Thursday, March 31, 2011

Wednesday, March 30, 2011

Obama's Schedule March 31

Times are eastern:

10:00 AM
The President and the Vice President receive the Presidential Daily Briefing
Oval Office
Closed Press
3:00 PM
The President and the Vice President meet with Secretary of State Clinton
Oval Office
Closed Press
10:30 PM
The President meets with senior advisors
Oval Office
Closed Press

White House Press Briefing March 30

Obama Speaks at Ron Brown Building Dedication in NYC

Patty Labelle kicks off the dedication by singing the National Anthem.

Obama Speaks on Energy at Georgetown U March 30

Obama is proposing to dramatically reduce our dependence on foreign oil.

Tuesday, March 29, 2011

Obama's Schedule March 30

Times are eastern:
10:00 AM
The President and the Vice President receive the Presidential Daily Briefing
Oval Office
Closed Press
11:20 AM
The President delivers a speech on his plan for America’s energy security
Georgetown University LIVE STREAM
Open to pre-credentialed media
12:30 PM
The President and the Vice President meet for lunch
Private Dining Room
Closed Press
4:25 PM
The President meets with senior advisors
Oval Office
Closed Press

Obama's Interview With Diane Sawyer March 29

Obama's Interview With Brian Williams March 29

Visit msnbc.com for breaking news, world news, and news about the economy

Hillary Clinton Joins World Leaders in Libya Meeting


Visit msnbc.com for breaking news, world news, and news about the economy

Monday, March 28, 2011

Obama's Schedule in New York March 29

All times are eastern:

9:30 AM
The President receives the Presidential Daily Briefing
Oval Office
Closed Press
1:00 PM
The President departs the White House en route Andrews Air Force Base
South Lawn
Open Press
1:15 PM
The President departs Andrews Air Force Base en route New York, NY
Andrews Air Force Base
Travel Pool Coverage
2:05 PM
The President arrives in New York, NY
John F. Kennedy International Airport
Open Press
4:45 PM
The President delivers remarks at the dedication of the Ronald H. Brown United States Mission to the United Nations Building
USUN Building
Open Press
7:00 PM
The President delivers remarks at a DNC event
Red Rooster Restaurant
Print Pool
9:05 PM
The President delivers remarks at a DNC event
The Studio Museum
Pooled Press
10:10 PM
The President departs New York, NY
John F. Kennedy International Airport
Open Press
11:00 PM
The President arrives at Andrews Air Force Base
Andrews Air Force Base
Travel Pool Coverage
11:10 PM
The President arrives at the White House
South Lawn
Open Press

Obama's Libya Speech March 28

Transcript

Obama's Remarks at Univision Town Hall

See the video here.
Transcript.
Remarks by the President at Univision Town Hall

Bell Multicultural High School
Washington, D.C.

10:37 A.M. EDT

MR. RAMOS: Mr. President, I have the first question. As a newscaster and as an anchor, I have to ask first. And I would like to ask something that everybody wants to know. I don't know if you can give us something about the speech you're going to give later on for us to listen to here at Univision. And we are going through a very difficult time. We're going through three different wars at the same time. I was looking at the education budget in the country and it amazes me that every dollar that is being spent on education we spend $10 for war and the Department of Defense. Do we need to change that? What would you do?

THE PRESIDENT: Well, first of all, I just want to say, Jorge, it’s wonderful to be with Univision. It’s wonderful to be here at Bell Multicultural. (Applause.) You guys are doing outstanding work.

I also want to make a confession, and that is that although I took Spanish in high school, I'm receiving translation through this earpiece. (Laughter.) But for all the young people here, I want you guys to be studying hard because it is critical for all American students to have language skills. And I want everybody here to be working hard to make sure that you don't just speak one language, you speak a bunch of languages. That's a priority. (Applause.)

MR. RAMOS: Let’s talk about Libya.

THE PRESIDENT: Jorge, with respect to Libya, I am going to be addressing this issue tonight, and I’ve already discussed it on several occasions, including on your program.

Our involvement there is going to be limited both in time and in scope. But you’re absolutely right that we have a very large defense budget. Some of that is necessitated by the size of our country and the particular special role that we play around the globe. But what is true is that over the last 10 years, the defense budget was going up much more quickly than our education budget.

And we are only going to be as strong as we are here at home. If we are not strong here at home, if our economy is not growing, if our people are not getting jobs, if they are not succeeding, then we won’t be able to project military strength or any other kind of strength.

