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7 Brutal Passages About Mark Sanford From His Ex-Wife's Book

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Jenny Sanford wrote a candid 2010 book called Staying True about her marriage to the former South Carolina governor. Ouch.

"I remember the first birthday I celebrated after we moved south. Mark gave me a hand-made birthday card with a picture of him holding birthday balloons on the front. I thought it was sweet that he drew a picture for me himself. But inside the card, strangely, was a picture of half a bike. I didn't quite understand the picture. Mark explained I would get the other half in the future. Well, that Christmas he drew me a picture of the other half of the bike, and months later, he delivered the gift to me, a used purple bike he had purchased for $25! My reaction at first was disbelief; he had given me nicer gifts while engaged. In time, however, I came to know this was just part of who he was."

"A short while before the wedding, when Mark and I were picking readings and vows, Mark told me that he didn't want to use a wedding vow that included the promise to be faithful. He was worried in some odd nagging way, he said, that he might not be able to remain true to that vow. In retrospect, I suppose I might have seen this as a sign that Mark wasn't fully committed to me, and with the benefit of the knowledge I have about Mark now, I could point to this moment as a clear sign of things to come."

Once in office, however, his habits deteriorated and he even forgot my birthday once. Thereafter, I nudged the scheduler to remind him. (My birthday is on September 11, and since 2001 Mark has learned to remember it without a reminder.)

"Mark joined me at one Lamaze class before deeming it a waste of his time since, as he explained, "I've spent many long nights helping cows give birth and I know what to do when the baby gets stuck." Of course, many fathers still didn't attend births in those days, so Mark didn't really feel he needed to know too much about the human birthing process. Instead, my sister Kathy came to be with me for the birth. We spent lots of time taking bike rides on the cobblestone streets in Charleston hoping to help nudge delivery along, to no avail."


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Obama Takes Charm Offensive To The Golf Course

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President hits the links with two Republican senators.

Via: Chris Carlson, File / AP

WASHINGTON — President Obama's latest outreach effort to the GOP involves one of his favorite pastimes.

Early Monday afternoon, Obama left the White House to play golf with three Senators: Republicans Saxby Chambliss of Georgia and Bob Corker of Tennessee, Democrat Mark Udall of Colorado.

Obama has been in midst of a "charm offensive" for months as he tries to break Congressional gridlock on budget issues. Past bipartisan adventures in Obama's second term involved dinners both in and out of the White House.

Obama has hit the links with Republicans before, but so far the outings haven't produced any policy breakthroughs: A much-touted golf outing with Speaker John Boehner in 2011, for example, resulted in a photo op and nothing else.

Terry McAuliffe Claimed Dick Cheney Was Drunk During Hunting Accident

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The Virginia Democratic gubernatorial candidate was speaking at a 2006 C-SPAN event on “insiders' views” of Washington.

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Via:

Mark Sanford Loves Props

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The former South Carolina Governor has a history of using visual aides to help make his points

These 1,000 $1 Bills

These 1,000 $1 Bills

Sanford took out $1,000 in ones to decry outside money being spent in his race against Democrat Elizabeth Colbert Busch.

Via: postandcourier.com

This Cardbord cutout of Nancy Pelosi

This Cardbord cutout of Nancy Pelosi

He recently debated a cardboard cutout of the House Minority Leader.

Via: http://cbsnews.com%20

Which of course launched 100 memes

Which of course launched 100 memes

This was our favorite.

Via: @laurinmanning

This Horse and Buggy

This Horse and Buggy

in 2005, Sanford took a horse and buggy to the statehouse to protest "outdated" government.


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This Video Of Mark Sanford Introducing His Wife In 2008 Will Make You Cringe

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“If you think that getting along with Mark Sanford on spending is tough, try being married to him.” He was speaking at the 2008 State of The State address.

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Via:

Beers With Sen. Rob Portman

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BuzzFeed sits down with the Republican senator from Ohio. Live from D.C. on May 6, 2013.

