John McCain, in New Orleans today, ripped the Bush Administration
and state and local government for “one of the worst disasters in
American history.”
** THE PETRAEUS MOVE. Here is another angle on the White House move of General Petraeus from commanding the Iraq theater to serving as chief of US Central Command. I have not seen this reported anywhere else.
A new Democratic president would be expected by many to remove Petraeus from the Iraq command. There is no term for theater commanders.
There is however, in the US Armed Forces, a term on the tenures of heads of major regional combatant commands, such as NATO, Central Command, Pacific Command, and so forth. It is three years. And the commander usually gets a fourth year.
That means that a President Obama, for example, would risk a firestorm of protest in the military and much of the country if he tried to remove Petraeus from the CentCom post. As head of Central Command, Petraeus will, if confirmed as expected by the Senate this summer, be in overall charge of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.
President Bush and Vice President Cheney are trying to ensure that Petraeus remains in charge of the Iraq War for at least three more years, and perhaps a fourth.
** MCCAIN RIPS HURRICANE KATRINA PLANNING AND RESPONSE. John McCain held a town hall in New Orleans and toured the battered, impoverished Ninth Ward of the fabled city.
He issued a new and scathing critique of the “terrible and disgraceful” failure of the Bush administration’s response to the disaster.
McCain, the presumptive Republican presidential nominee, said that had he been president he would have immediately visited the area after the storm hit in August 2005. While he’s been critical of the administration’s Katrina response before, the Arizona senator’s remarks today were some of the sharpest he’s used.
“Never again will a disaster of this nature be handled in this terrible and disgraceful manner,” McCain said after a walking tour of the Lower Ninth Ward, a predominantly black neighborhood that was devastated by Katrina. “History will judge this president,” he said. “This was an unacceptable scenario.”
McCain toured New Orleans with Louisiana’s new Republican Governor Bobby Jindal, an Indian-American who replaced the Democrat who served at the time of Hurricane Katrina.
** SCHWARZENEGGER POLITICAL SHOP. Josh Ginsberg, late of the Mitt Romney campaign, has signed on with Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger’s political operation as a political director. Actually, he has re-signed on with the former action superstar. He’s seen here in the video look behind the scenes of Schwarzenegger’s re-election campaign in which he served as deputy political director. He’ll work with more seasoned figures such as Steve Schmidt — Schwarzenegger’s campaign manager, who now has his hands full as John McCain’s senior advisor — former Schwarzenegger communications director Adam Mendelsohn, and former Schwarzenegger press secretary Julie Soderlund in overseeing the governor’s involvement in the midterm elections and his initiative campaigns.
** SOME INTERESTING ARITHMETIC. Here’s an interesting bit of Democratic delegate math.
Before Pennsylvania, Hillary Clinton needed to win 63% in the remaining contests in order to overtake Barack Obama for the lead in earned delegates. Now she needs to win 68% the rest of the way.
John McCain on his tour of “forgotten” places in America.
** MCCAIN’S VEEP: A STRAW IN THE WIND FROM MINNESOTA. Here’s an interesting item. Minnesota Governor Tim Pawlenty (see below re polling in his state) had a Washington funder last night for his re-election, in 2010. It was attended by a who’s who of Beltway Republicans, with some notable McCainiacs co-hosting and putting in appearances. Pawlenty was a key early backer of McCain, who stuck as his campaign melted down last year, not once but twice. The host of the event, former Republican national chairman Ken Mehlman (close to other veep hopefuls Rob Portman and Mitt Romney, and a law school acquaintance of Barack Obama), joked about Pawlenty’s wife supposedly calling him “45.” McCain would be “44,” as in the 44th president of the United States.
** POST-PENNSYLVANIA SUPERDELEGATES SO FAR: OBAMA 3, CLINTON 1. Oregon Congressman David Wu this morning endorsed Barack Obama for president. Wu represents the Portland suburbs. The Oregon primary is on May 20th. Wu is one of three uncommitted superdelegates to endorse Obama since he lost the Pennsylvania primary to Hillary Clinton the day before yesterday. Clinton has picked up one.
One of the three is Oklahoma Governor Brad Henry, who endorsed Obama yesterday. Intriguingly, it was Clinton, not Obama, who won the Oklahoma primary.
