31 Jan, 2010  |  Written by  |  under wp news

Lady Gaga makes me honest

I have never been one to openly admit that I love a pop star, especially a female pop star who wears scandalous clothing and basically acts like a diva a lot of the time. however, Lady Gaga is different for some reason. she seems genuine and strong in her crazy, skin-baring costumes. It doesn’t come off like she’s dressing up for others — she makes me believe she is doing it for herself.

Plus, she is donating emergency money to Haiti. in order to help myself come to terms with the fact that I might be a conformist or a sheep because I love someone who everyone loves, I have decided to compile a list of the top five reasons why I love Lady Gaga, and I ain’t afraid to say it.

5. Work ethic

This woman is a very hard worker. she has done so many performances on so many different shows, I’d almost wager that she never turns down a gig — at least not if she can help it. and she puts the same enormous amount of effort into each show. she also teams up with a whole lot of other musical artists.

4. Influence

I have noticed a lot of other musical artists who seem to want to imitate Lady Gaga, and I think it’s a good thing. she is a strong, creative woman who doesn’t follow stereotypes, doesn’t care what anyone thinks of her, and she is doing what she loves. if Lady Gaga helps other young female artists be able to let their freak flags fly, I say more power to them.

3. Personality

Every time I see an interview with Lady Gaga I like her more. she has a straightforward way of communicating that I like. You can always tell if she is annoyed with or in love with the interviewer because she doesn’t hold anything back. I appreciate that type of honesty.

2. Fashion

Would I ever dress like Lady Gaga? not in a million years. Wait, I take that back. I would love to wear a dress made of stuffed animals someday. still, most of the stuff she wears is crazy, out-of-this-world weird — and fabulous.

1. Music

Despite her big personality and crazy clothes, I would have never paid attention to Lady Gaga if it weren’t for the fact that I love her music. It makes me want to dance every time. whenever it gets stuck in my head it puts me in a good mood. and she only has made two albums! keep up the good work, Gaga.

Five reasons why I love Lady Gaga

31 Jan, 2010  |  Written by  |  under wp themes

For some, driving is a passion and for some others it’s a pain. if you’re thinking of making it an even more enjoyable thing, you should be planning to do all the hard work yourselves. The more you work on your car; the better your skills will be on your car. You should be planning to make it as a place that would be helping you to spend your free time the best possible manner you can even think of. The more time you spend on your car, the better will be your experiences driving your cool car.

There are lots of fun stuffs you would be able to do using your car. it is you who that should be making things come on your ways. it is you who is the owner of your car. for the same reason, it is your responsibility to do tackle the hard stuffs yourselves. as mentioned above, your aim should be to love your car more than anything. if you are with a strong intention of doing something you would be surely be tackling the stuffs on your ways for accomplishing the tasks. same thing goes in the case of our car.

If you are thinking of enjoying your driving experience to its fullest, you should be making sure you are on a good track. The surroundings and the atmosphere in which you are going to drive your car is something that would be deciding the driving experience. So, if you are thinking of enjoying a cool driving this season, you should be first of all making sure that you have already chosen a good driving destination. The roads on which you are going to drive would also be taking a good part in deciding the driving experience. it would be really fun to experience driving in snow. But for doing so should be with good driving experience.

A newbie won’t be finding it easy to drive in heavy rain. same would be the case, if he is ordered to drive in snow. Experience is something about which we should be thinking here. if the guy is an experienced driver, he won’t be finding any trouble in taking his car on roads, even if the road is filled full of snow.

Safety Tips while Driving in Rain or Snow

Wyclef Wants his Footage of Haiti Hell To become A Film

January 30th, 2010 WYCLEF JEAN wants to turn Flip camera footage of the horror in his native Haiti into a hard-hitting movie, so the world will understand the earthquake relief effort there will be a long one. the former Fugees star fears the international media covering the catastrophe and its aftermath is turning away from the worst scenes and giving TV viewers the impression that the relief effort has been a huge success.

