Archive for August, 2009

Tacky Kennedy Funeral Service

Monday, August 31st, 2009

tedennyJust when you think people couldn’t sink any lower or display greater moral bankruptcy Ted Kennedy’s funeral service comes along.

Oh, I expected the state run media to be endlessly lavishing praise on Kennedy.  I assumed that attending democrats to use the event to promote socialized healthcare.  But I never imagined that these low-life cretons could stoop to sending Ted’s grandchildren to the podium to offer a political speech. 

I think it’s wonderful if the kids want to offer a prayer of intercession of thier own, from thier heart, about Grampa, but the grownups decide to make them into democrat puppets.  One of the grandchildrens’ lines ended with the ”cause of his life to see every American have decent quality health care as a fundamental right and not a privilege.”

That’s bad enough but in doing so, the child has announced that Ted has conferred a new right to the American people.  Up until now the rights of American people were bestowed upon us by God.  It’s supposed to be the government’s job to assure that those rights of the American people are protected.  But, neither the government, Obama, nor even Ted Kennedy can confer rights to anybody.

Controversial anti-Obama ad pulled | Spero News

Friday, August 28th, 2009

Golly-whiz, it’s almost like ABC and NBC are working with an oppressive dictatorship to keep information from the public!

The ABC and NBC networks refused to show an advertisement criticizing President Obama’s health care reform plan. ABC aired a special report in June on healthcare that was hosted at the White House.

Sponsored by the League of American Voters, the ad features neurosurgeon Mark J. Cuffe MD who warns that a government-run health care system will lead to the rationing of procedures and medicine. It began airing weeks ago on local affiliates of ABC, NBC, FOX and CBS, but  ABC and NBC have refused to run the spot nationally.


“It’s a powerful ad,” said Bob Adams, executive director of the League of American Voters, a national nonprofit group with 15,000 members who advocate individual liberty and government accountability. “It tells the truth and it really highlights one of the biggest vulnerabilities and problems with this proposed legislation, which is it rations health care and disproportionately will decimate the quality of health care for seniors.”

“The ABC Television Network has a long-standing policy that we do not sell time for advertising that presents a partisan position on a controversial public issue,” spokeswoman Susan Sewell said in a written statement. “Just to be clear, this is a policy for the entire network, not just ABC News.”  NBC says it may consider it if revised.  (TorchandandFork Editorial Note: I guess Susan Sewer forgot to mention that ABC is happy to give time away to the dictator they support.)
Martin Barillas is a former US diplomat, who also worked as a democracy advocate and election observer in Latin America.

Controversial anti-Obama ad pulled | Spero News.

Ted is Dead

Wednesday, August 26th, 2009

Ted Kennedy died earlier today.

In related news, premium scotch distillers are expected to announce significant layoffs due to due to dramatic declining sales.

I’m just glad I’ve got a DVR because I expect the state run media to be wall to wall Ted while they drag his fat ass from place to place presumably to prove to all the “villagers” that the arrogant, lying, smug, murdering ass-wipe is truly dead.

Are All Western Governments Led By Pussies?

Monday, August 24th, 2009

In 2001, Abdelbaset Ali Mohmed Al Megrahi, a Libyan, was convicted of involvement in the bombing and sentenced to life imprisonment. On 20 August 2009, the Scottish Government released him on compassionate grounds to return to Libya as he was suffering from terminal prostate cancer and had a life expectancy of less than 3 months.PA103cockpit4

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The dude got a life sentence; why is it a surprise to the Scots that he would have died in prison? 

This is so stupid – I feel badly for the families and friends of the people that were murdered on that plane;  it’s got to be like having to relive the whole thing over again.

Our own government has released a bunch of terrorists that had been imprisoned in Guantanemo.  To add insult to injury, they sent some of them to Bermuda!  I’m not kidding, there were pictures of them frolicking on the beach!

Meanwhile, the Justice Department’s ethics office has recommended reopening nearly a dozen cases of prisoner abuse, potentially exposing CIA employees and contractors to prosecution.  The cases needed to re-opened becasue they had already been closed because nobody did anything wrong!  That’s right, we’re going to prosecute CIA men/women for doing their job, protecting the United States. 

This stuff just doesn’t make sense!

Obama accuses healthcare critics of “bearing false witness”

Thursday, August 20th, 2009

Obama called on his Obama-tron minions to organize a conference call with liberal minded religious leaders yesterday.  Obama flipped into ‘holy-mode” and accused critics of Obama-care of “bearing false witness”.  OBAMA/

I’ve got to admit, this guy has gnads; using church speak to call American citizens liars while lying himself to the church people!  Obama really does have that audacity thing working.