** RASMUSSEN: OBAMA RISING IN NATIONAL POLLING. The Rasmussen robopoll, in which the Democrats tend to run lower than in other polling, has Barack Obama edging ahead of John McCain for only the second time in six weeks, 47% to 45%. McCain continues to have a slight edge over Hillary Clinton, 47% to 45%.
Obama’s favorables are moving back up, to 51% favorable, 47% unfavorable. McCain is 51% favorable, 45% unfavorable, while Clinton is 44% favorable, 54% unfavorable. Obama’s unfavorable rating has generally been much higher in this poll than in other polls.
On the Democratic side, it’s Obama 49%, Clinton 42%.
** WHERE THEY ARE TODAY.
Barack Obama is in Chicago, where he has no public events.
Hillary Clinton is in Jacksonville, Fayetteville, and Asheville, North Carolina.
John McCain is in New Orleans and Baton Rouge, Louisiana.
** SCHWARZENEGGER LIVE WEBCAST THIS MORNING. Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger delivers the keynote address at the DNA/Cold Case Summit, hosted by the California District Attorneys Association.
The DNA/Cold Case Summit highlights “cold” homicide cases. The summit also provides training opportunities for prosecutors, law enforcement officers, and crime victim advocates.
The event will be webcast live at 10:45 AM.
** FROM THE ARNOLD FILE. Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger, who spent the day yesterday in the Capitol working on knotty California budget issues, returns to a more convivial setting tonight when he appears with his friend Jay Leno on The Tonight Show.
Barack Obama kicking off his drive for Indiana after losing Pennsylvania.
** RASMUSSEN: OBAMA STRONG IN BATTLEGROUND STATE MINNESOTA. Barack Obama has taken a big lead over John McCain in the new Rasmussen robopoll of Minnesota. It’s Obama 52%, McCain 38%. A month ago, Obama led by only four points. Hillary Clinton has a much smaller lead over McCain, 47$ to 42%.
Both Democrats have the same 20-point edge over McCain among women. The difference in the results is among men. There Obama leads McCain by three points, while Clinton trails by 16 points.
Minnesota voted only narrowly for the Democratic nominee in the two elections against George W. Bush, with John Kerry carrying the state by only three points in 2004 and Al Gore by only two points in 2000.
Minnesota Governor Tim Pawlenty was a key McCain backer in the primaries and is said to be a leading contender for the Republican vice presidential nomination.
In the U.S. Senate race there, incumbent Republican Norm Coleman leads comedian Al Franken, 50% to 43%.
** SLIM EDGE FOR OBAMA IN BATTLEGROUND STATE COLORADO. Barack Obama has a slight edge over John McCain in Colorado, in a new Rasmussen robopoll. It’s Obama 46%, McCain 43%. Hillary Clinton is out of contention in the Rocky Mountain battleground state, trailing McCain by 14 points.
Coloradans are split over Obama’s Bittergate remarks. 44% believe they reflect an elitist point of view, while 44% do not.
** 24/7 LIVE TV NEWS FEED FROM RUSSIA TODAY. Russia has re-emerged as one of the world’s great powers. Click here for a live TV news feed on your computer, bringing you English-language, jargon-free, fast-paced coverage of global and Russian news from the new Russia Today channel.
You probably already know about CNN International, BBC World, and Al Jazeera. Russia Today, which also features culture, entertainment, and sports, is based in Moscow and is owned and operated by the TV Novosti division of Russia’s state news agency, RIA Novosti.
While it’s quite foolish to expect to see, say, criticism of Vladimir Putin on Russia Today, the channel is very interesting nonetheless. The NWN live link to RT does not constitute an endorsement of the channel’s views. It’s presented as an otherwise unavailable new media window.
** TRACK GLOBAL AND U.S. ENERGY PRICES IN NEAR REAL TIME VIA BLOOMBERG ENERGY MARKET WATCH. Crude oil is trading in the $118 to $119 per barrel range.
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| Comments (100) | 

Michael Brown was a complete disgrace as FEMA director post-Katrina, but I don’t believe that an effective federal government response in the days and weeks following the hurricane would have made much of a difference to the people in New Orleans.
FEMA is not tasked with evacuations pre-disaster, which New Orleans botched.
It has been part of disaster planning for years that rescue and recovery supplies be located at significant distance from the likeliest disaster sites, to minimize the chance of the supplies themselves being destroyed. There really was no fast way to get much of anything into New Orleans post-Katrina.