Now, movie on Haiti earthquake

January 30th, 2010 LONDON – Singer Wyclef Jean wants to compile footage he shot of the horror in Haiti into a hard-hitting movie so that the world will understand the earthquake relief effort. the former American hip-hop group Fugees star, fears the international media covering the catastrophe and its aftermath is turning away from the worst scenes and giving TV viewers the impression that the relief effort has been a huge success, reports contactmusic.com.

Wyclef talks relief efforts, urges Obama to make ’sustainable commitment’ to rebuilding Haiti

January 27th, 2010 Wyclef Jean talks about Haiti relief efforts in NYNEW YORK — Haitian-born singer and producer Wyclef Jean says he is working with his foundation to deliver cooked meals, water and medical supplies to survivors of the earthquake in Haiti. Surrounded by prominent New York black clergy, including the Rev.

Queen Latifah wants to adopt Haitian children

January 23rd, 2010 WASHINGTON – while most celebrities are doing their bit by donating money to the Haiti earthquake relief fund, actress Queen Latifah has said she would like to adopt a Haitian baby. Queen Latifah, 39, real name Dana Elaine Owens, said on the Today Show on January 21 that she is ready to become a parent.

Wyclef ‘we have Learned From our Mistakes’

January 21st, 2010 Hip-hop star WYCLEF JEAN accepts his Yele Haiti foundation has been “poorly run” – but he’s determined to make it a leading charity hub for the desperate people of his homeland. the former Fugees star’s charity has been targeted by critics, who claim the gone till November hitmaker has personally profited from foundation cash.

Wyclef Fights back Tears as He Describes Haiti Horrors

January 21st, 2010 Hip-hop star WYCLEF JEAN fought back tears on U.S. TV talk show OPRAH on Wednesday (20Jan10) as he recalled the horror he experienced during a recent return to his earthquake-ravaged homeland Haiti.

Jean Desperate for News From Collapsed Arts Centre

January 21st, 2010 WYCLEF JEAN is desperate for good news about the arts school his Yele foundation built in his native Haiti – because the entire site was crushed by an earthquake last week (12Jan10) and he fears all the students and teachers are dead. the Yele Center was less than a year old when it collapsed during the 7.0-magnitude earthquake, which shook Haiti, and Jean, who visited his homeland at the weekend, admits he fears the worst.

Wyclef Jean Scraps Australian Gigs

January 21st, 2010 WYCLEF JEAN has cancelled his upcoming shows in Australia so he can concentrate on helping survivors of the Haiti earthquake. the former Fugees star, who was born in Haiti, has been spearheading aid efforts in the Caribbean country following the devastating tremor that rocked the nation last Tuesday (12Jan10).

Wyclef Jean denies Haitian charity wrongdoing

January 19th, 2010 more imagesmore imagesLONDON – Wyclef Jean is fuming over reports suggesting that the singer used money raised by his Haiti charity for his own enterprises. the Haitian-American rapper’s NGO YELE managed to raise 1 million dollars to help victims struck by the massive earthquake that shook the Caribbean on January 12.

Wyclef Devastated by Pal’s Death

January 17th, 2010 WYCLEF JEAN has been left devastated after his friend, rapper JIMMY O, was found dead in Haiti following Tuesday’s (12Jan10) earthquake. the former Fugees star appealed for information about his pal after he failed to get in touch in the aftermath of the devastating 7.0-magnitude quake.

Wyclef Jean’s organization under scrutiny over Haiti charity

January 16th, 2010 WASHINGTON – Wyclef Jean’s organization ‘The Wyclef Jean Foundation Inc.’ has come under scrutiny over charity work for earthquake victims in Haiti. Groups that vet charities have pointed out mischief in the foundation’s accounting practices.

Rapper Wyclef Jean rebukes questions over his charity’s accounting practices

January 16th, 2010 Wyclef Jean defends his Haiti charityLOS ANGELES — Haitian-born rapper Wyclef Jean spoke out Saturday in defense of his foundation after charity screening groups raised concerns about its accounting practices. Jean said he was baffled by the timing and nature of criticism of the Wyclef Jean Foundation Inc., which has already raised more than $2 million to help earthquake victims.