Video will stream LIVE from D.C. on Monday, May 6 at 6:30pm ET.

Terry McAuliffe Might Be The Worst Media Critic Ever

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The Virginia Democratic gubernatorial candidate has a history of singing praise for whatever network he is on, while dissing the other networks.

Exhibit A: Here's Terry McAuliffe attacking Chris Matthews and Hardball, and praising Fox News as "fair and balanced," during an interview on Fox News.

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The full exchange can be found here.

Via:

Exhibit B: Here's Terry McAuliffe on Hardball praising Chris Matthews and Hardball, while calling Fox News "right-wing nut case" in 2007.

Exhibit B: Here's Terry McAuliffe on Hardball praising Chris Matthews and Hardball, while calling Fox News "right-wing nut case" in 2007.

From a transcript:

Happy anniversary to HARDBALL, the greatest show on television. Beats FOX, that right-wing nut case and CNN. HARDBALL`s No. 1. You want to get the facts straight, you want to get them right, watch Chris Matthews and HARDBALL. Happy ninth anniversary.

And Exhibit C: Here's Terry McAuliffe praising Fox News coverage again in 2008.

Source: youtube.com

Fox News even put it into a promo.

Source: youtube.com


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White House Uses Ghosts Of Iraq To Scare Away Syria Critics

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Remember Iraq’s nonexistent “WMD”? When it comes to Syria, the White House would really like you to.

Via: Joe Raedle / Getty Images

WASHINGTON — The White House has a message for Republican hawks beating the drums of war in Syria: Remember Iraq.

"The fact of the matter is, jumping to conclusions and acting before you have all the facts is not a good recipe for making policy decisions," White House Press Secretary Jay Carney told reporters Monday.

"We have seen in the not-too-distant past the consequences of acting before we had all the facts," Carney added, a not so oblique reference to the false claims of Iraqi weapons of mass destruction that helped galvanize the country behind the 2003 invasion of Iraq.

Although the White House is likely leaning toward a strategy similar to the one it used in Libya — limited air and material support for rebels but avoiding inserting U.S. ground forces into the civil war — events on the ground are giving Republican opponents fodder for their war campaign.

"Apparently, the Syrians and Iranians have crossed a red line for the Israelis," Sen. John McCain said Sunday.

For now, the White House hopes the lingering hangover from the Iraq War is enough to stave off hawks.

Obama is "looking at a range of options and he is not removing any option from the table," Carney said. But he also argued, "There's a recent enough example of why we need to make sure we have our facts in matters like these ... And the dangers inherent of not having all those facts and corroborated evidence."

That's a useful out for a White House that reportedly got backed into the position on Syria it's in by an unscripted remark by Obama that led to all the current "red line" talk in the first place.

Carney disputed the New York Times report, insisting Obama had intentionally used the "red line" phrase — even as he denied that it teed up any particular kind of action.

"To do so is to say, 'If X happens, Y will happen,'" Carney said. "He has never said what action he will take at a policy level to the proved crossing of the red line in Syria."


Sen. Rob Portman Sings Randy Newman's "Burn On"

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At BuzzFeed Brews in DC, the Ohio Republican sings Newman's song about the day the Cuyahoga River caught fire.

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Here's Randy Newman singing the original

Yes, America, Senator Rob Portman Smoked Pot

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At BuzzFeed Brews in DC, Portman answers a burning question.

Via: Drew Angerer / Getty Images

WASHINGTON — Here's something Ohio Republican Sen. Rob Portman and President Obama have in common: they both used to smoke weed when they were younger.

"Uhh...yes," Portman replied Monday when asked by BuzzFeed DC Bureau Chief John Stanton if he's ever smoked pot. "I think I've been asked that now, in 20 years, three times."

Portman used to imbibe, but now he's against using marijuana.