I wonder how god-boy justifies his own false witnessing.  Here’s a good one that also broke yesterday.  Remember when we all wanted the government to authorize drilling for oil last year.  That’s when all the democrats told us how oil is bad, wind is good and Nacny Pelosi has been blowing hot air ever since!  Well apparently oil isn’t so bad that they couldn’t lend $2 billion dollars to their pal George Soros for his Brazilian oil drilling company.

Ohio.com – All stirred up at Tea Party

Thursday, August 20th, 2009

Thousands decry health-care plan, stimulus. State senator says ‘I want my country back’ to cheering crowd

By Linda Golz
Beacon Journal staff writer

CUYAHOGA FALLS:

About 7,000 people crowded into Falls River Square Wednesday night for the first Akron Tea Party.

Organizers said it was the largest Ohio Tea Party so far.

Many in the crowd wore patriotic hats and shirts, waved American and ”Don’t Tread On Me” flags and carried homemade signs protesting policies in Washington, D.C., and the direction the country is headed in general.

”I was not born in a socialist country, and I will not die in a socialist country,” Republican state Sen. Tim Grendell of Geauga County said. ”And neither will my children.”

The crowd roared its approval.

He said it is ”all American” to get involved in government and let politicians know what policy changes voters would like to see.

”It’s called the First Amendment,” Grendell said.

Instead, he charged, the government is trying to keep the people ignorant and apathetic.

Grendell also urged the crowd to support strong states’ rights and to protect their freedoms.

”I want my country back,” he said.

Other speakers included Cuyahoga Falls Mayor Don Robart; American Policy Roundtable Vice President Rob Walgate; Republican candidate for Ohio’s 27th Senate District Frank LaRose; and businessmen Greg Knox of Dayton and Jason Wise of Stark County.

Robart said that former President George W. Bush’s bailout ”has been a total failure” and that President Barack Obama’s stimulus bill
”has been worse.”

He promised the crowd that ”cap-and-trade will be the largest tax increase in our history.” Robart said it should be renamed ”the China-India stimulus bill” and accused it of being ”based solely on a myth called global warming.”

”We’re not drinking the Kool-Aid no more,” attendee Barry Bugh of Akron said.

Cristina Shreve of Strongsville came to the Tea Party because, she said, she moved to the United States from Brazil with her parents and siblings as a child in 1965 ”to get away from socialized health care and everything.”

”I just don’t want government in everything we do. I don’t like the illegal immigrants. They should have to do what we did [to enter the country legally]. It took a long time,” Shreve said. ”I get so ticked off at these politicians that think they’re so special.”

Democrat joins ranks

Eileen Crilley, a Democrat from North Canton, said she came because her friend Phil Green of Minerva had urged her.

”I am here to see what it’s all about,” she said.

She said Green persuaded her to really check out President Obama’s health-care plan.

”Some people just hear the bits and parts they want to hear,” Crilley said. ”If you really dig deep, you’ll see what they’re really saying.”

Crilley said she was being swayed by her Republican friend and becoming more conservative.

”I’m just not happy with the way the government has been doing things,” said Aaron Kopp of Ravenna. He said he was not happy about taxes, the health-care plan and Obama’s policies in general, a feeling expressed by many.

Signs could be seen all around the huge gathering, including ”Pucker up D.C. Kiss Our Grass Roots,” ”The Opposite of Progress is Congress” and ”There’s nothing unpatriotic about caring for your grandma.”

Naomi Storob of Akron and friend John Welfley of Munroe Falls said government officials pay no attention to the people, and that Congress won’t have to be on the same health insurance as other U.S. citizens.

”I shudder to think what’s happening to our country,” Storob said.

Phil Bennett of Canton came wearing a costume hat like the crown on the Statue of Liberty.

”I just want to get my voice heard. I don’t agree with what’s going on right now,” he said.

 

Sam Williams of Akron dons a colonial hat for the Akron Tea Party held at the Falls River Square on Wednesday, August 19, 2009, in Cuyahoga Falls, Ohio. “I disagree with where our country is going. It’s a little more change than I had wanted.” (Phil Masturzo/Akron Beacon Journal)

CUYAHOGA FALLS:

About 7,000 people crowded into Falls River Square Wednesday night for the first Akron Tea Party.

Organizers said it was the largest Ohio Tea Party so far.