Groups that vet charities see problems in Haitian-born Wyclef Jean’s foundation

January 15th, 2010 Groups raise doubts about Wyclef Jean’s charityLOS ANGELES — Groups that vet charities are raising doubts about the organization backed by Haitian-born rapper Wyclef Jean (WY’-klef ZHAHN). They say the foundation’s questionable accounting practices could hurt its ability to function in earthquake-hit Haiti even as hundreds of thousands of dollars pour in via text message.

Fugees Consider Reunion To Benefit Haiti

January 15th, 2010 Rapper PRAS is considering reuniting the FUGEES for a special benefit concert to raise money for earthquake-devastated Haiti. the star – who has Haitian roots – previously poured scorn on the chances of the killing Me Softly hitmakers getting back together, insisting the group was “straight dead”.

Wyclef Jean’s tweeting for Haitian earthquake relief becomes galvanizing force on the Web

January 13th, 2010 Wyclef Jean’s tweeting for Haiti galvanizes WebNEW YORK — Wyclef Jean is one of Haiti’s most famous sons, and his tweeting about the earthquake there has been a galvanizing force on the Web. Jean is most famously a member of the now-defunct Fugees (FOO’-jeez).

Singer Wyclef Jean's volunteer shot dead by desperate Haitian

MELBOURNE, Australia Australian Open champions Roger Federer and Serena Williams will maintain their no. 1 rankings when new ATP and WTA rankings are released Monday.

Federer, who beat Britain’s Andy Murray in the Australian Open men’s final in straight sets Sunday, will begin his 268th week as no. 1 and match Jimmy Connors, currently in third place, for total number of weeks as world no. 1.

Pete Sampras leads the career list with 286 weeks at no. 1, followed by Ivan Lendl with 270.

ATP projections have Novak Djokovic taking over no. 2, Murray third and injured Rafael Nadal dropping to no. 4. it marks the first time that Nadal will drop out of the world’s top three since his debut there in June 2005.

“It is not important for me, the ranking issue and losing a few spots that’s normal when you are not able to compete,” Nadal said.

He has been cleared of a recurrence of the knee tendinitis that sidelined him for nine weeks last year. a small muscle tear sustained at the Australian Open, where Nadal lost in the quarterfinals to Murray, will keep him out for the next month.

There will be movement on the women’s side, with Li Na becoming the first Chinese player ever to enter the top 10 when she reaches a career-high no. 10 following her semifinal run here.

Justine Henin, who was unranked and playing on a wild-card entry at her first major in two years, still needs to play another tournament before she gets an official ranking.

Williams, who beat Henin in Saturday’s Australian Open final, has extended her current stretch at no. 1 to 15 weeks. Projections provided by the WTA show Williams will begin her 88th career week as the top-ranked player.

Dinara Safina is projected to be no. 2, followed by U.S. Open finalist Caroline Wozniacki at a career-high no. 3, French Open champion Svetlana Kuznetsova at no. 4 and Australian Open quarterfinalist Venus Williams at no. 5.

Projections also show Victoria Azarenka, who lost to Serena Williams in the quarterfinals, to be no. 6, followed by Elena Dementieva at 7. it would be the first time that Olympic gold medalist Dementieva, who lost to Henin in the second round here, has dropped out of the top 5 since September 2008.

Jelena Jankovic is projected to be no. 8, Aznieszka Radwanska ninth and Li at 10.

Li said after her quarterfinal win over Venus Williams that her goal was the top 10, but she might have to revise her expectations higher.

“So exciting, maybe I will have a beer tonight,” said Li, who lost in the semifinals to Serena Williams. “My goal this year was top 10, but it’s only January, and it’s come quickly.”

Tennis: Federer, Serena Williams to hold on to no. 1 rankings …

31 Jan, 2010  |  Written by  |  under wp themes

WASHINGTON, D.C., JAN. 21, 2010 (Zenit.org).- every second, more people are joining the more than 50,000 participants in the Virtual March for Life to protest a U.S. health care bill that would include federal funding for abortion.

The virtual march Web site was created only a week ago, yet tens of thousands have already gathered in a united stand for life.

