vinny and Harry Show


As if this year's National League Championship Series in baseball wasn't fun enough with two old rivals...the Dodgers and Phillies, the announcers aren't two shabby either. Both are legendary in their own right.

Vin Scully, probably one of the greatest baseball announcers of all times is at the mic again for another post season with the Dodgers. On the Philadelphia side is a guy you probably are more familiar with as the voice of the NFL This Week Highlight show...Harry Kalas. Harry is also the longtime voice, and a great one, for the Phils.

Both teams get together next for Game 5 of the series on Wednesday with the Phillies up 3-1.

Link to all the Major league playoff games, audio and video on Bosco Radio Sports powered by MLB.com. It's in the sidebar.

Friday, October 10, 2008

Rachael Yamagata on MBE Archived


Singer-songwriter Rachael Yamagata made an appearance on the Morning Becomes Eclectic radio program on Friday. She performed songs from her new album Elephants...Teeth Sinking Into Hearts. Tha album was also released on Friday as well.

Morning Becomes Eclectic
, the daily exploration of music of all genres hosted by Nic Harcourt can be heard everyday live through www.kcrw.com or if you are in the Los Angeles area on KCRW FM 89.9. The live show and archives of past shows can be accesed through the Bosco Radio Music links in the sidebar.

The program starts at 9 AM PT/12 PM ET. The show with Rachael Yamagata has been archived and can be accessed on www.kcrw.com

Over on Bosco Radio Sports we have links to both of the Major League Baseball Championship series, NCAA soccer, cricket, and much more. All live and all in the sidebar.

A reminder...on Saturday's Prairie Home Companion, legendary English Baladeer Nick Lowe will perform. The show comes from St. Paul Minnesota this Saturday live at 3 PM PT/6 PM ET and can be accessed through Bosco Radio: Nostalgia and Entertainment.

Thursday, October 9, 2008

k.d. Lang on Morning Becomes Eclectic


The sublime sound of k.d. Lang was heard in a special performance on the Morning Becomes Eclectic radio program on Thursday morning.

Lang performed with her band and they played songs from her new album. She talked about her career and current projects with host Nic Harcourt.

Morning Becomes Eclectic, an adventure in new music, is on each weekday. The program starts at 9 AM PT/12 PM ET.

You can hear the show through KCRW 89.9 FM in the Los Angeles area or tune into www.kcrw.com. You can also access the show through Bosco Radio Music. The link is in the sidebar. The k.d. Lang show is archived at www.kcrw.com

Wednesday, October 8, 2008

Fact-Checking The Second Debate


By Jim Kuhnhenn and Calvin Woodward
From Associated Press


Republican John McCain expressed incredulity in the presidential debate Tuesday that Democrat Barack Obama would tip off the enemy by saying publicly that he'd attack al-Qaida in Pakistan under certain conditions. "Remarkable," McCain said during the presidential debate, meaning remarkably irresponsible.

Lost in his withering criticism: McCain took the same position as Obama, a year ago, when he said, "Sure. We have to," when asked if he'd go after Osama bin Laden in Pakistan.

Both candidates stretched facts, sometimes past the breaking point, as they addressed the financial crisis and misrepresented each other's position on health care during their second presidential debate.

One of the night's sharpest exchanges was over what should be done if the U.S. knew the whereabouts of bin Laden and his terrorists in sovereign Pakistan, and Pakistani officials were unable or unwilling to strike. Obama repeated that he'd attack across the border in that instance.

"Sen. Obama likes to talk loudly,' McCain said in response. "In fact, he said he wants to announce that he's going to attack Pakistan. Remarkable."

McCain went on: "I'm not going to telegraph my punches, which is what Sen. Obama did. And I'm going to act responsibly, as I have acted responsibly throughout my military career and throughout my career in the United States Senate."

In an October 2007 interview with Military Times, however, McCain's position was indistinguishable from Obama's.

Asked if "you'd go get him" if U.S. forces had a fix on bin Laden in Pakistan, McCain said: "Sure. Sure. We have to, and I'm sure that after the initial flurry, that whoever our friends are, wherever he is, would be relieved because, as I mentioned to you before, he's still very effective in the world, very, very effective."

McCain broadened that threat to say he'd target the Taliban operating in Pakistan, too: "I think that if we knew of al-Qaida - more specifically Taliban, it's mainly Taliban that are operating in these places - that we have to do what's necessary. We don't have to advertise it. We don't have to embarrass or humiliate the Pakistani government."

Also in the debate:

OBAMA: Said McCain's proposal to give people a tax credit in exchange for treating employers' health insurance contributions as taxable wages amounts to "what one hand giveth, the other hand taketh away."

