Archive for the ‘Obama’ Category

Potters crush Obama – The Review

BEAVER FALLS, Pa. East Liverpool went over the border to start its boys basketball season and the Potters were in control with a 63-44 victory over Pittsburgh Obama Academy at Geneva College.

Preston Kerr paced the experienced Potter roster with 19 points. Preston Dawson added 10 points.

East Liverpool trailed 13-12 after the first quarter but outscored the Eagles 25-4 in the second quarter to grasp the advantage.

Obama Academy was 7-13 last season.

East Liverpool will continue its Pennsylvania swing to start the season with a game against Western Beaver on Sunday at the Lincoln Park Performing Arts Charter School in Midland.

EL: 12-25-8-1863

OA: 13-4-14-1344

EAST LIVERPOOL SCORING: Cohen Pease 3-0-8, Nate Birch 1-0-3, Quintin Conrad 3-0-6, Preston Kerr 8-1-19, Malachi Reed 0-0-0, Marquise Glenn 1-2-4, Blake Adkins 1-0-2, Preston Dawson 4-2-10, DShawn Kirby 3-1-7, Jake Smith 2-0-4. TEAM TOTALS: 21, 6-9: 63.

OBAMA SCORING: T. Perkins 6-6-18. K. Harris 6-0-14, N. Jackson 2-2-6, S. Long 2-0-4. M. Glass-Jones 1-0-2. TEAM TOTALS: 17, 8-14: 44.

Three-point goals: East Liverpool 5 (Kerr, Pease 2, Birch), Obama 2 (Harris).

Lisbon 48,

Western Reserve 30

LISBON Lisbon used a dominant first quarter to put Western Reserve on its heels in a 48-30 win in the second game of the Lisbon Tip-Off Tournament on Friday.

Lisbon will play Heartland Christian in the championship game at 7:30 p.m. Saturday at Lisbon High School. Western Reserve and Salem will meet in the consolation game at 6 p.m.

Lisbon outscored Western Reserve 15-3 in the first quarter to set the tone.

Trevor Siefke had 20 points, five assists and three steals for the winners. Hunter Dailey added 13 points, six rebounds and two blocks. Tate Wallen had seven boards and four blocks. Austin Dailey chipped in three steals.

Connor Cochran sparked Reserve with 12 points.

W: 3-14-6-730

LI: 15-10-13-1048

W. RESERVE SCORING: Dominic Riccardi 0-3-3, Luke Henning 1-0-3, Andrew Hendricks 0-2-2, Josh Klasic 2-2-6, Connor Cochran 4-0-12, Hunter Stacy 1-2-4. TEAM TOTALS: 8, 9-10: 30.

LISBON SCORING: Trevor Siefke 8-3-20, Hunter Dailey 5-2-13, Tate Wallen 3-0-6, Austin Dailey 2-0-6, Luke Kraft 0-0-0, Alec Schreffler 0-0-0, Alex Brown 0-0-0, Timmy Brandon 0-0-0, Blaine Barnes 0-0-0, Logan Sturgeon 0-0-0, Zylar Mundy 0-0-0. TEAM TOTALS: 19, 5-8: 48.

Three-point goals: W. Reserve 5 (Cochran 4, Henning), Lisbon 5 (A. Dailey 2, Siefke, H. Dailey, Schreffler).

Southern 67, Leetonia 65

SALINEVILLE Southern walked a fine line at the end of the game to avoid an upset in a 67-65 win over Leetonia on Friday in the opening game for both teams.

Southern led 21-17 after one but a back-and-forth second quarter had the teams tied at 33 at the half. Southern found some momentum in the third quarter to jump out to a 53-44 lead heading into the fourth quarter.

Leetonia returns to action today at Jackson-Milton.

Southern is at Columbiana on Tuesday.

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Potters crush Obama - The Review

Poll: Democrats support Biden more than others, but Michelle … – The Highland County Press

By Brett Rowland The Center Square

Democratic voters support President Joe Biden far more than any of the declared candidates seeking the nomination and a group of hypothetical candidates from across the country except for one: Michelle Obama.

The Center Square Voters' Voice Poll, conducted in conjunction with Noble Predictive Insights, found that Biden would win the Democratic primary over a wide swath of hypothetical Democratic challengers.