FEMA is not responsible for New Orleans officials’ conscious decision to refuse to stock the city’s designated primary emergency shelter (the Superdome) with food and water because they didn’t want large numbers of people congregating there.
To the extent that Governor Blanco’s footdragging after Katrina (being unwilling to relinquish authority) made the situation worse, a competent FEMA director could have gone on TV/radio and made a public plea for her to call in the full resources of the federal government. This would have helped a lot more than exchanging emails about his attire.
Where FEMA’s deficiencies have been the most damaging has been in reconstruction, and most of that hadn’t even happened yet when Brown was relieved of command.
The levee fiasco is attributable to ACE and several state agencies, not FEMA.
McCain’s temper will be a welcome addition to bureaucracies which have long found no consequences for failure.
lol
Vladimir Bierko :
Did you hear? Wesley Snipes has joined the cast of Prison Break! Oh, wait. I got it mixed up. AP is reporting “a federal judge has sentenced action star Wesley Snipes to the maximum three-year sentence on tax charges.”
Still, Snipes would be a great addition to the Prison Break cast. Tommy Lee Jones too.
“THE PETRAEUS MOVE”
Remote-control war at last…they should name one of the new drone models after Petraeus.
He’s done a great job on doing the best he can with the Surge, but he’s got to be 100% behind the NEXT president, not the OLD one. Bush leaves the title of Commander and Chief in the desk drawer of the White House – he can’t take it to Crawford.
Thanks for connecting the dots!
It never sets here.
Bill, you got to report on the moron Jonny Flashman’s latest Flush Report embarassments.
Not the usual ZERO comments for the “movement conservatives” today on his tweezer web site.
No, he “credited” some boy who left Capitol Weakly 2 years ago with an interview with aged porno queen Nina Hartley.
lol
Why do righty wingnuts keep on defending Bush?
JOHN FRAKING MCCAIN SAYS BUSH IS AN ASSHOLE FOR NEW ORLEANS.
Can you not “get it”?
lol
NickM :
Michael Brown was a complete disgrace as FEMA director post-Katrina, but I don’t believe that an effective federal government response in the days and weeks following the hurricane would have made much of a difference to the people in New Orleans.
FEMA is not tasked with evacuations pre-disaster, which New Orleans botched.
It has been part of disaster planning for years that rescue and recovery supplies be located at significant distance from the likeliest disaster sites, to minimize the chance of the supplies themselves being destroyed. There really was no fast way to get much of anything into New Orleans post-Katrina.
FEMA is not responsible for New Orleans officials’ conscious decision to refuse to stock the city’s designated primary emergency shelter (the Superdome) with food and water because they didn’t want large numbers of people congregating there.
To the extent that Governor Blanco’s footdragging after Katrina (being unwilling to relinquish authority) made the situation worse, a competent FEMA director could have gone on TV/radio and made a public plea for her to call in the full resources of the federal government. This would have helped a lot more than exchanging emails about his attire.
Where FEMA’s deficiencies have been the most damaging has been in reconstruction, and most of that hadn’t even happened yet when Brown was relieved of command.
The levee fiasco is attributable to ACE and several state agencies, not FEMA.
McCain’s temper will be a welcome addition to bureaucracies which have long found no consequences for failure.
Apr 24, 2008 05:08 PM
I’m sorry, it’s been like 2 hours since I had coffee. Did Ann say that Flashreport has porn?
Finally, a reason to read Fleishman’s website…
…oh wait, this is the Internet – I can get porn anywhere. Nevermind.
lol
I nearly put Mary Carey on NWN, since she was a gubernatorial candidate and played herself in See Arnold Run.
She was only 5 hours late for her call in San Diego. Because she was shooting another movie in the San Fernando Valley …
>Brasky :
I’m sorry, it’s been like 2 hours since I had coffee. Did Ann say that Flashreport has porn?
Finally, a reason to read Fleishman’s website…
…oh wait, this is the Internet – I can get porn anywhere. Nevermind.
Apr 24, 2008 06:15 PM
Is your post about porn or stupidity?
>Ann :
Bill, you got to report on the moron Jonny Flashman’s latest Flush Report embarassments.
Not the usual ZERO comments for the “movement conservatives” today on his tweezer web site.