"I'm very involved, as you may know, on drug prevention," he said. "I have been since my first year in Congress."

In 2005, Portman told the Cleveland Plain Dealer he wasn't much of a smoker when he did smoke pot.

"He told The Plain Dealer in 2005 that he never bought or sold it and didn't smoke it often," the paper reported.

"This was an era when almost everybody did it," he said in 2005. "It's something I regret."

Watch Rob Portman answer the burning question:

Rob Portman Says Immigration Law "Should Follow" State Law For Gay Couples

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Ohio's Republican senator also expressed support for “the concept” of workplace protections for LGBT Americans, although he raised concerns with the current legislation.

Ohio Sen. Rob Portman and BuzzFeed DC Bureau Chief John Stanton

WASHINGTON — Ohio Senator Rob Portman said "immigration law should follow" state law on Monday night, when asked whether protections for same-sex couples should be included in immigration reform legislation making its way through the Senate.

Portman — who announced that he supported same-sex couples' marriage rights and opposed the Defense of Marriage Act earlier this year after learning that his son, Will, is gay — talked about his views on a variety of LGBT issues at BuzzFeed Brews Monday.

Noting that many areas of federal law address marriage-based benefits, Portman counseled against the creation of a specific category for same-sex couples in immigration law — although he stopped short of saying he would oppose such a measure.

Reiterating his opposition to the Defense of Marriage Act, Portman said his preferred way of moving forward on recognizing same-sex couples' rights in the country is through state-based decisions on allowing gay and lesbian couples to marry. Without DOMA's prohibition on the federal government recognizing same-sex couples' marriages, same-sex couples who are legally married are expected to be eligible to seek spousal-based green cards.

The Senate Judiciary Committee is expected to start addressing amendments to the "Gang of Eight" immigration reform bill this week, one of which is likely to be a measure that would create a new category, "permanent partners," to allow same-sex couples to sponsor their foreign partner for purposes of seeking a green card.

Portman also expressed general support for LGBT employment protections, saying, "I totally support the concept" of the Employment Non-Discrimination Act, which would bar most employers from discriminating on the basis of sexual orientation or gender identity.

"There oughta be a law in place," he said, expressing two potential concerns with ENDA: "litigation that could result" and "religious freedom."

Saying, "I'm also a strong believer in religious freedom," Portman noted, "ENDA traditionally has addressed that issue." The current version of ENDA, introduced in April, includes a religious exemption.

Portman said that because the bill creates a private right of action, or civil lawsuit, that could be filed by employees who faced anti-LGBT discrimination, he wanted to be sure the bill would not create a flood of lawsuits if enacted.

Asked about criticism he received when announcing his changed view on marriage equality by those who said it shouldn't have taken learning about his son for him to change on the issue, he initially replied, "Whatever."

Portman then said he hadn't thought about the issue in depth prior to learning about his son, although he said that perhaps he should have done so.

But, at its base, he said, "That's how most of us change our mind on this issue."

Watch BuzzFeed Brews With Sen. Portman:

Source: youtube.com

Federal Government Hunkers Down For Massive Cyber Attack Tuesday

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Middle Eastern “OpUSA” hackers expected to attacked feds Tuesday. Questions over White House preparedness.

Via: Amine Landoulsi / AP

WASHINGTON — The federal government is preparing for a large-scale cyberattack on government accounts Tuesday as federal officials try to learn the lessons from the Associated Press hacking that sent stocks into a brief but expensive tailspin last month.

A senior federal official shared documents with BuzzFeed Monday that show the government is warning agencies that a cyber assault Tuesday could affect agencies across the the federal government.

"On 7 May 2013, a group of mostly Middle East- and North Africa-based criminal hackers are preparing to launch a cyber attack campaign known as 'OpUSA' against websites of high-profile US Government agencies, financial institutions, and commercial entities," reads a warning sent across federal agencies earlier this month. "The attacks likely will result in limited disruptions and mostly consist of nuisance-level attacks against publicly accessible webpages and possibly data exploitation. Independent of the success of the attacks, the criminal hackers likely will leverage press coverage and social media to propagate an anti-US message."