THE FACTS: Obama's suggestion that McCain's health care plan is a wash for families is misleading. McCain offers families a $5,000 tax credit to help them buy health insurance. The corresponding increase in taxable wages would result in a much smaller cost than the value of the tax credit, at least at first. Over time, the value of the tax credit may diminish as premiums rise. However, the Tax Policy Center estimates that McCain's plan would increase the federal deficit by $1.3 trillion over 10 years - mainly because it would lead to less tax revenue coming in, meaning it is a true tax break overall.

---

McCAIN: Said he would provide a $5,000 refundable tax credit for families to buy health insurance "rather than mandates or fines for small businesses as Sen. Obama's plan calls for."

THE FACTS: Obama's health care plan does not impose mandates or fines on small business. He would provide small businesses with a refundable tax credit of up to 50 percent on health premiums paid on behalf of their employees. Also, large employers that do not offer meaningful coverage or contribute to the cost of coverage would be required to pay a percentage of payroll toward the costs of a public insurance plan. But small businesses would be exempt from that requirement.

---

OBAMA: "Actually I'm cutting more than I'm spending so that it will be a net spending cut."

THE FACTS: The bipartisan Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget estimates Obama would increase spending by $425 billion over four years and reduce spending by $144 billion for a net increase in the deficit of $281 billion. Obama has said he'll cut pork-barrel programs and the costs of the war in Iraq to pay for his programs - as well as raise taxes on the wealthy - but the specifics of his new spending plans outweigh the few spending cuts he's identified.

---

McCAIN: Said one way out of the financial crisis is to "stop sending $700 billion a year to countries that don't like us."

THE FACTS: Although he didn't spell it out, he was referring - as he has in the past - to purchases of oil from countries hostile to the U.S. The figure is inflated and misleading. The U.S. is not spending nearly that much on oil imports and roughly one-third of what it does spend goes to friendly countries such as Canada, Mexico and Britain.

---

OBAMA: Blamed some of the problem of terrorism in the Afghanistan-Pakistan region on Bush administration policy in Pakistan, saying "We can't coddle, as we did, a dictator, give him billions of dollars and then he's making peace treaties with the Taliban and militants."

THE FACTS: Obama oversimplifies ex-President Pervez Musharraf's approach to making peace deals. In fact, the U.S.-backed Musharraf focused more heavily on military action, launching blistering attacks on the militants at times and negotiating peace deals with them at others. Obama also ignores the fact that Pakistan's newly elected civilian government, also U.S.-supported, is seeking the same kind of peace deals and has stepped back from heavy-handed tactics that were pursued by the Musharraf government.

---

McCAIN: Said Obama had voted for tax increases "94 times."

THE FACTS: This inflated count, heard before, includes repetitive votes as well as votes to cut taxes for the middle class while raising them on the rich. An analysis by factcheck.org found that 23 of the votes were for measures that would have produced no tax increase at all, seven were in favor of measures that would have lowered taxes for many, 11 would have increased taxes on only those making more than $1 million a year.

---

OBAMA: "I believe this is a final verdict on the failed economic policies of the last eight years, strongly promoted by President Bush and supported by Sen. McCain, that essentially said that we should strip away regulations, consumer protections, let the market run wild, and prosperity would rain down on all of us."

THE FACTS: McCain has indeed favored less regulation over the years but supported tighter rules and accountability on Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac two years before the start of a financial crisis prompted in part by those giant mortgage underwriters. Obama was not a leader in that unsuccessful effort. Some of the current problems can be traced to legislation passed in 1999 that lifted many regulations over the financial industry. That deregulation was championed by then-Sen. Phil Gramm, R-Texas, a McCain supporter, but also by President Clinton, who signed the legislation, and by former Clinton Treasury Secretary Robert Rubin, now a top Obama economic adviser.

---

MCAIN: "Oil drilling offshore now is vital so we can bridge the gap between imported oil ... and it will reduce the price of a barrel of oil. ... We've got to drill offshore and do it now."

THE FACTS: The government estimates that opening the Atlantic and Pacific coasts and eastern Gulf of Mexico to drilling "will not have a significant impact on domestic crude oil and natural gas production or prices before 2030." Even then, it would only increase domestic oil production by 3 percent.

---

Associated Press writers Tom Raum, Andrew Taylor, Kevin Freking, Anne Gearan, H. Josef Hebert and Christopher Wills contributed to this report.