No, he “credited” some boy who left Capitol Weakly 2 years ago with an interview with aged porno queen Nina Hartley.
lol
Apr 24, 2008 06:06 PM
Bill, I think this analysis in (of all places) the L.A. Times covers some of the same ground in re the Petraeus move, although you describe it with much more clarity and wonderfully succinctly (vs. Barnes burying the key point “military experts consider the act of ousting a top officer unlikely” in just about the last paragaraph):
http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/world/la-na-petraeus24apr24,1,4348709.story
I never go to Fleischman’s site, but I did take in a story in today’s Wall Street Journal by the republican everyone loves to hate…
Rove’s article is below:
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB120899654405739949.html
[subscription required]
You’re welcome.
>Brasky :
“THE PETRAEUS MOVE”
Remote-control war at last…they should name one of the new drone models after Petraeus.
He’s done a great job on doing the best he can with the Surge, but he’s got to be 100% behind the NEXT president, not the OLD one. Bush leaves the title of Commander and Chief in the desk drawer of the White House – he can’t take it to Crawford.
Thanks for connecting the dots!
Apr 24, 2008 05:36 PM
subscription not req’d apparently. I subscribe, so assume everything on that site has to be read after signing in…
Sorry, Nick, that is just another excuse for the Bush White House, as John McCain just pointed out today in New Orleans.
>NickM :
Michael Brown was a complete disgrace as FEMA director post-Katrina, but I don’t believe that an effective federal government response in the days and weeks following the hurricane would have made much of a difference to the people in New Orleans.
FEMA is not tasked with evacuations pre-disaster, which New Orleans botched.
Not quite the way I would put it, but not off base …
>Capitol Boy :
If the media are focused on the horse race, they conclude Clinton is finished. Can’t win the delegates. Can’t win the popular vote WITHOUT the caucuses. Massively behind when you include the caucus votes. Way behind in the polls. Way behind in fundraising.
The only thing Clinton leads Barack in is bullshit and lying.
Apr 24, 2008 05:04 PM
Not a relevant point.
>Brasky :
“It could turn out that Clinton wins the primary voting and loses because she can’t get sufficient delegates”
whatever, dems are all too aware that presidents aren’t elected by the popular vote. we got that civics lesson in 2000 — moving on…
Apr 24, 2008 04:59 PM
Well, aside from your not caring about the initiative’s covert agenda of repealing renters’ rights legislation, I’m sure what you say is entirely right …
>Hap Hazard :
Prop 98 actually does quite a bit more to blunt the impact of the US Supreme Court Kelo case. Aside from repealing rent control, which I don’t really care about, 98 is much better than 99, which, suspiciously, is supported by cities and local governments. They are the ones who want to be able to continue to condemn private land and turn it over to auto mall developers.
Apr 24, 2008 04:47 PM
Look, it’s all over but the stubbornness and remarkable spin. Not to to mention the credulousness of a credulous media. Which also seeks contest where no contest exists.
>Brasky :
Well, if polls counted as votes, Hillary would be losing to Obama by several million in a nation-wide super primary.
The media continues to buy whatever Clinton spin is out there – she has a better record on odd-numbered days when the wind is from the southeast, etc.
If field goals were worth 5 points, Tennessee would be Super Bowl champions. Whatever.
Apr 24, 2008 04:44 PM
The only major figures I’m aware of who support the Prop 98 eminent domain initiative are very conservative Republicans.
When you have Pete Wilson out there blasting it, that is indicative.
>Dana :
News Flash! Senator Feinstein opposes Prop 98 and endorses Prop 99.
From the press release by the opponents of 98: “Bi-partisan opposition continues to grow against Prop. 98. Earlier this week, prominent Republicans U.S. Rep. George Radanovich (R-Mariposa) and former governor Pete Wilson formally opposed Prop. 98.”
[news.yahoo.com/s/usnw/20080424/p...]
Apr 24, 2008 04:23 PM
Prison Break becomes US Marshals?!
Pretty good flick, though Wesley Snipes is not a good replacement for Harrison Ford from the classic original, The Fugitive.
The Jerry Goldsmith musical score is quite good, however.
>Vladimir Bierko :
Did you hear? Wesley Snipes has joined the cast of Prison Break! Oh, wait. I got it mixed up. AP is reporting “a federal judge has sentenced action star Wesley Snipes to the maximum three-year sentence on tax charges.”
Still, Snipes would be a great addition to the Prison Break cast. Tommy Lee Jones too.