The Huffington Post reported Monday that the attacks — prompted by criticisms of US foreign policy — have "an ambitious list of targets, including the websites of the White House, the Defense Department, the FBI, Bank of America and Chase Bank."

Warnings of the attack come amidst criticisms of White House handling of a hacking attack last month, when the Associated Press' Twitter feed was infiltrated and reported explosions at the White House injured President Obama. That sent stocks into a brief tailspin that worried market observers.

In the aftermath of that attack, the senior government official told BuzzFeed government agencies need to prepare to quickly respond to attacks on media organizations. The official criticized the White House for letting the hacked Associated Press tweet go officially unanswered until the White House briefing later in the day.

In addition to being prepared for hacks to their own social media and other accounts, the official said, government agencies need to be prepared to quickly dispel false accounts on hacked social media feeds.

The documents shared with BuzzFeed Monday show federal agencies readying themselves for Tuesday's planned attack. It's not clear what precautions, if any, the White House is taking. A White House official did not immediately respond to requests for comment late Monday night.

South Carolina Comes Around To Mark Sanford

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As the race for South Carolina's first district tightens, the former governor is in a very good mood. “It turns out he's crazy as a fox and it looks like he's going to pull this off.”

CHARLESTON, S.C. — Win or lose, Mark Sanford is having the time of his life.

Driving, walking, and shaking hands with the formerly disgraced former governor through South Carolina's first congressional district, it's hard to remember that this was a guy whose national ambitions were shattered when he disappeared to Argentina for several days in 2009 to cheat on his then-wife.

Equally hard to remember is that when he entered the race there was a collective groan from Republicans across the state and in Washington D.C., who thought Sanford's past was a liability that would put a safely Republican seat in Democratic hands for the first time in decades.

"The thought was it's too early, you do a tour, you write a book, you do all those things to rehab your image and then you run," said one former Sanford staffer. "But it turns out he's crazy as a fox and it looks like he's going to pull this off."

The race is close: his opponent, Democrat Elizabeth Colbert Busch, comic Stephen Colbert's big sister, has run an aggressive campaign, with plenty of support from national Democrats, presenting herself as an independent alternative to Sanford. Money has poured into the district. Sanford's ex-wife accused him of trespassing and the National Republican Campaign Committee said they were sitting this one out. Charleston's largest newspaper, the Post and Courier endorsed her, arguing that for voters suffering from "Sanford fatigue," Colbert-Busch was a "welcome tonic."

If voters were tired by Sanford, he set out to prove on the final days of the campaign that he was not tired of them. In his uniform of khakis, a checkered shirt, and a belt decorated with South Carolina flags, he has criss-crossed the district in a blue Chevy with a pretty young staffer named Martha, who Sanford describes as a terrible driver and whose hopeless job it is to keep her boss on time for events. She is largely unsuccessful at this task because Sanford will talk to to anyone who was willing to listen to him, even the ones who hate his guts.

The national media has been enraptured by Sanford's attempted comeback and this past weekend a small swarm of reporters descended on Charleston. Of course there were lots of questions about the affair, the trespassing, his family, and just how voters would ever take him back.

"You guys just want to write a story about how no one likes me," he declared on Saturday.

His aides stood by watching helplessly as Sanford then made it his mission to prove just how wrong we all were by taking a group store-to-store to find a "woman that doesn't like me."

He pointed to one woman, declaring she "looked biased," and it turned out she was actually a huge supporter. There was some eye rolling from people he approached in a coffee shop, yes of course they knew who he was, but if anyone was angry they were far too polite to say it. When Sanford shared with one woman his mission to help us find anti-Sanford sentiment, she expressed her disapproval for his past behavior, but said she would vote for him anyway.