The Center Square Voters' Voice Poll - Logo - White Background Registered Democratic voters would pick Biden (74%) over Marianne Williamson (9%). They'd also opt for Biden (58%) over U.S. Secretary of Transportation Pete Buttigieg (25%). And Biden (57%) would beat Vermont independent Sen. Bernie Sanders (29%).

Biden (53%) has the upper hand on California Gov. Gavin Newsom (27%). The incumbent (60%) triumphs over U.S. Sen. Elizabeth Warren (25%). Vice President Kamala Harris (24%) wouldn't beat Biden (62%) either. Former U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton (32%) comes closer than other Democrats, but comes up short against Biden (54%).

Biden (63%) bests U.S. Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (21%). The president (64%) also comes out on top over Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker (12%).

Former First Lady of the United States Michelle Obama is a different story. Obama (45%) would narrowly win over Biden (43%).

The former first lady is popular.

"Michelle Obama currently has the best of multiple worlds," said David Byler, chief of research at Noble Predictive Insights. "She's a celebrity with near universal name recognition. She's beloved by Democrats who remember her years as First Lady. But she doesnt have the string of failures and missteps that follow anyone who holds formal political office.

"In other words, she has all the goodwill that comes with the Obama brand but no record that a potential opponent could use against her. Shes not running for office now but if she chose to do so in a future cycle, she could be formidable," he said.

When voters were asked about Michelle Obama this summer, she performed even better in a hypothetical match up. In that earlier poll, Obama (48%) had more support than Biden (36%). The wife of former President Barack Obama has strong support from women, people younger than 55, moderate Democrats, voters without kids, and voters with children younger than 18, according to the poll.

The poll of 2,605 voters included 1,035 Republicans, 1,074 Democrats, and 496 true Independents.

The poll was conducted by Noble Predictive Insights from Oct. 20-26 with a margin of error of 1.92%.

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Poll: Democrats support Biden more than others, but Michelle ... - The Highland County Press

Biden Administration Unleashes Powerful Regulatory Tool Aimed at … – The New York Times

The Biden administrations crackdown on methane leaks from oil wells is based in part on a new powerful policy tool that could strengthen its legal authority to cut greenhouse gas emissions across the entire economy including from cars, power plants, factories and oil refineries.

New limits on methane, announced Saturday by the Environmental Protection Agency during the COP28 climate talks in Dubai, take aim at just one source of climate warming pollution. Methane, which spews from oil and gas drilling sites, is 80 times more powerful than carbon dioxide when it comes to heating the atmosphere in the short term.

But within the language of the methane rule, E.P.A. economists have tucked a controversial calculation that would give the government legal authority to aggressively limit climate-warming pollution from nearly every smokestack and tailpipe across the country.

The number, known as the social cost of carbon, has been used since the Obama administration to calculate the harm to the economy caused by one ton of carbon dioxide pollution. The metric is used to weigh the economic benefits and costs of regulations that apply to polluting industries, such as transportation and energy.

As scientists have increasingly been able to link planetary warming to wildfires, floods, droughts, storms and heat waves, estimates of the social cost of carbon have grown more sophisticated.

The higher the number, the greater the governments justification for compelling polluters to reduce the emissions that are dangerously heating the planet. During the Obama administration, White House economists calculated the social cost of carbon at $42 a ton. The Trump administration lowered it to less than $5 a ton. Under President Biden, the cost was returned to Obama levels, adjusted for inflation and set at $51.

The new estimate of the social cost of carbon, making its debut in a legally binding federal regulation, is almost four times that amount: $190 a ton.

E.P.A. officials say they intend to use that figure in all the agencys climate regulations moving forward.

This is an enormous victory this rocks. Its awesome! said Michael Greenstone, the Obama administration economist who first came up with the idea of using the social cost of carbon to create an economic justification for climate policy.

It brings the U.S. government to the frontier of climate science and economics, after we had fallen behind, said Mr. Greenstone, who now directs the Energy Policy Institute at the University of Chicago. And it means that it will be justified to have more stringent climate regulations. That will mean that polluting power plants and cars will not be able to emit as much.