Tuesday, October 7, 2008

Economy Dominates Presidential Debate


By Kathy Kiely and David Jackson, USA Today

John McCain and Barack Obama exchanged blame and offered proposals to address the nation's financial crisis during Tuesday's presidential debate, with McCain promising aid to struggling homeowners and Obama saying the government must assure the massive federal financial rescue package works as planned.
The town hall-style debate focused immediately on the economy and stayed on it for much of the night, with McCain calling for the Treasury Department to buy up troubled mortgages — with some conditions — and renegotiate them with homeowners at the current value of homes. His campaign estimated the cost of the program at $300 billion.

"Is it expensive? Yes, but we all know, my friends, until we stabilize home values in America, we're never going to start turning around and creating jobs and fixing our economy, and we've got to get some trust and confidence back to America," McCain said.

"It is my proposal. It's not Sen. Obama's proposal. It's not President Bush's proposal," he added.

Obama called the current downturn "the worst financial crisis since the Great Depression" and said the government must assure that the financial rescue package signed into law last week worked as planned.

"I believe this is a final verdict on the failed economic policies of the last eight years, strongly promoted by President Bush and supported by Senator McCain," he said.

The debate began hours after the Dow Jones industrial average tumbled another 508 points, and the resulting financial anxiety is looming large over tonight's session.

The two clashed repeatedly over taxes and spending, with McCain saying that "nailing down Sen. Obama's various tax proposals is like nailing Jell-O to a wall."

"I'm going to ask the American people to understand that there are some programs that we'll going to have to eliminate," McCain said, but he limited that proposal to "programs that aren't working."

Obama said the nation's debt problems start "with Washington. I think we've got to show that we've got good habits, because if we run up trillion-dollar debts that get passed on to the next generation, then a lot of people are going to think there's easy money out there."

McCain accused Obama of being the Senate's second-highest recipient of donations from individuals at Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, the two now-disgraced mortgage industry giants.

"There were some of us who stood up against this," McCain said. "There were others who took a hike."

Obama shot back that McCain's campaign manager, Rick Davis, has a stake in a Washington lobbying firm that received thousands of dollars a month from Freddie Mac until recently.

NBC's Tom Brokaw moderated the debate. Questions came from an audience of 80 Nashville-area voters, who are seated in a semi-circle in front of the candidates. Members of the audience were selected by The Gallup Organization to represent a demographic cross-section of undecided voters in the region.

The candidates covered other issues as well, including:

•Energy policy. McCain called for more nuclear energy and alternative energy sources, and again called for more oil drilling. Obama said McCain "talks a lot about drilling, but added, "We have 3% of the world's oil reserves and use 25% of the world's oil. We can't simply drill our way out of the problem."

•Health care. Obama noted McCain's proposal would give individuals a $5,000 tax credit — but tax their employer-provided health care as income.McCain said Obama will "impose mandates." on health care.

•Foreign policy. McCain, as he has for months, said Obama "does not understand our national security challenges." Obama said "there are things I don't understand, including "How we ended up invading a country that had nothing to do with 9/11, while Osama bin Laden was setting up base camps" in Pakistan.

Obama also said he would be willing to send U.S. troops into Pakistan if necessary to hunt down bin Laden. That brought a chiding from McCain, who said a president must speak responsibly about military actions. "The point is that I know how to handle these crises...I'm not going to telegraph my punches, which is what Senator Obama did."

The session here at Belmont University fell during a week when McCain began to sharpen his attacks on Obama, and Republican surrogates — most notably, vice presidential nominee candidate Sarah Palin — revived efforts to make an issue of Obama's association with Bill Ayers, a 1960s radical turned education professor.

Ayers, 67, was a founder of the Weather Underground, a student group that opposed the Vietnam War and was involved in several bombing incidents. Now a professor at on the University of Illinois-Chicago faculty, Ayers helped Obama on several of his state Senate races. The two served together on the board of a Chicago foundation's board that gives grants to civics and arts organizations.

Obama has played down their relationship, referring to Ayers — who lives several blocks away from him on Chicago's South Side — as "a guy who lives in my neighborhood." The Democrat has also denouced the violence and views of Ayers' former group.

McCain launched his sharpest attack to date on Obama on Monday, saying voters do not know nearly enough about the first-term senator from Illinois and stopped just short of calling his rival a liar. "Who is the real Barack Obama?" he asked an audience in Albuquerque.

Obama, in Asheville, N.C., accused McCain of trying to distract voters' attention from the troubled economy. "I cannot imagine anything more important to talk about," he said.

The Democrat's campaign, meanwhile, released a video about McCain's links to Charles Keating, the owner of a failed savings and loan in McCain's home state of Arizona. Keating went to jail for his role in a banking scandal. McCain, along with four other senators, became the subject of a Senate ethics investigation that led to him reimbursing the U.S. Treasury and Keating for contributions and plane trips he received from the disgraced S&L owner.