The initiative corresponds to the annual rally and March for Life taking place on Friday, the 37th anniversary of the U.S. Supreme Court decision that legalized abortion. Hundreds of thousands are expected to travel to the nation’s capital to remind congress of the pro-life views of many U.S. citizens.

For those who cannot get out of work or attend the event, the virtual march site was created by Americans United for Life Action as an opportunity to stand alongside fellow pro-lifers.

The site was launched “to allow the millions of pro-life activists who can’t attend the march in person to create their own avatars to digitally march at the rally on the National Mall and have their voices heard too,” the action group stated.

The Web page allows users to sign in, choose an avatar, a digital figure, to be placed on a map in front of the congressional buildings, thereby making a stand to defend life and protest the health care reform bill currently being discussed by lawmakers.

In a promotional video, the action group stated that this bill “will create the largest expansion of abortion in 40 years.”

It continued, “You will have one final chance to make your voice heard.”

Charmaine Yoest, president and CEO of Americans United for Life, explained in a letter that “with a health care bill that includes taxpayer funding for abortion hanging in the balance, this is an important, historic opportunity to get the attention of politicians in Washington.”

“In this critical moment, every American must be heard regardless of where you are,” she affirmed.

This year is the “most important March for Life in history,” Yoest said. “So much is at stake in this moment.”

She continued: “How many more lives will be lost if the congressional majority rolls back existing law that protects life and protects us from having our tax dollars used to fund abortion?

“Please stand and be counted among those who are marching for life and please ask everyone you know that doesn’t want their tax dollars to fund abortion to join us.”

The Web site also allows networking with other pro-life supporters through Twitter and Facebook, and enables participants to follow Friday’s events live through the internet.

Virtual March for Life: VirtualMarchforLife.com

50,000 Join Virtual March for Life

Photo: Tim Sloan – Pool/Getty Images

According to post-speech polls, President Obama’s State of the Union was well received by America. according to CBS, 83 percent who watched the speech approved of Obama’s proposals, while CNN showed that 78 percent of viewers had a positive or very positive reaction. But regular viewers don’t have blogs, or newspaper columns, and are therefore unimportant. Let’s take a look at what the nation’s professional pundits and commentators thought of the speech.

• Gail Collins says Obama was peeved and cranky. [NYT]

• Richard Cohen says it was Obama’s “demeanor, his poise, his supreme self-confidence that spoke volumes.” [Post Partisan/WP]

• Chuck Todd and friends write that “much of the speech was responding to frustrated independents and anger at Washington,” but there was “something for everyone.” [First Read/MSNBC]

• The Washington Post editorial board thinks Obama provided “a little something for everyone, sometimes conciliatory, sometimes combative, often sounding much like a campaign speech, only longer.” [WP]

• The new York Times editorial board liked seeing Obama “get tougher and clearer about going forward” in the face of Republican obstructionism. [NYT]

• The Wall Street Journal editorial board concludes that what Obama learned from Scott Brown’s election is “that he should keep doing what he’s been doing, only with a little more humility, and a touch more bipartisanship.” [WSJ]

• John Dickerson thinks it felt like a “relaunch,” with Obama returning “repeatedly to the themes he campaigned on ? a call to end partisanship and special interest influence, and to create a government equal to the spirit of the American people.” [Slate]

• Nate Silver is “pleasantly surprised” that the speech “managed at once to recall why the majority of the electorate voted for him while at the same time demonstrating an awareness of the difficult situation in which the President now finds himself.” [FiveThirtyEight]

• Ezra Klein thinks Obama tried to get himself “on the side of those who are disgusted by Washington rather than letting him become one of the reasons people are disgusted by Washington.” [Ezra Klein/WP]

• Ross Douthat gets the impression that Obama “doesn’t know what narrative he’s selling. The eloquence was there, but the tone veered wildly ? now self-critical, now self-justifying; now scolding, now conciliatory ? and so did the substance.” [Ross Douthat/NYT]

• Andrew Sullivan saw “the president I supported and still support and will support because he alone is calling us away from the cynicism, the ideology, the rhetorical poison, and the red-blue divide that keep us from the reform we desperately need.” [Daily Dish/Atlantic]