The new number will be put into action right away: the E.P.A. plans this spring to release final regulations to curb carbon dioxide from cars, trucks and power plants. Plug the new number into the agencys proposal to tighten tailpipe emissions by ramping up sales of electric vehicles or into its proposal to eliminate pollution from power plants, and the economic benefits of each rule could increase to more than $1 trillion, much greater than the estimated cost to the affected industries. It would be similar for new rules to cut pollution from steel and cement plants, factories and oil refineries, which Mr. Biden is planning if he wins reelection to a second term.

With such a high number, many more actions to fight climate change will pass the cost-benefit test, said Michael B. Gerrard, director of the Sabin Center for Climate Change Law at Columbia University.

Thats a crucial point in the legal fight over the regulations: historically, when the government can show that the economic benefit of a regulation is greater than its cost, the courts are likely to uphold those rules against legal challenges.

This number means that the government has a weapon that it can use to justify anything it wants to do, Elizabeth Murrill, the Republican solicitor general of Louisiana, said in an interview.

Ms. Murrill is part of a group of Republican state attorneys general that is preparing to fight the climate regulations coming from the Biden administration, which they see as a government assault on industry.

A federal judge had dismissed one challenge to the Biden administrations decision to set the cost of carbon pollution at $51 a ton. Ms. Murrill said the new number should be easier to attack in court because it would carry much greater economic consequences.

Now weve got a concrete application of the numbers and now we can go back and challenge everything again, she said.

E.P.A. officials said they are prepared for any legal challenge. They spent more than two years working on a 182-page analysis, documenting the scientific and economic methods that they used to consider the damages to livelihoods, property values and commodity costs from climate change.

Its a huge deal, and it reflects the impacts of climate change that people are living in their daily experience, said Vicki Arroyo, E.P.A.s associate administrator for policy, in an interview.

If you look at the recent National Climate Assessment these numbers reflect what the scientific community has said is the cost to society of climate change, said Ms. Arroyo, pointing to the release last month of a sweeping report documenting the impact of climate change on American lives, from rising fatalities during extreme heat in the Southwest, earlier and longer pollen seasons in Texas, northward migration of crop pests in the Corn Belt, and more damaging hailstorms in Wyoming and Nebraska.

The assessment includes a chapter on economics, reflecting an expanding field of research into the financial costs of a warming planet and how they impact households, businesses and markets.

Researchers for the National Academies of Science concluded in 2017 that the Obama-era estimate that every ton of carbon pollution results in $42 of damage to the economy was outdated, and recommended that the government revise the figure. A study last year in the journal Nature concluded the price should be $185 per ton.

Mr. Trump, the frontrunner for the 2024 Republican presidential nomination, could try to shrink the cost of carbon metric if he wins the White House, as he did when he cut the Obama-era number.

But Mandy Gunasekara, who served as chief of staff of the E.P.A. in the Trump administration, said that given the research and analysis underpinning the new number, it could be difficult for a new administration to easily reduce it.

There is a heavy degree of legal security, given the numbers inclusion in the new methane regulation, said Ms. Gunasekara, who is now a visiting fellow at the Heritage Foundation, a conservative research organization that is writing the blueprint for the next Republican administrations energy and climate agenda.

Still, she said, a future Republican administration is likely to try.

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Biden Administration Unleashes Powerful Regulatory Tool Aimed at ... - The New York Times

I Was Obama’s 2012 Campaign Manager. There’s No Need to Panic Over Biden. – POLITICO

Yet, three days after that poll hit, Democrats took Republicans behind the woodshed, enshrining the right to make reproductive decisions in the Ohio constitution, taking control of the Virginia legislature, taking a state supreme court seat in Pennsylvania, and reelecting a popular Democrat as governor in the deep-red state of Kentucky.

This all gave me whiplash. Just like in 2011, we have an early poll screaming doom and gloom for a Democratic incumbent. Yes, we are officially in the Democratic bedwetting era for the 2024 presidential election. But heres some advice from someone whos been here before: Dont panic. Heres why.

Silvers 2011 analysis did not age well: A year later, Obama wiped the floor with Mitt Romney. But Silver wasnt alone. In this publication, polling done a year out had Obama tied with Romney in 10 battleground states; we ended up winning 9 of them. In December 2011, a Gallup poll had Obama losing to Romney by 5 percent across 12 battleground states; we won 11. Bill Clinton trailed about this same time in his reelection cycle. A year before a presidential election, it is just too early to get an accurate read on how the people will actually vote. There are a few reasons for this.