Contributing: Mark Memmott in Nashville; Randy Lilleston in McLean, Va.; Associated Press

Photo: Jim Bourg, Associated Press

Monday, October 6, 2008

The Candidates and the "Vision Thing"


Barack Obama has great expectations for improving the lives of Americans. John McCain wants to cut both taxes and spending. Monday (10.06.08), on the To the Point radio program, the first President Bush called it "the vision thing." What role do the candidates see for the federal government? Can they make good on their promises in the midst of the economic crisis?

To the Point, hosted by veteran reporter Warren Olney can be heard daily through your local Public Radio affiliate. Also access the show Monday through Friday at 12 noon PT/ 3 PM ET on Bosco Radio: News and Information. The link is in the sidebar.

The Monday Program has been archived and can be accessed at www.kcrw.com

Sunday, October 5, 2008

Waiting Till Next Season....Again


It's official. It will now be at least 101 years before the Chicago Cubs hoist another World Series Champion banner. That's because they lost 3-1 to the Los Angeles Dodgers Saturday night to be swept from the National League Playoffs three games to none to prolong the agony of an entire city...at least the North side.

On paper, this looked like the year they could do it. The Cubs finished with the best record in the National League and they held off the Milwaukee Brewers down the stretch to claim the Central Division. But they drew the hottest team in baseball...the LA Dodgers, in the first round and were dominated by the Western Division champions.

Thursday, October 2, 2008

Palin, Biden Spar On Iraq, Economic Crisis


By Jim Kuhnen
Associated Press


Vice president candidate Sarah Palin accused Barack Obama of voting against funding for U.S. troops in combat Thursday night in their much-anticipated campaign debate and chastised his Democratic running mate, Joe Biden, for defending the move, "especially with your son in the National Guard" and headed for Iraq.

"John McCain voted against funding for the troops," as well, Biden countered, adding that the Republican presidential candidate had been "dead wrong on the fundamental issues relating to the conduct of the war."

Biden did not reply to Palin's mention of his son, Beau, the Delaware attorney general, who is scheduled to fly to Iraq with his National Guard unit on Friday.

Palin has a young son who is in Iraq with the Alaska National Guard, although she did not refer to it.

The exchange over Iraq was easily the most personal, and among the most pointed, as the two running mates debated across 90 minutes on a stage at Washington University.

They also clashed over energy, the economy, global warming and more in their only debate, with little more than one month remaining in the campaign and McCain struggling to regain his footing.

Republican officials disclosed earlier in the day that he was conceding the battleground state of Michigan to Obama. The state voted Democratic four years ago, but McCain had spent millions trying to place it in his column.

Biden was scathing in his criticism of McCain's position on the Iraq war, calling him the "odd man out" for his refusal to accept a timeline for the withdrawal of U.S. troops.

But Palin countered that a timetable was tantamount to "a white flag of surrender in Iraq," and at a moment when victory was "within sight."

She also said Biden had once supported McCain's view of the war, and noted that he had once said of Obama that he wasn't ready to be commander in chief ... "and I know again that you opposed the move that he made to try to cut off funding for the troops and I respect you for that."

"I don't know how you can defend that position now but - I know that you know, especially with your son in the National Guard."

As for Obama, she said, "Another story there. Anyone I think who can cut off funding for the troops after promising not to - that's another story."

Biden's reply was in clipped tones. "John McCain voted to cut off funding for the troops. Let me say that again. John McCain voted against an amendment containing $1 billion, 600 million dollars" for protective equipment that is "protecting the governor's son and, pray God, my son and a lot of other sons and daughters. He voted against it."

Palin, who has been governor of her state less than two years, was under intense pressure to demonstrate a strong grasp of the issues as she stepped onto the stage. Polls show the public has become increasingly skeptical of her readiness for high public office.

As is her custom on the campaign, she spoke in familiar terms, saying "betcha" rather than "bet you" and "gonna" rather than "going to."

She also spoke to the home folks. "Here's a shout-out" to third graders at Gladys Wood Elementary School in Alaska. She said they would all receive extra credit for watching the debate.

"Can I call you Joe?" she asked Biden as they shook hands before taking their places behind identical lecterns.

He readily agreed she could - and she used it to effect more than an hour later. "Say it ain't so, Joe," she said as she smilingly criticized him at one point for focusing his comments on the Bush administration rather than the future.

She made only one obvious stumble, when she twice referred to the top U.S. general in Afghanistan as "Gen. McClellan." In fact, his name is David McKiernan.