Many in the crowd wore patriotic hats and shirts, waved American and ”Don’t Tread On Me” flags and carried homemade signs protesting policies in Washington, D.C., and the direction the country is headed in general.

”I was not born in a socialist country, and I will not die in a socialist country,” Republican state Sen. Tim Grendell of Geauga County said. ”And neither will my children.”

The crowd roared its approval.

He said it is ”all American” to get involved in government and let politicians know what policy changes voters would like to see.

”It’s called the First Amendment,” Grendell said.

Instead, he charged, the government is trying to keep the people ignorant and apathetic.

Grendell also urged the crowd to support strong states’ rights and to protect their freedoms.

”I want my country back,” he said.

Other speakers included Cuyahoga Falls Mayor Don Robart; American Policy Roundtable Vice President Rob Walgate; Republican candidate for Ohio’s 27th Senate District Frank LaRose; and businessmen Greg Knox of Dayton and Jason Wise of Stark County.

Robart said that former President George W. Bush’s bailout ”has been a total failure” and that President Barack Obama’s stimulus bill
”has been worse.”

He promised the crowd that ”cap-and-trade will be the largest tax increase in our history.” Robart said it should be renamed ”the China-India stimulus bill” and accused it of being ”based solely on a myth called global warming.”

”We’re not drinking the Kool-Aid no more,” attendee Barry Bugh of Akron said.

Cristina Shreve of Strongsville came to the Tea Party because, she said, she moved to the United States from Brazil with her parents and siblings as a child in 1965 ”to get away from socialized health care and everything.”

”I just don’t want government in everything we do. I don’t like the illegal immigrants. They should have to do what we did [to enter the country legally]. It took a long time,” Shreve said. ”I get so ticked off at these politicians that think they’re so special.”

Democrat joins ranks

Eileen Crilley, a Democrat from North Canton, said she came because her friend Phil Green of Minerva had urged her.

”I am here to see what it’s all about,” she said.

She said Green persuaded her to really check out President Obama’s health-care plan.

”Some people just hear the bits and parts they want to hear,” Crilley said. ”If you really dig deep, you’ll see what they’re really saying.”

Crilley said she was being swayed by her Republican friend and becoming more conservative.

”I’m just not happy with the way the government has been doing things,” said Aaron Kopp of Ravenna. He said he was not happy about taxes, the health-care plan and Obama’s policies in general, a feeling expressed by many.

Signs could be seen all around the huge gathering, including ”Pucker up D.C. Kiss Our Grass Roots,” ”The Opposite of Progress is Congress” and ”There’s nothing unpatriotic about caring for your grandma.”

Naomi Storob of Akron and friend John Welfley of Munroe Falls said government officials pay no attention to the people, and that Congress won’t have to be on the same health insurance as other U.S. citizens.

”I shudder to think what’s happening to our country,” Storob said.

Phil Bennett of Canton came wearing a costume hat like the crown on the Statue of Liberty.

”I just want to get my voice heard. I don’t agree with what’s going on right now,” he said.

Ohio.com – All stirred up at Tea Party.

William McGurn: Harry Reid’s ‘Evil’ Moment – WSJ.com

Wednesday, August 19th, 2009

Man, the democrats can really dish it out but they don’t seem to take it very well.  What a bunch of douche-bags.  To quote Hillary Clinton; “I’m sick and tired of people who say that if you debate and disagree with this administration, somehow you’re not patriotic. We need to stand up and say we’re Americans, and we have the right to debate and disagree with any administration.”

Here’s an article from the Wall Street Journal describing the latest insult to the American people perpetrated by Harry Reid.

Remember when polite society treated a politician’s use of the word “evil” as a sign that the old boy was dangerously lacking upstairs?

We saw it in 1983, when Ronald Reagan famously used the word in a speech to describe the Soviet empire. What a rube! New York Times columnist Anthony Lewis spoke for the smart set when he wondered what Soviet leaders must think: “What confidence can they have in the restraint of an American leader with such an outlook?”

We saw it again in 2002, when George W. Bush characterized North Korea, Iran and Saddam Hussein’s Iraq as an “axis of evil.” Tom Daschle, a Democrat and then Senate majority leader, warned that “we’ve got to be very careful with rhetoric of that kind”; former President Jimmy Carter called it “overly simplistic and counterproductive”; and comedian Will Ferrell parodied it on Saturday Night Live. Soon the phrase became acceptable only in the ironic sense—as in the Chris Fair cookbook titled “Cuisines of the Axis of Evil and Other Irritating States: A Dinner Party Approach to International Relations.”