Apr 24, 2008 04:01 PM
Thanks, Hap, for linking to Karl Rove’s anti-Obama screed.
Which he presents in the guise of analysis.
He’s really quite impartial, you know …
Let me give you a clue.
Obama scares the shit out of Republicans.
There’s more …
>Hap Hazard :
I never go to Fleischman’s site, but I did take in a story in today’s Wall Street Journal by the republican everyone loves to hate…
Rove’s article is below:
[online.wsj.com/article/SB1208996...]
[subscription required]
Apr 24, 2008 06:48 PM
Thanks, Paul …
>Paul Burton :
McCain has no credibility attacking Bush’s failures in the criminally negligent response to the
OK, what?
>Hap Hazard :
How much longer will the media pretend that Clinton can win? — I think they are hung up on the manner in which Obama will get over the top, because it does a perceived injustice to the sanctity of the vote, so to speak.
No prob.
>Jonathan Hemlock :
Sorrry for the double-posting.
Apr 24, 2008 02:44 PM
Attended a lecture this week in re the upcoming election by pollster Dr. Robert G. Meadow
http://www.lakesnellperry.com/who/bios/meadow.htm
Some of it was stuff I had heard before (most of the vulnerable Senator seats are held by Republicans). But one interesting perspective in re health care reform is he found Democrats are mostly concerned about the uninsured while Republican’s emphasis is on cost containment. Not much room for common ground with those opposing points of view.
Much was made about how unpopular the current Congress is. I raised my perennial point that Pelosi is unable to keep her base happy because her majority was built on winning in what normally would be Republican districts and that she is constrained to give her members from more centrist districts room to maneuver.
Meadow noted this had been a conscious strategy by the Democrats, to tailor their candidates to the profile of the districts they were running in to beat Republicans in centrist/right leaning districts. This includes the Dems running a number of Iraq war veterans (which was unusual for the Dems to do).
I noted my curiosity whether the Republicans are targeting these seats which you would think would be vulnerable. Meadow agreed, quipping Congressional incumbents are most vulnerable at the intervals of 2 and 20 years after winning a seat (i.e. while still settling in and after losing touch with the district upon serving for a long period–Matthew G. Martinez is an example of this).
Then Meadow said the Republicans haven’t done a good job of recruiting candidates for the vulnerable districts, which is partly why most observers don’t think the Republicans have much chance of retaking the Congress this November.
Looks like the National Republican Congressional Committee and others in the party are not doing their job and letting a chance to get those seats back slip through their fingers. If I was a Republican I’d be pissed.
Till somebody drops an anvil on Obama’s head as he saunters up 5th Avenue.
Or till they’ve reaped all the ratings they can.
Or till it’s obvious to people with below room temp IQs.
>Jonathan Hemlock :
How much longer will the media pretend that Clinton can win?
Apr 24, 2008 02:41 PM
A lot better than not.
It’s a winner against the Clintons.
Which is why Team McCain never attacks the Clintons.
>Brasky :
I didn’t say he wasn’t strong, but as old and white goes, Clinton has got nothing on McCain.
We’ll see how running against the Bush legacy works for the Talk Express.
Apr 24, 2008 02:09 PM
Not too shabby …
>marcus :
Good for Mac ripping on Bush for Katrina.
Incompetent Republicans are every bit as bad as wimpy Demos.
Not bad for an “old white guy white as Death.”
Apr 24, 2008 01:59 PM
There’s always something to joke about.
Besides, the logic of the budget crisis is fairly inexorable.
>marcus waldron :
What does Arnold have to joke about on the Tonight Show? Doesn’t California’s deficit get bigger and bigger?
Apr 24, 2008 01:26 PM
That wasn’t the deal.
>Kandy Kid :
I want to compliment Capitol Boy on using Donald Rumsfled’s excellent “bitter ender” phrase to describe Hillary. Though the prospects of finally divorcing her sex addicted husband, keeping her Senate seat and spending $50 million do not seem too bitter.
Apr 24, 2008 12:30 PM
The night is young.
>Brasky :
“MCCAIN’S VEEP: A STRAW IN THE WIND FROM MINNESOTA”
Whomever the pick, he’ll be less white and less old than McCain. Only Death is older or whiter than McCain.
If the Reeps really wanted to mess with the dems, they would heavily float Powell’s name up until convention, then pick their crappy establishment candidate.