Biden's burden was not nearly as fundamental. Although he has long had a reputation for long-windedness, he is a veteran of more than 35 years in the Senate, with a strong knowledge of foreign policy as well as domestic issues.

For much of the evening, the debate unfolded in traditional vice presidential fashion - the running mates praising their own presidential candidate and denigrating the other.

Palin said Obama had voted to raise taxes 94 times - an allegation that Biden disputed and then countered. By the same reckoning, he said, McCain voted "477 times to raise taxes."

They clashed over energy policy, as well, when Palin said Obama's vote for a Bush administration-backed bill granted breaks to the oil industry. By contrast, she said that as governor, she had stood up to the same industry, and noted that McCain had voted against the bill Obama supported.

Biden said that in the past decade, McCain had voted "20 times against funding alternative energy sources and thinks, I guess, the only answer is drill, drill, drill."

"The chant is, `drill, baby drill," Palin countered quickly, unwilling to yield to Biden on that issue - or any other.

Photo: Reuters

To The Point Discusses Palin as VP Candidate


Sarah Palin's speech to the Republican convention made her a household name, but her interviews with reporters have bombed in the polls and with many Republicans. On Thursday, on the To the Point radio program, which Sarah Palin will show up for the vice presidential debate? Will she or Joe Biden provide the material for late-night comedians?

To the Point is a daily talk show hosted by news veteran Warren Olney. Link to the show via Bosco Radio: News and Information at 12 PM PT/ 3 PM ET. The show on Sarah Palin has been archived at www.kcrw.com

Wednesday, October 1, 2008

Thoughts and Ideas On The MLB Postseason


Ozzie Guillen and Jim Thome celebrate the White Sox 1-0 win over the Twins to lock up the American League Central Division title on Tuesday night. The MLB Playoffs start today with three games starting at 12 Noon PT/3:00 ET

By Allen Bacon
Editor, The Daily Bosco


Far be it from me to argue with genius. But I have to respectively disagree with Los Angeles Angel Manager Mike Scioscia's idea to tweak the Major League Baseball Playoff format a bit to make it harder for the Wild Card team to advance.

Under Scioscia's plan, which was discussed in Orange County Register's Randy Youngman's column this week, the Wild Card team would only get one home game in the divisional playoffs. The format involving the wild card team's game would be 2-1-2 with the wild card only getting one game at home on the third game. The current format for all playoff series in the first round is 2-2-1.

Scioscia would also like the teams to be seeded according to records with the Wild Card team playing the team with the best record in the first round. And he would allow teams that are in the same division to play each other in the first round which is not the case currently.

The reason why I disagree with the manager is that often times the Wild Card team is better than the two teams that win the division. I thought one of the reasons for the wild card was to not only create more interest and generate more money but to allow deserving teams that may have a better record than the other divisional winners a chance to play in the postseason.

For instance, this season, Milwaukee had a better record than the entire Western Division of the National League. They would have won the West going away. So they deserve to be there just has much as the Dodgers...if not more so.

I do agree with the Angel manager on the second point. The playoffs should be seeded, just like the NBA or NHL. Based on records...1 plays 4 and 2 plays 3. And teams in the same division should be able to play each other in the first round.

Some more baseball thoughts as we head to the postseason: I was thinking of all the compelling possible matchups for the World Series. Of course there is the possibility of Chicago vs. Chicago (The El train series) or LA vs. LA (the Freeway series). And we may finally get one for the ages: Chicago Cubs vs. Boston Red Sox. (two of the oldest teams in the two oldest ballparks). Then it could be Tampa Bay vs. the Dodgers. The youngest franchise against the oldest franchise. Or Tampa Bay vs. Chicago. One team has never been in the Fall Classic and the other team of course hasn't won or even been in one for a long, long time.

But my most obscure, and my favorite matchup: Chicago Cubs vs. Los Angeles Angels. Why? The old Los Angeles Angels in the Pacific Coast League were the farm team for the Chicago Cubs.

Every year at this time, I also start fantasizing about a tournament of champions between the winners of the major baseball leagues. A lot of them wrap up play about the same time. The MLB, Korean, and Japanese Leagues would all be ready to roll right into the series after their respective World Series were done at the end of October. I think it would be great for the game and you would see the best teams going head to head at their playoff best.

At any rate, it's my favorite time of year...it's October, the leaves are turning (except here in Southern California where summer is still here apparently), football has started, hockey and basketball is around the corner and the MLB Playoffs start today. Yes, my friend, it's great to be alive. Make yourself a Pumpkin Latte and let the good times roll.