With all this history, you would think Harry Reid (D., Nev.) had ample warning. Nevertheless, the Senate majority leader invoked the e-word himself last week at an energy conference in Las Vegas, where he accused those protesting President Barack Obama’s health-care proposals of being “evil mongers.” So proud was he of this contribution to the American political lexicon that he repeated it to a reporter the next day and noted the phrase was “an original.”

And then . . . nothing. No thundering rebuke from the New York Times. No outburst from Mr. Carter. In fact, it’s hard not to notice that the good and gracious people who instinctively recoil at words like “evil” or “un-American” (the preferred term of Mr. Reid’s counterpart in the House, Speaker Nancy Pelosi) have all been silent.

McGurn

Associated Press

Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid of Nev., second from left, accompanied by Sen. Christopher Dodd, D-Conn., Sen. Charles Schumer, D-N.Y., and Sen. Max Baucus, D-Mont.

It would be easy to read something dark into Mr. Reid’s characterization, and the yawn with which it has been greeted. In fact, what we have here is really the logical extension of the liberal assumption that they have a monopoly on brain power. In such a world, anyone who dissents, almost by definition, has to be stupid or evil or both.

It’s a point of view Mr. Obama inadvertently encourages when he indulges in, say, the trope about Medicare that has become a staple of his town halls. The president tells the crowd he’s received a letter from a woman upset with his plans for health care. “She said, ‘I don’t want government-run health care. I don’t want you meddling in the private market place. And keep your hands off my Medicare.’”

Get it? The applause tells us the audience does: How dumb can this woman be?

It’s much the same with White House spokesman Robert Gibbs. In his press briefings, Mr. Gibbs seems to suggest that all hard questions about health care are based on “misconceptions.” Really?

Is the Congressional Budget Office’s finding that the House plan would significantly raise health-care costs a “misconception”? Was it a “misconception” that the now-abandoned section covering end-of-life issues had an in-built conflict of interest between lowering costs and providing care for the elderly? And is it a “misconception” that Mr. Obama’s ultimate goal is a single-payer system, when Americans can watch him on earlier videos saying as much?

Right now the entire Beltway—including the West Wing—seems obsessed with finding out what went wrong with the administration’s sales pitch. No one appears to think the problem might be substance. Or that the vague answers and vitriolic rhetoric we get from Democrats such as Mr. Reid convey a sense that the plans they favor will not hold up under public scrutiny.

In fairness to the senator, perhaps history will one day vindicate his “evil monger” statement as a prophetic Gipper moment. If so, the legions of white-haired grandpas and grandmas now descending on our nation’s town halls will be exposed to be as irredeemably evil as, say, Iran or the USSR. When asked if the senator has any second thoughts about calling American citizens evil, a spokesman emailed me to say that Mr. Reid’s only regret is the “hate-filled rhetoric and signage” being used “to disrupt civil dialogue.”

Plainly the Nevada Democrat is taking no chances. Instead of pressing the flesh at a real town hall this August, Mr. Reid has opted for a tele-town hall late next week. Aides say the format allows him to reach thousands more people. Of course, it also protects him from having to come face to face with all those evil mongers out there.

As with so many of his colleagues, Mr. Reid appears unable to connect his attitude to a questioning American citizenry to poll results showing increased sympathy for town-hall protestors, flagging public support for the health-care plans in Congress, and an erosion of Democratic credibility from the White House to Capitol Hill. To paraphrase Anthony Lewis, what confidence can the American people have in leaders with such an outlook?

William McGurn: Harry Reid’s ‘Evil’ Moment – WSJ.com.

I just don’t trust Obama

Tuesday, August 18th, 2009

Yesterday Obama said that he would take the public option for healthcare off the table; an obvious attempt to quiet the firestorm of citizen dissent across the country.  So, despite his rhetoric for the past several years to the contrary, I’m supposed to believe that he’s just throwing in the towel on this?  I don’t think so.

The American people are waking up to the political manipulations happening in Washington DC today, and as they rub the sleep from their eyes, are realizing that a healthcare plan, any healthcare plan, under government control will cost more than projected, allow for political quid pro quos, foster political strong-arm pressure, create market manipulation, and ultimately cost citizens in quality of care and cost seniors by devaluing their lives to save money.

Pelosi said that the house bill WILL have the public option.  The senate says they will look at healthcare coop angle.

What ever these crooks are doing it ain’t good for you and me.  The pressure needs to continue and government needs to understand that we don’t want them involved in our healthcare!