He then went into a drug store, bought a giant chocolate milkshake, and talked to everyone inside until Martha finally wrangled him back in the car for the hour and a half drive to Beauford.

On Monday, Sanford insisted on making a pit stop at a Whole Foods in Mt. Pleasant in between scheduled events. He politely interrupted several folks in the produce aisle, asking them to consider voting for him, and many of them said they already were. A cashier gleefully greeted Sanford, telling him what a fan she was. Then he ran into a Colbert Busch supporter, Marion Sullivan, who he introduced to reporters as his downstairs neighbor.

"We've been giving each other a hard time for how many months now? We live in the same building," he said.

"I told him he shouldn't run, that he should stop embarrassing the state but he didn't take my advice," she said with a smile. "I put Colbert Busch stickers on my front and back bumper so he can see them in the garage."

"This is fun, huh?" Sanford said. "Good to see you!"

Only a few weeks ago, Sanford's chances at winning the House seat were unlikely. Republicans were loathed to say his name and Jenny Sanford's trespassing accusations seemed to doom his already difficult climb (he claims he was watching the end of the Super Bowl with his son. A court hearing is this Thursday). And a string of oddball campaign stunts, including a debate with a cardboard cutout of Nancy Pelosi, prompted mockery in the press.

"People got it, people totally got," he swears. "When she dumped $370,000 into this race ... and a whole host of Democratic groups come in and dump over a million dollars into this race what you are really having is a debate with those folks that are funding the radio and TV ads."

Sanford might be right: he has made up a remarkable 9 point polling deficit against Colbert Busch and the race is now neck and neck. His attempt to tie Colbert Busch with national Democrats, and Pelosi specifically, struck a nerve with Republicans in this conservative district who after writing him off, were giving Sanford his second (or is it fourth?) look.

"What other Republicans like me are thinking, it is not really about the first congressional district but where we are going as a country," said state Rep. Chip Limehouse, who ran against Sanford in the primary. "Do we want socialism to prevail or do we want capitalism? I think the country is focused on this race because of that."

Former S.C. Governor Jim Edwards offered this dire warning:

"It's a battle for the soul of America," said Edwards. "We've got to keep every vote we can in the House to keep Obama from being dictator. He's practically a dictator now."

Unhelpful to Democrats is the fact that many voters here are more than willing to look past Sanford's past.

"He's the most learned candidate for our issues that we have," said Joan Cobb. "She's been slinging mud, he talked facts. His personal life is his personal life."

There are definitely Republicans who might sit this race out, and as always, turn out will be key. Sanford has picked up some much needed, if not late, endorsements from GOP'ers in the state like Sens. Lindsey Graham and Tim Scott.

Despite the apparent momentum in Sanford's direction, Colbert Busch and her supporters still believe the race is theirs to lose.

"To me this is always a 1-3 point race. And it's always been about turnout," said Conressman Jim Clyburn, a South Carolinian and the third ranking Democrat in the House. "The polls I have been paying close attention too are never beyond 3 points and as close as one."

For Colbert Busch to win she'll need to convince enough voters that she won't be a rubberstamp for Democrats and pick up Republican crossovers. She too is canvassing the district, only instead of a blue Chevy, she's riding in a hard-to-miss campaign bus with the slogan "Elizabeth Means Business" on the side.

"We need her around here. This state is so needy in a lot of ways, but Elizabeth is a breath of fresh air," said Sharon Bohn. "We need some one who is agreeable and everything isn't 'no, no, no.' Sanford just says no to everything."

As much as Sanford will insist that the past is in the past (he says it's only relevant to the campaign because the media insists on bringing it up), it is still the first thing people in the district know about him. As Sanford shook hands in a diner Monday morning, a man remarked to Sanford's communications director he had no interest in shaking hands with "a former philandering governor."

His supporters acknowledge the mistakes Sanford has made but say his conservative record more than makes up for it.