Apr 24, 2008 12:28 PM
The Clintons keep thinking they can point to a big state, which most any Democrat would do just as well in or better in the general …
>Brasky :
“SOME INTERESTING ARITHMETIC”
Win a battle to lose the war – that seems to be Clinton’s mantra this election.
Apr 24, 2008 12:15 PM
Well, in my view, this thing is already over.
But if the Clintons want to have a semblance of an argument, they need a big win in Indiana.
>Chris M :
This native Hoosier’s sense is that the Indiana popular vote is very important for Obama as a chance to put this thing away. NC will be spun as a “black thang,” and IN is the opportunity to show he can win with white working people.
Here’s another look at the Indiana race (with excellent graphics):
http://tinyurl.com/4hjpuh
The supers are sort of like Lincoln waiting for a Union victory to release the Emancipation Proclamation. To fall in behind Barack after a loss would appear as a sign of desperation.
Apr 24, 2008 11:46 AM
“The night is young.”
As a veteran of some Saturday nights, those are famous last words…
That’s because the reporter, like virtually everyone at the LA Times, has never been in the military and doesn’t know much about the military.
He doesn’t even know Pentagon policy, and how it differs between the theater commanders and the CINCs.
Any yet he probably logged a few days on that little story.
>Dana :
Bill, I think this analysis in (of all places) the L.A. Times covers some of the same ground in re the Petraeus move, although you describe it with much more clarity and wonderfully succinctly (vs. Barnes burying the key point “military experts consider the act of ousting a top officer unlikely” in just about the last paragaraph):
[www.latimes.com/news/nationworld...]
Apr 24, 2008 06:48 PM
And now the night beckons …
>Brasky :
“The night is young.”
As a veteran of some Saturday nights, those are famous last words…
Apr 24, 2008 07:26 PM
You earned it buddy. Have two for me.
Every time I think this campaign may bore it drives ahead more.
Yeah, yeah, McCain. Tell it to the judge. Wasn’t idiot George at your birthday party in Arizona during the disaster? Didn’t he do a fly-over on the way home in Air Force One complete with photo-op trying to look concerned but managing only to look like Alfred E. Newman?
John, you can run from Bush all you want, but you can’t hide.
Forgotten America Tour, my ass.
Well, in my view, this thing is already over. — I hope that Obama wins in Indiana like he did in neighboring Illinois. It would be great to see her be forced to concede early, or at least for her to be disregarded everywhere starting the next day. It would be good for Obama to have some regroup time before having to start a fall campaign full bore
What video today?
Let me give you a clue. Obama scares the shit out of Republicans — Thanks. I hope you are right.
It’s on several levels. Young voters. Independents. Generational change. The fear of backfiring attacks against a non-Jesse Jackson black politician.
Rev. God Damn America himself.
>Jonas Blane :
What video today?
Apr 25, 2008 05:59 AM
Wasn’t the NOLA fly-over by AF1 later?
>Pat Skipper :
Yeah, yeah, McCain. Tell it to the judge. Wasn’t idiot George at your birthday party in Arizona during the disaster? Didn’t he do a fly-over on the way home in Air Force One complete with photo-op trying to look concerned but managing only to look like Alfred E. Newman?
John, you can run from Bush all you want, but you can’t hide.
Forgotten America Tour, my ass.
Apr 24, 2008 10:44 PM
True, though you have the added benefit of not having it constantly on your screens.
>sergei :
Every time I think this campaign may bore it drives ahead more.
Apr 24, 2008 09:03 PM
Thanks! Now I have a headache.
>Brasky :
You earned it buddy. Have two for me.
Apr 24, 2008 07:34 PM
[...] » Blog Archive » May 2, .. ENPR: Pa. Win Gives Hillary a Super-Delegate Wedge Outlook New West Notes » Non-Random Notes, With Updates And Forum Throughout.. PolState.com » Blog Archive » PS: Gossamer Strands of The Po.. Remember that [...]
For the past three months, I have been waiting for that DVD edition in the Frasier series. I’m still fourth in line at my local library to receive these so I was incredibly excited to learn that I can Watch Frasier Online.. My plan was to watch the DVDs about the train although commuting to and from perform so I’m hoping I have World-wide-web access through the tunnels and stations on my route. My wife laughs about my obsession with this, but she is hooked on certain Television shows herself. I’m wondering if I should tell her that she can watch her exhibits online also.