The difference between healthcare co-ops and a public option is only in who runs them.

Internal Memo Confirms Big Giveaways In White House Deal With Big Pharma

Monday, August 17th, 2009

The Huffington Post isn’t normally one of my first choices for gathering news, but these are stange times indeed.  Could it be that this revelation along with growing concern over the background of Obama’s czars has triggered the White House to back off this “public option” health plan?

The memo described in the Huffington Post article is pretty damning.  It clearly illustrates that Obama is not being straight with citizens – again.

A memo obtained by the Huffington Post confirms that the White House and the pharmaceutical lobby secretly agreed to precisely the sort of wide-ranging deal that both parties have been denying over the past week.

The memo, which according to a knowledgeable health care lobbyist was prepared by a person directly involved in the negotiations, lists exactly what the White House gave up, and what it got in return.

It says the White House agreed to oppose any congressional efforts to use the government’s leverage to bargain for lower drug prices or import drugs from Canada — and also agreed not to pursue Medicare rebates or shift some drugs from Medicare Part B to Medicare Part D, which would cost Big Pharma billions in reduced reimbursements.

In exchange, the Pharmaceutical Researchers and Manufacturers Association (PhRMA) agreed to cut $80 billion in projected costs to taxpayers and senior citizens over ten years. Or, as the memo says: “Commitment of up to $80 billion, but not more than $80 billion.”

Representatives from both the White House and PhRMA, shown the outline, adamantly denied that it reflected reality. PhRMA senior vice president Ken Johnson said that the outline “is simply not accurate.” “This memo isn’t accurate and does not reflect the agreement with the drug companies,” said White House spokesman Reid Cherlin.

Stories in the Los Angeles Times and the New York Times last week indicated that the administration was confirming that such a deal had been made.

Critics on Capitol Hill and online responded with outrage at the reports that Obama had gone behind their backs and sold the reform movement short. Furthermore, the deal seemed to be a betrayal of several promises made by then-Sen. Obama during the presidential campaign, among them that he would use the power of government to drive down the costs of drugs to Medicare and that negotiations would be conducted in the open.

And over the past several days, both the White House and PhRMA have offered a series of sometimes conflicting accounts of what happened in an attempt to walk back the story.

The White House meeting took place on July 7th, as first reported that evening in the Wall Street Journal. Also on the same day, a health care lobbyist following the talks was provided the outline of the deal by a person inside the negotiations. That outline had been floating around K Street before being obtained by the Huffington Post. In order to learn more about its origin, HuffPost agreed not to reveal the name of the lobbyist who originally received it.

“That is the PhRMA deal,” said the lobbyist of the outline. He then clarified, “It was the PhRMA deal.”

The deal, as outlined in the memo:

Commitment of up to $80 billion, but not more than $80 billion.
1. Agree to increase of Medicaid rebate from 15.1 – 23.1% ($34 billion)

2. Agree to get FOBs done (but no agreement on details — express disagreement on data exclusivity which both sides say does not affect the score of the legislation.) ($9 billion)

3. Sell drugs to patients in the donut hole at 50% discount ($25 billion)
This totals $68 billion

4. Companies will be assessed a tax or fee that will score at $12 billion. There was no agreement as to how or on what this tax/fee will be based.

Total: $80 billion

In exchange for these items, the White House agreed to:

1. Oppose importation

2. Oppose rebates in Medicare Part D

3. Oppose repeal of non-interference

4. Oppose opening Medicare Part B

 

“Non-interference” is the industry term for the status quo, in which government-driven price negotiations are barred. In other words, the government is “interfering” in the market if it negotiates lower prices. The ban on negotiating was led through Congress in 2003 by then-Rep. Billy Tauzin (R-La.), who is now the head of PhRMA.

The rebates reference is to Medicare overpayments Big Pharma managed to wrangle from the Republican Congress that Democrats are trying to recoup. The House bill would require Big Pharma to return some of that money. The rebate proposal would save $63 billion over ten years, according to the Congressional Budget Office. The White House, given the chance, declined to tell the Wall Street Journal for a July 17th article that it supported the effort to pursue the rebates.

The Medicare Part B item refers to “infusion drugs,” which can be administered at home. If they fall under Part B, Big Pharma gets paid more than under Part D. The agreement would leave infusion drugs in Part B.

In the section on Big Pharma’s concessions, “FOBs” refers to follow-on biological drugs. Democrats have pushed to make it easier to allow generic drug makers to produce cheaper versions of such drugs, an effort Big Pharma has resisted. The Senate health committee bill gives drug makers 12 years of market exclusivity, five more than the White House proposed.