"I wouldn't necessarily want him marrying my daughter, or my sister. But his constitutional voting record is more than enough to carry the day versus the absolutely unconstitutional voting positions of his opponent," said John Hull. "It's no contest, it's good versus evil."

If comments like these upset Sanford, he wasn't showing it. Sanford was happy to talk about it, and happy to talk to reporters in general. He took turns driving with reporters (even getting behind the wheel of Buzzfeed's rental) so they'd have a chance to talk to him one-on-one.

"If you've been where I've been back in 2009, it's all a blessing," he during our car ride. "If I have the chance to serve in this role, I'll be thrilled. If I don't, I'm at peace. I'll go back to real estate."

As Monday's exhaustive campaigning came to a close, Sanford met with a group supporters, including two of his sons, for a small backyard barbeque.

"In politics," he said thanking the people who'd been with him through the race, "You don't have to wait till your funeral to find out who your friends are."

Anti-Chris Christie Ad Targets Talk Show Appearances

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The third ad buy against the Republican governor. “There's one Chris Christie who's funny on talk shows.”

Via: onenewjersey.org

As part of a six-figure ad campaign against New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, a liberal nonprofit, One Jersey, released an ad spot Tuesday morning that contrasts what the group calls "TV Chris Christie" with the governor's state record.

Using images from Christie's appearances on The Late Show with Dave Letterman and Late Night with Jimmy Fallon, the ad targets New Jersey's nine percent unemployment rate, and the Republican governor's decision veto a minimum wage hike and cut funding for Planned Parenthood.

"TV Christie is funny, but there is nothing funny about what Republican governor Chris Christie is doing to our families," reads the ad, which is set to run this month in Philadelphia and New York City media markets.

Joshua Henne, spokesman for One New Jersey, said in a statement that the governor has "perfected the art of celebrity through late-night TV and manufactured YouTube moments," but has "far from perfected the actual job of standing up for New Jersey's working families and values."

The 30-second spot, called "Funny," will reach the entire state of New Jersey starting this week, ahead of the governor's reelection campaign this fall, and a possible bid for the presidency in 2016.

One Jersey, a progressive 501(c)4 group, has released two other television ads this year.

Gun Advocate Says Armed March On Washington Will Be Totally Safe

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“It's all going to be very well choreographed,” Kokesh says.

Via: facebook.com

WASHINGTON — The libertarian activist and radio host planning a thousands-strong armed march on Washington this summer says the event will be perfectly safe and that the participants won't resist violently if stopped by police.

The District of Columbia has some of the strictest gun laws in the nation. Although individuals can now own guns within the city limits, it remains difficult to obtain a permit. Loaded weapons being transported across state lines into the city by unlicensed out-of-state residents would likely be treated as a highly provocative and illegal act by police.

"If they do, then we'll either peacefully submit to arrest in order to make a court case out of it or we'll turn back," said Adam Kokesh, a libertarian activist and former candidate for Congress in New Mexico, in an interview with BuzzFeed on Monday. "We're not going to resist government by force in any way."

"It's all going to be very well choreographed," Kokesh said.

The march is planned for July 4 and will circle through D.C.: "we will muster at the National Cemetery & at noon we will step off to march across the Memorial Bridge, down Independence Avenue, around the Capitol, the Supreme Court, & the White House, then peacefully return to Virginia across the Memorial Bridge," Kokesh wrote on the Facebook page for the event.

Kokesh, a prominent Ron Paul supporter and 9/11 truther who made headlines during the 2012 campaign for publicly musing about assassinating Mitt Romney, said he couldn't say how many people the march will include. "I couldn't say right now because it's so viral," he said. On the Facebook page, he wrote that the march would go ahead with 1,000 marchers; Kokesh said it has passed that point and the march is definitely a go.

Kokesh, who owns "about a dozen" guns, said there will be strict rules for how participants can carry their guns. Those with long guns must keep them slung across their back.