• Joan Walsh believes Obama “showed more spine and fire than he has of late, mainly using humor to turn the GOP’s dourness back on itself.” [Salon]

• mark Levin calls the speech “the most partisan, least presidential” State of the Union he’s ever seen. [Corner/National Review]

• Joe Klein calls it “Obama at his best” ? “smart,” “funny,” and “drop-dead serious about the country.” [Swampland/Time]

• Eleanor Clift suspects that the “way Obama shamed Republicans and called them out to participate in governing had to warm liberal hearts.” [Gaggle/Newsweek]

• Michael Gerson claims Obama “lost his grip on reality.” [Post Partisan/WP]

• Yuval Levin thinks it was all “amazingly disconnected from the moment ? treating and describing the public as downtrodden, depressed, but resilient, when the public mood seems more like fed up.” [Corner/National Review]

• Jennifer Rubin finds Obama’s conduct regarding the Supreme Court “repellent.” [Contentions/Commentary]

• Greg Sargent is disappointed about Obama’s treatment of health-care reform. “While he urged Congress not to walk away from completing reform, the speech was notably lacking on specifics in terms of what he’d like to see Congress do resolve the current impasse.” [Plum Line/Who Runs Gov]

• Steve Benen thinks Obama gave health-care reform “a much-needed boost, and with some meaningful follow-up, the measure may yet succeed.” [Political Animal/Washington Monthly]

• Jonathan Cohn says Obama didn’t save health-care reform, but “that’s only because there’s no way he could save it with just one speech. It’s too big a job. all Obama could do Wednesday night was to send some messages, about his expectations and priorities. and there I think he did pretty much what he needed to do.” [Treatment/New Republic]

• Kevin Drum wishes that Obama had “at least said something about the fact that we have a bill in place right now and then urged the House to pass that bill and the Senate to agree to changes.” [Mother Jones]

• Chris Cillizza thinks “the common thread was an appeal to the country’s shared values of what it means to be an American. [Fix/WP]

• Max Boot is stunned by “how little coverage national-security affairs received in this State of the Union.” [Contentions/Commentary]

• Harold Meyerson thinks the speech was “jumbled” thematically, but “[t]onally, however, it was a masterpiece.” [Post Partisan/WP]

• mark Thiessen felt the speech “quickly descended into scolding and condescension.” [Corner/National Review]

• Fred Barnes calls it “the least fresh State of the Union address I’ve ever heard, and I’ve heard more than 30 of them.” [Weekly Standard]

• Karen Tumulty is struck by Obama’s “frank admission” that the process of shaping health-care reform “has turned off the American people.” [Swampland/Time]

• Howard Fineman calls Obama “nothing short of masterful.” [Gaggle/Newsweek]

• Matthew Yglesias was reminded “that Obama is fantastic at delivering formal speeches,” but “giving fantastic setpiece speeches has limits as a political strategy.” [Think Progress]

The State of the Union Fails to Unite the Nation's Pundits

31 Jan, 2010  |  Written by  |  under wp plugins

look at the ”pic” taletela.com/assets/Image/rihannabeaten.jpg

then look at this:
remix.vg/wp-content/uploads/2008/11/rihanna.jpg

the faces are two different shapes. also Rihanna doesn’t have that tattoo on her trapeizus. what do you think?

What do you think about the Alleged Rihanna Pictures?

31 Jan, 2010  |  Written by  |  under wp news

Johnny Depp Car Crash the rumor about Johnny Depp Car Crash and his death is circulating around the internet for no particular reason. Johnny Depp did not die in a car crash. the Johnny Depp Car Crash and his death is being rumored by fake CNN webpage.

The hoax of Johnny Depp’s death started when “angelfire” a website featured a fake Webpage of CNN saying that Johnny Depp died in a car crash back in 2004.

Johnny Depp car crash never happened. the internet users are being deceived once again with the false death news of a celebrity. this is not the first time this happened, the death news of rapper Eminem pop up every now and then, while masses start on searching about the news.