PhRMA’s Johnson cast doubts on the provenance of the outline. “The memo, as described, is simply not accurate,” he said in a statement. “Anyone could have written it. Unless it comes from our board of directors, it’s not worth the paper it’s written on. Clearly, someone is trying to short circuit our efforts to try and make health care reform a reality this year. That’s not going to happen. Too much is at stake for both patients and the U.S. economy. Our new ads supporting health care reform are starting this week, and we are redoubling our efforts to drive awareness of why this issue is so important to America’s future.”

Johnson added that “no outside lobbyists — not a single one — were ever involved in our discussions with the Senate Finance Committee or the White House so someone is blowing smoke.”

But the lobbyist who was given the outline defended its authenticity. And although the White House now says that drug price negotiations and reimportation were not actually discussed in the talks with PhRMA, the lobbyist said: “Well, that’s bull — that’s baloney. That was part of the deal, for them not to push that.”

The new uncertainty surrounding the deal comes after House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) has repeatedly said that her chamber is not bound by any agreement it is not a party to. On July 8th, the day after the Journal reported some elements of the deal, Energy and Commerce Committee Chairman Henry Waxman (D-Calif.) said in a public speech that his committee would not be tied down by the agreement.

Before recess, he followed through. His committee passed a bill that allowed for re-importation and drug-price negotiations.

In the Senate, Democrats Sherrod Brown (Ohio) and Byron Dorgan (N.D.) pressed White House officials at a closed-door meeting last week, asking whether the White House had tied the Senate’s hands.

The health care lobbyist said that what deal still exists is uncertain, as a result of House pressure. “Now the White House is backing away from it, as you know, because of pressure from the House, because the House was not a party to the deal,” he said. “The Speaker put enormous pressure on the White House, [saying], ‘We weren’t a party to it and we reserve the right to do whatever we want.’ And which they did in the House Energy and Commerce Committee bill, which led the White House to say, ‘Well, maybe it’s not cast in concrete.’”

Obama is walking a tightrope here. He wants to keep PhRMA from opposing the bill, and benefits by having its support, which now includes a $150 million advertising campaign. That’s a fortune in politics — more than Republican presidential candidate John McCain spent on advertising during his entire campaign — but it’s loose change in the pharmaceutical business.

Opponents of the deal with PhRMA hope that Obama is playing a multilayered game, making a deal in order to keep the drug makers in his camp for now, but planning to double-cross them in the end if he needs to in order to pass his signature initiative.

Big Pharma, however, is still comfortable. “As far as the pharmaceutical industry, PhRMA and its member companies, yes, they say a deal is a deal. We’ll see what happens,” said the health care lobbyist.

Internal Memo Confirms Big Giveaways In White House Deal With Big Pharma.

America’s Top Diplomat Steps In It

Tuesday, August 11th, 2009

Secretary of State Hillary Clinton

Secretary of State Hillary Clinton

Secretary of State Hillary Clinton lost her cool Monday after a Congolese student, speaking through a translator, asked her what “Mr. Clinton” thought about a Chinese trade deal with the Democratic Republic of the Congo.

“You want me to tell you what my husband thinks?” Clinton replied, clearly irked by the thought of being her husband Bill’s spokeswoman. “My husband is not secretary of state, I am,” she replied. “If you want my opinion I will tell you my opinion. I am not going to be channeling my husband.”

The only problem? Apparently the translator made a mistake and the student had wanted to know what President Obama thought of the deal. A State Department official tells ABC News the student went up to Clinton after the event and told her he was misquoted. No immediate word yet how Clinton responded.

Regardless of the error, the notion of Secretary Clinton’s deference to her husband clearly touched a nerve with America’s top diplomat. Just a week ago the former President stole his wife’s thunder when he appeared in North Korea to rescue two American journalists detained there. His trip came just as Secretary Clinton embarked on a swing through Africa she hoped would shine light on the plight of the continent.

What’s odd, unless there are two translators involved somehow, the video clearly shows the questioner speaking in English and saying “Mr. Clinton” and then the lady at the podium repeating the question — again in English — to Mrs. Clinton.

Regardless, her indignant response seems rather over-the-top for America’s chief diplomat. She could have asked for clarification before going off. (My guess would have been that the student meant “Mrs. Clinton” and it got garbled in translation to English.) Or she could have joked, “Well, you’ll have to ask him next time he’s in Kinshasha” and added “but here’s what I think.”

“Diplomacy in action,” indeed.