RWH: Republican VP Nominee Sarah Palin in November 2006 Gubernatorial Debate
This week, Sen. John McCain and Alaska Governor Sarah Palin accepted the nomination for the Republican ticket. Palin won the gubernatorial seat in 2006 after defeating incumbent Governor Frank Murkowski in a Republican primary battle. She went on to beat Democratic Governor Tony Knowles in the general election by 7 percentage points.
9/7/2008: WASHINGTON, DC: 1 hr. 25 min. (From CSPAN: POLITICS/ELECTIONS ARCHIVE)
MPlayer
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
MPlayer | |
---|---|
MPlayer screenshot | |
Developed by | MPlayer team |
Initial release | 2000 |
Stable release | 1.0rc2 (October 7, 2007 ) [+/−] |
Preview release | SVN (SVN) [+/−] |
Written in | C |
Platform | Cross-platform |
Available in | English, Hungarian, Polish, Russian and Spanish |
Type | Media player |
License | GPL |
Website | www.mplayerhq.hu |
MPlayer is a free and open source media player distributed under the GNU General Public License. The program is available for all major operating systems, including Linux and other Unix-like systems, Microsoft Windows and Mac OS X. Versions for OS/2, Syllable, AmigaOS and MorphOS are also available. The Windows versions works, with some minor problems, also in DOS using HX DOS Extender. A port for DOS using DJGPP is also available.[1] A version for the Wii Homebrew Channel has also emerged. [2]
MPlayer supports a wide variety of media formats[3]. In addition to its wide range of supported formats MPlayer can also save all streamed content to a file.
A companion program, MEncoder, can take an input stream or file and transcode it into several different output formats, optionally applying various transforms along the way.
MPlayer is a command line application which has different optional GUIs for each of its supported operating systems. Commonly used GUIs are gmplayer (the default GUI for GNU/Linux and other Unix-like systems, and Microsoft Windows), MPlayer OS X (for Mac OS X), MPUI (for Windows) and WinMPLauncher (also for Windows). Several other GUI frontends are also available for each platform....(WORTH THE EFFORT!-java)
Lies To Nowhere
On August 29, when Sen. John McCain (R-AZ) introduced Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin (R) as his running mate, he touted her as "someone who's stopped government from wasting taxpayers' money." Following McCain on the stage, Palin claimed that she "told Congress, 'Thanks, but no thanks,' on that Bridge to Nowhere." "If our state wanted a bridge, I said we'd build it ourselves," said Palin. Since her debut on the national stage, the McCain campaign and its surrogates have reiterated this claim at least 19 times, even featuring it in a new TV ad. But the problem is that Palin's claim to be the the great bridge killer doesn't stand up to scrutiny. As The New Republic's Brad Plumer first noted, Palin "was fine with the bridge in principle, never had a problem with the earmarks, bristled at all the mockery, and only gave up on the project when it was clear that federal support wasn't forthcoming." "We need to come to the defense of Southeast Alaska when proposals are on the table like the bridge," Palin said in August 2006, "and not allow the spinmeisters to turn this project or any other into something that's so negative." In fact, not only did Palin support the project while running for governor in 2006, but when she finally redirected funds away from the bridge, she lamented the fact that Congress had "little interest in spending any more money on a bridge between Ketchikan and Gravina Island." Afterwards, Palin "did not return the federal money. She just allocated it elsewhere."
RUNNING FOR THE BRIDGE: As the Associated Press wrote recently, "Palin was for the infamous bridge to nowhere before she was against it." In September 2006, while campaigning in the city that would benefit from the bridge, Palin spoke in favor of the bridge. "The money that's been appropriated for the project, it should remain available for a link," said Palin, according to the Ketchikan Daily News. "I think we're going to make a good team as we progress that bridge project." She also told the residents that "she felt their pain when politicians called them 'nowhere.'" In fact, Palin was so supportive, that she was even photographed displaying a pro-bridge t-shirt that proclaimed, "Nowhere, Alaska 99901." Asked by the Anchorage Daily News in Oct. 2006 if she would "continue state funding for the proposed Knik Arm and Gravina Island bridges," Palin replied, "Yes," adding that she "would like to see Alaska's infrastructure projects built sooner rather than later. The window is now -- while our congressional delegation is in a strong position to assist."