This is just an easy way for none popular website to popularize their website and there name on the web nowadays an “SEO” strategy that works every time.

The hoax about Johnny Depp car crash and death started on Twitter as usual and within few hours all internet traffic is crawling towards the new and started reporting the death news of Johnny Depp. however, most of the posts over the Twitter and other social networks reported the Jonney Depp car crash and his death a Hoax.

Johnny Depp is alive and well. it has been reported couple of day ago on TMZ that Johnny was seen coming out of a NEW YORK Restaurant in drunk condition. the TMZ reported that he might be celebrating his success of being the Sexiest Man Alive.

Johnny Depp Car Crash

  1. Johnny Depp Dead
  2. Johnny Depp Death Cnn
  3. Did Johnny Depp Die
  4. Taylor Lautner Dead
  5. Dan Gurewitch

Johnny Depp Car Crash

31 Jan, 2010  |  Written by  |  under wp news

First, let me say that after my last frustrations with (mt) Media Temple, things have been going much better. I haven’t experienced much, if any, downtime, page load time has been very good, and my WordPress Admin is working much smoother. Has everyone else noticed more consistency? I think so. I am very pleased with (mt) because of this. And they did give me one month’s hosting for free because of some of my previous downtime issues. Thanks (mt).

However, there is still something I find frustrating. I use (mt) primarily to host my WordPress sites, as I’m sure a fair number of (mt)’s users do. It’s the way to go – and I love the fact that (mt) has the 1-Click Installation of WordPress. that was one of the key components I was looking for, because I knew I’d be installing a lot of sites, and hopefully hosting some sites through my account (interested in hosting your site with me? contact me here). however, one of my frustrations has been that (mt) still only has WordPress 2.0.4 as the version they offer for the 1-Click. It’s not the biggest pain in the world, because after installing that, I just need to manually upgrade to the newest WordPress version. not a huge deal – but something that I shouldn’t need to do. it seems they should be able to offer the newest version of WordPress that is available.

Now, hold it right there. I know what you’re going to say. “What about WordPress 2.1.1? it was hacked. It’s a good thing (mt) Media Temple didn’t have that version available!” And you’re right – that does throw a small wrench in my argument.

But what is wrong with 2.1? Ella has been out since January 22, 2007, while 2.0.4 has been out since July 29, 2006. is (mt) saying that they don’t trust any more recent WordPress upgrades since July of 2006? That’s what I thought after I emailed (mt) Media Temple’s Customer Support and asked when they were planning on upgrading their WordPress 1-Click Installation. below is the email that I received in response:

We do not have plans to upgrade Wordpress at this time. once we have tested and believe it is up to Media Temple’s standards we will make a decision on weather to upgrade at that time.

If you have any further questions regarding your (mt) Media Temple services, please feel free to contact us at any time.

Customer Support
(mt) Media Temple

There is the frustration: “…and believe it is up to Media Temple’s standards…?” What standards might those be? And it’s not just because (mt) is a large hosting provider. I know many large web hosts who provide up-to-date WordPress installs in their 1-Click Installation, Dreamhost being one of them. In fact, within a day of WordPress announcing that 2.1.1 got hacked, Dreamhost had WordPress 2.1.2 up and ready for their simple 1-Click Install and 1-Click Upgrade.

So what gives, (mt)? is this one way in which a bit of (mt) Media Temple elitism is seen? or are there good reasons for their decision to stick with an outdated version of WordPress for their customers? Even if they were not ready to upgrade to 2.1 because they still wanted to test it properly, what about Ronan? or 2.0.7? or the most recent release of 2.0.9 on February 21? I really would like to understand this – and I’m hoping that someone might have some insight into this frustration for me.

Update: good news – Media Temple now offers WordPress 2.1.2.

Related posts:

  • Media Temple, Revolution MoneyExchange and Text Link Ads
  • Top 10 Reasons to Switch to WordPress
  • When Blog Scrapers Use your WordPress Theme
  • Thesis is more than just a WordPress Theme

Tagged as: (mt), Media-Temple, Web-Hosting, WordPress

(mt) Media Temple Doesn't Trust WordPress.org

31 Jan, 2010  |  Written by  |  under wp themes

Along with her “ready to lead on Day One” mantra, Hillary Clinton’s favored line of attack against Barack Obama is the reincarnation of Mondale’s 1984 “Where’s the beef?” attack on Gary Hart. In Clinton’s version, Obama is little more than a shallow speechifier — he believes that words are all you need to lead.