The people who take the time to answer pollster questions right now are already politically engaged. They are either die-hard partisans or trying to make a point. But swing voters arent tuned in yet and may not decide who to back until very late, and they are the ones who will decide this election.

You cant predict what hasnt happened yet. Think of all the election-shattering news that happened in the year before. In 2008, the subprime bubble popped, cratering the economy. In Obamas reelection, the economy rebounded and then Hurricane Sandy hit, focusing attention on the presidents empathy and effectiveness in a crisis. In 2016, we all got sick of the phrase, But Her Emails! and in 2020, a global pandemic turned the election on its head. Next year, what will it be? Will Trump go to prison? Its possible. (Can you campaign from behind bars?) I wouldnt even call these October surprises you can almost guarantee that something big and unexpected will happen next year.

Elections are a choice, and we havent formalized that choice yet. Once voters know their options, their opinions change. While I dont see any likely alternative than a rematch between Biden and Trump in 2024, thats not what voters see. There is still a GOP primary going on, and several candidates left for Trump to officially beat.

Instead of fretting about early polls, Democrats should follow real data like voter registration, special elections, and turnout and concentrate on what matters:

Focus on the economic message. Back in 2011, we were in the worst economic crisis since the Great Depression and unemployment was historically high. But I believed then and I still believe that the economy is what voters care about most, so we focused our energy on building up Obamas economic message. Specifically, we talked about how the president saved the American auto industry and how it created hundreds of thousands of jobs. That work paid off, with approval of Obamas handling of the economy rising from 35 percent in November 2011 to 48 percent right before the election. The Biden campaign has a much better economy than we did in 2011, and its individual policies are very popular; there is still plenty of time to break through with voters the policies they like are actually Bidenomics.

Double down on the battleground states. In 2011, the data told us that working class voters in battleground states would decide the election. The Biden campaign knows that there are just seven battleground states this time, with a few paths to victory. Biden can win if he holds onto the Blue Wall states of Michigan, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin; he can hold onto his gains from 2020 in the Sunbelt; and he can try to expand the map by winning North Carolina. And Biden has smartly already begun this work, with the campaign increasing its $25 million advertising spend in these key states.

Get ready for the GOP opponent that Biden has already defeated once. In 2011, we didnt know who wed face in the general election. We also didnt know how formidable Romney would be. But very likely, this is going to be a choice between Biden or Trump. With Biden, you get a president who has passed historic legislation, running on popular policies with little-to-no drama in the White House. With Trump, you have a candidate charged with 91 felony counts and a different court date every week. Trump means right-wing extremism, everyday chaos, criminal behavior, fundamental freedoms stripped away, and a rejection of democratic norms. While some will argue that Trump is already defined in voters minds, many Americans still arent paying close attention to the election. I believe voters will move in Bidens direction when they hear what the president has done, and get reminded (by Democrats and Biden himself) of the chaotic, lawless circus that was Trumps presidency.

This will be a very close election, and there will be plenty more times Democrats will feel nervous. But what will make a difference is the work itself, engaging voters and spreading a positive message about his accomplishments, economic policies, and views on issues like abortion and freedoms. Biden has been counted out time and time again, and hes proved pollsters and pundits wrong. His campaign (along with the rest of us) needs to ignore the noise and build the strong campaign it needs to win just like in 2020. And Democrats need to remember what I learned back in 2011: Voters decide elections, not polls.

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I Was Obama's 2012 Campaign Manager. There's No Need to Panic Over Biden. - POLITICO

Bill Maher scolds Obama’s ‘moral equivalency’ on Israel-Hamas: He ‘disappointed me’ – Fox News

  1. Bill Maher scolds Obama's 'moral equivalency' on Israel-Hamas: He 'disappointed me'  Fox News
  2. Alan Dershowitz calls out Obama's 'deep hatred of Israel': 'He should be ashamed'  Fox Business
  3. 'Nobody's hands are clean': Obama urges reflection amid Israel-Hamas conflict  POLITICO

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Bill Maher scolds Obama's 'moral equivalency' on Israel-Hamas: He 'disappointed me' - Fox News