'A NATIONAL EMBARRASSMENT': Funds for the project, which would build "a bridge nearly as long as the Golden Gate Bridge" to connect an island populated by 50 people to the mainland, were appropriated by Alaska's congressional delegation in a 2006 transportation bill. Soon after it gained infamy as the epitome of excessive pork-barrel spending. In October 2005, Sen. Tom Coburn (R-OK) tried to "redirect the money" to a bridge damaged by Hurricane Katrina, but following Sen. Ted Stevens (R-AK) threat to resign, the Senate kept the project with an 82 to 15 vote. Coburn's failed effort "became a cause celebre on the left and the right." The conservative Heritage Foundation released a paper calling the bridge earmark "a national embarrassment." The Sierra Club issued a statement declaring that "widespread public outrage over such wasteful spending is understandable." A month later, Congress finally relented by killing funding for the bridge and another Alaskan bridge project. In a press conference with Stevens earlier this year, Palin appeared to admit that the political winds made support for some earmarked projects like the Bridge to Nowhere politically untenable, saying she could see "the writing on the wall."
OTHER PROJECTS TO NOWHERE: Though the Bridge to Nowhere has been abandoned, Alaska is still using excessive federal funds to build infrastructure projects that only benefit a limited number of citizens. In fact, after Congress removed funding for the Bridge to Nowhere, then-Alaska Gov. Frank Murkowski approved the construction of a $24 million gravel "access" road, known as the Gravina Island Access Highway, that would lead to the nonexistent bridge. In a 2006 gubernatorial debate, Palin was asked whether she supported the earmarked project, or whether she would pledge to cancel it as governor. Rather than responding with "thanks but no thanks" to federal funding for the "access" road, Palin replied that she "wouldn't" cancel the project because she was "not going to stand in the way of progress." To this day, the state of Alaska "is continuing to build a road on Gravina Island to an empty beach where the bridge would have gone -- because federal money for the access road, unlike the bridge money, would have otherwise been returned to the federal government." As CQ recently noted, there is also "a second bridge, more than twice as expensive and just as controversial" as the canceled Bridge to Nowhere, but Palin hasn't tried to kill it. Palin also supports a $375 million "mega-project" known as the "road to nowhere," that connects a town of 2,400 to a town of 870....
Nice Work If You Can Get It: Palin Paid Herself To Live At Home
By: Jane HamsherTuesday September 9, 2008 7:00 am
The Washington Post has an article this morning on the 312 nights Sarah Palin spent in her own home -- and still charged the state for 312 days of "per diem" allowance (which is supposed to cover expenses while traveling).
The media narrative is that Palin cut back wasteful government spending in Alaska and took on her own party to do so. But that becomes less compelling when you factor in that she paid herself $16,951 to live at home. And it's not like she can toss her hair and say that "this is just the way things are done in Alaska":
In 1988, the head of the state Commerce Department was pilloried for collecting a per diem charge of $50 while staying in his Anchorage home, according to local news accounts. The commissioner, the late Tony Smith, resigned amid a series of controversies.
"It was quite the little scandal," said Tony Knowles, the Democratic governor from 1994 to 2000. "I gave a direction to all my commissioners if they were ever in their house, whether it was Juneau or elsewhere, they were not to get a per diem because, clearly, it is and it looks like a scam -- you pay yourself to live at home," he said.
Palin and her husband both make six-figure incomes. They don't need to be chiseling the state for this money to live, and she sure isn't entitled to be running on fiscal responsibility when she's pocketing cash in a way that has a history of being regarded in Alaska as a "scam."
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