"It'll be an AR-15 across my back, and that's gonna be a strictly enforced protocol in order to be part of what we're doing," Kokesh said.

He said other pro-gun bigwigs might show up as well.

"I did an interview for the Alex Jones show today, and he said that he was hoping to be there but didn't make the commitment," Kokesh said.

Though Kokesh feels "that I'm going to be a lot safer at this event than I would be on the streets of Chicago," he can't fully guarantee that no one in the group will do anything dangerous.

"No, but that's never true, and that's one of the realities in our daily lives," he said. "We largely do trust the people around us to not kill us. Human life is really fragile."

The march's Facebook page promises "coordination with D.C. law enforcement prior to the event," and invites "law enforcement officers to stand with us armed however they feel is appropriate."

Despite the event's clear political bent, Kokesh says he hasn't been paying attention to the fate of gun control measures in Congress.

"I'm not really a congressional handicapper," he said. "I haven't been following Congress too close."


7 Photos Of A Skinny Chris Christie

Mark Sanford Explains His Change Of Heart On Three Term Limit Pledge

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The former governor is now running for a fourth term after previously pledging to serve only three. Sanford said his change of heart came after a conversation with his former chief of staff.

When first elected, Mark Sanford vowed he would not serve more than three terms. After he left Congress, Sanford wrote a book, The Trust Committed To Me published by the U.S. Term Limits Foundation. Sanford abided by his self-imposed term limit vow when he choose to run for governor after he left office in 2001.

Here's Sanford arguing, in 1997, that three terms should be the maximum a member of Congress can serve.

View Video ›

Via:

"Life is a great teacher. You can call Scott English, he's my former chief of staff. He called me before this thing started and he said 'Mark, Please. Whatever you do, I know you are a term limits guy, but please make them longer than you did the last time. We were on the cusp of doing some interesting things there in your first term.' I think there is a real value in knowing an exit point. But if you think this is the rest of your life, it makes each political decision far weightier.

I talked about it with some people that mattered to me like a Scott English who was there for my three terms in Washington DC and his point was look, if it's good enough for Jim Demint its good enough for you."

Kate Nocera contributed to this report.

Obama Ramps Up Syria Rhetoric

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Mentions successes in Libya and in killing Osama bin Laden in the same breath as Syria.

Via: Kevin Lamarque / Reuters

WASHINGTON — President Obama appeared to intensify his rhetoric on Syria on Tuesday, comparing the situation to U.S. military action in Libya and to the operation that took out Osama bin Laden.

"You suggested even in your question a perceived crossing of a red line," Obama said in response to a reporter's question during a joint press conference with South Korean President Park Geun-hye. "The operative word here is 'perceived.' What I've said is that if we have evidence that there has been the use of chemical weapons in Syria, but I don't make decisions based on 'perceived' and I can't organize international coalitions around 'perceived.'"

"We've tried that in the past, I might add, and it didn't work out," Obama said in an apparent reference to the Iraq War. "We want to make sure that we have the best analysis possible, we want to make sure that we are acting deliberately."

Obama suggested that action of one kind or another would soon be taken.

"But I would just point out that there have been several instances over the course of my presidency where I said I was going to do something and it ended up being done," he said. "There were times when there were folks on the sidelines wondering 'why hasn't it happened yet?' and 'what's going on'…but in the end, whether it's bin Laden or Qaddafi, when we say we're taking positions I would think at this point the international community has a pretty good sense that we typically follow through on our commitments."

Critics allege Obama's red line in Syria is at best blurry and at worst moving rapidly backwards after the sarin gas discovery that kicked off this week's investigation. A senior White House official rejected that claim Monday, saying the line is where it's always been: the use of chemical weapons by Assad's regime.