And that's why in my 2012 budget, even though we have all these obligations -- we’re still in Afghanistan; I have ended the war in Iraq, and we’ve pulled 100,000 troops out -- (applause) -- but we still have some commitments there -- despite all that, my proposed budget still increases education spending by 10 percent, including 4 percent for non-college-related expenses. But we also increased the Pell Grant program drastically so all these outstanding young people are going to have a better chance to go to college. (Applause.)

So the larger point you’re making I think is right that we have to constantly balance our security needs with understanding that if we’re not having a strong economy, a strong workforce and a well-educated workforce, then we’re not going to be successful over the long term.

MR. RAMOS: Okay. Mr. President, one of the main problems here in the United States is that -- with Hispanics especially -- is that only one out of three of Hispanic students actually graduates from high school. They drop out. And Iris Mendosa, a student from this school has the first question. Iris?

Q Hello, Mr. President. My name is Iris Mendosa, and I attend Washington, D.C. Bell Multicultural High School. And my question is: What can we do to reduce the amount of students that drop out of school before graduating? Read the rest

Birther Trump Releases Unofficial Birth Certificate

The Donald has been calling for Obama to release his birth certificate, joining that loony group known as.... The Birthers. Trump bragged earlier today to Newsmax (like Fox News times 10) about releasing his birth certificate (which for the sane among us, Obama already did in 2008). Funny thing about Trump's certificate though. It ain't the real thing:
But after several New York City-based readers contacted POLITICO's Maggie Haberman, her call to city officials revealed that an actual birth certificate, which is issued by the Department of Health, would have the agency's seal and also a signature of the city registrar - neither of which the Trump document has. Officials said the city Health Department is the "sole issuing authority" of official birth certificates in New York, and that the document would clearly say so, and "city officials said it's not an official document." Politico
Furthermore, Politico's Ben Smith goes on to point out Trump's mother was born in Scotland and his plane is registered in the Bahamas (naturally). Of course I have no doubt Trump is a U.S. citizen (nor do I care or think that he stands any chance of being president, and I'm so proud to say I've never watched him fire people) and neither does Ben Smith. It's just sort of fun mocking a fool.

Sunday, March 27, 2011

Obama's Schedule March 28

Times are eastern.

10:30 AM
Obama participates in an education town hall hosted by Univision.

11:30 AM
Carney and Deputy National Security Adviser Denis McDonough brief the press.

7:30 PM
Obama delivers an address on Libya.

Media and Politicians Ill Informed on Libya

NPR's On the Media has a great show on how much of our media and many of our politicians -- most of all Newt -- are fools on Libya. Many people are comparing Libya to Iraq, Afghanistan, Rwanda, Kosovo and Somalia. Foreign Policy editor Blake Hounshell says if Libya resembles anything it's Bosnia, only in Bosnia it took too long to save the masses from slaughter there. With Libya, the decision to act came in weeks.
Hounshell says one of the worst commentaries on Libya so far was one in the Nation that said Obama's female advisers "bewitched" Obama into getting involved. He said one of the best commentaries was by Nicholas Kristof. Hounshell says the story of Libya, where people are fighting and dying for freedom, has become a partisan slugfest. Our media have turned Libya into a stupidfest, indeed. Just like it does with nearly every topic that matters. Listen:

From Kristof's story:
In 2005, the United Nations approved a new doctrine called the “responsibility to protect,” nicknamed R2P, declaring that world powers have the right and obligation to intervene when a dictator devours his people. The Libyan intervention is putting teeth into that fledgling concept, and here’s one definition of progress: The world took three-and-a-half years to respond forcefully to the slaughter in Bosnia, and about three-and-a-half weeks to respond in Libya.

Granted, intervention will be inconsistent. We’re more likely to intervene where there are also oil or security interests at stake. But just as it’s worthwhile to feed some starving children even if we can’t reach them all, it’s worth preventing some massacres or genocides even if we can’t intervene every time.
For all the questions there is a simple answer:
Critics of the intervention make valid arguments. It’s true that there are enormous uncertainties: Can the rebels now topple Colonel Qaddafi? What’s the exit strategy? How much will this cost?

But weighed against those uncertainties are a few certainties: If not for this intervention, Libyan civilians would be dying on a huge scale; Colonel Qaddafi’s family would be locked in place for years; and the message would have gone out to all dictators that ruthlessness works.

Pro-Democracy Libyan Rebels Gain Momentum

Clinton and Gates on Meet the Press March 27


Savannah Guthrie, bless her heart, is way off on her interpretation of Obama's actions as "reluctance." Sure, he's not a war monger. The Obama administration is acting with humility. It's acting (in our best interests) as a part of the world, not the world dominator. That's the message. It's a crucial message while pro-democracy rebels fight for their rights. The U.S. can help open the door but we can't determine Libya's destiny. Only the Libyan people can do that for themselves.