But the official also raised the specter of Iraq's reported WMD from 2003 to justify its actions since the sarin discovery. The administration has subtly cited the faulty intelligence that led to the Iraq War over and over when explaining why it's waiting for hard evidence that Assad's regime was responsible for the sarin discovered on the Syrian battlefield. The official said it was unlikely the sarin came from the rebels, but wasn't ready to say it came from Assad until the investigation has ended.

MSNBC's "Morning Joe" And Chris Christie: A Love Story

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The governor of New Jersey has been mentioned in over 500 episodes of MSNBC's nationally broadcast morning show since 2009.

September 3, 2009: Morning Joe mentions Chris Christie after a Quinnipiac poll reveals that Christie is crushing then Gov. John Corzine by 10 points in the race for the New Jersey governorship.

September 3, 2009: Morning Joe mentions Chris Christie after a Quinnipiac poll reveals that Christie is crushing then Gov. John Corzine by 10 points in the race for the New Jersey governorship.

October 6, 2009: Joe responds to viewer concerns about the fact that Christie has yet to appear on the show.

SCARBOROUGH: "Why don't we have Mr. Christie on the air? Very simple. He won't come on. We've asked him. We'll ask him again."

October 6, 2009: Joe responds to viewer concerns about the fact that Christie has yet to appear on the show.

October 14th, 2009: With just twenty days until the election, Chris Christie drops in on Morning Joe for the very first time.

As this historic moment in cable news history concludes, Scarborough, who had been nervous about co-host Mika Brzezinski saying something "rude" about Christie's weight, asks the candidate how she did:

SCARBOROUGH: "Was she OK?"

CHRISTIE: "Yes, great! Not OK, great!

View Video ›

Source: nbcnews.com

April 14, 2010:"Yesterday, we had Chris Christie on. He's making a lot of enemies. Guess what he's doing? What Republicans used to do." — Joe Scarborough

April 14, 2010 :"Yesterday, we had Chris Christie on. He's making a lot of enemies. Guess what he's doing? What Republicans used to do." — Joe Scarborough


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HRC Says Republican Resistance To Same Sex Immigration Protections Is Homophobic

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“These senators are towing a tired line that no longer represents mainstream opinion, and they’re throwing same-sex couples under the bus in the process,” Human Rights Campaign says of opposition.

Via: David McNew / Getty Images

WASHINGTON — The nation's largest LGBT rights organization Tuesday called Republican resistance to including same-sex marriage protections in immigration reform legislation "homophobia," accusing GOP senators of "throwing same-sex couples under the bus" out of political expediency.

"There is a jarring disconnect between the American public and these senators when it comes to issues of LGBT equality. It's pretty dated to consider LGBT equality as a controversial, hot-button issue like these senators are portraying it to be," the Human Rights Campaign said Tuesday in a statement. "These senators are towing a tired line that no longer represents mainstream opinion, and they're throwing same-sex couples under the bus in the process."

With the Senate set to take up a sweeping comprehensive immigration reform bill this week, Republicans have increasingly warned that an expected push by Democrats to include provisions providing visas for foreign husbands and wives in a same-sex marriage will kill the bill.

"There's already resistance to the bill as it's currently structured. And to bring an issue like that on to it, would not just ensure the bill doesn't pass, the votes wouldn't be there in the Senate and certainly not in the House, but it would facture a coalition from all kinds of groups like evangelicals and the Catholic Church and others," said Sen. Marco Rubio, one of the Republican members of the Gang of Eight that drafted the compromise legislation.

"I respect peoples' views on this issue, I understand this is an issue that's moving across the country and different states are dealing with it differently. I understand all that, I do. But I just think if it's brought into this bill it will ensure that it fails," Rubio added.

But HRC made clear in its statement that no amount of sympathy will placate activists if Republicans succeed in keeping the language out of the bill.

"If they end up doing that, they should just own it and call it what it is: homophobia. Labeling the inclusion of bi-national couples in the immigration bill as toxic is nothing more than a tired, insulting ruse designed to distract attention from their own failure to represent all Americans," the group said.

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