She made it explicit in a speech in Providence, Rhode Island on Sunday:

“I could stand up here and say ‘Let’s just get everybody together. Let’s get unified. the sky will open! the light will come down! Celestial choirs will be singing! and everyone will know we should do the right thing and the world will be perfect!’ Maybe I’ve just lived a little long, but I have no illusions about how hard this is going to be. You are not going to wave a magic wand and have the special interests disappear!”

Last week it was: “Speeches don’t put food on the table. Speeches don’t fill up your tank, or fill your prescription, or do anything about that stack of bills.”

And her chief strategist, mark Penn, summed up the “just words” meme this way: “She is in the solutions business while Obama is in the promises business.”

Now, I agree with Clinton that it’s important to look at how each of the Democratic candidates uses words and how rhetoric fits into how they’ve run their respective campaigns. and if you do, you’ll see that one candidate does believe that words are like a magic wand: you utter them and reality changes. but it’s not Barack Obama — it’s Hillary Clinton.

Clinton’s use of words is disturbingly reminiscent of the way the Bush administration has used words: just saying something is true is magically supposed to make it true. Call it Presto-change-o Politics.

The examples are so notorious they hardly bear repeating: “mission accomplished,” “heckuva job,” “last throes,” the endless “turning the corner” in Iraq. They were all said with the arrogant belief that merely saying these words was all that was needed: reality would literally change to fit the rhetoric.

Now let’s look at Hillary Clinton’s rhetoric and what is says about the campaign she’s run. It started with her absurd claim that her vote for the war was really a vote to send inspectors back in. the name of the bill? “The Joint Resolution To Authorize the use Of United States Armed Forces Against Iraq.” saying it was about sending inspectors back in doesn’t mean that it is true that it was about sending inspectors back in.

And then how about the endless spinning trying to diminish Obama victory after Obama victory? here was Penn: “Could we possibly have a nominee who hasn’t won any of the significant states — outside of Illinois? That raises some serious questions about Sen. Obama.” mark Penn calling Virginia, Georgia, Missouri, and Colorado, among others, not “significant” does not make them insignificant.

Or Clinton’s “35 years of experience.” she has had a distinguished record of public service, but it’s not in any way 35 years of government experience, unless you want to include her time at Yale Law school, or going door to door for George McGovern in Texas, or working at the Rose law firm in Arkansas as government experience. but her campaign seemed convinced that by repeating “35 years of experience” at every stop she would magically acquire that 35 years of experience.

But as the Bush administration has shown, believing your own words and not being able to see things as they are is not a good thing — either for a country or a campaign. the New York Times described some Clinton aides as “baffled that a candidate who had been in the United States Senate for only three years and was a state lawmaker in Illinois before that was now outpacing a seasoned figure like Mrs. Clinton.”

As Matt Yglesias says:

“Whether or not you think the more ’seasoned’ candidate ought to win presidential elections, it seems to me that any campaign staffer who could be genuinely ‘baffled’ by experience not proving to be a winning issue is demonstrating a scary ignorance of how things work. Is her staff baffled that Joe Biden didn’t win the nomination?”

Or how about the Clinton campaign’s abracadabra rhetoric, designed to make the reality of what they agreed to about Florida and Michigan — poof! — go away. They even set up a website that attempts to pull a rabbit out of the electoral hat. the site list several “facts”: “FACT: Florida and Michigan should count, both in the interest of fundamental fairness and honoring the spirit of the Democrats’ 50-state strategy.” as Ezra Klein notes: “It’s almost as if they thought putting it after… the word ‘FACT,’ would be like a Jedi mind trick.”

Meanwhile, as the Clinton campaign was busy trying to use words to push the idea that losing is actually winning (you know, just like in Iraq), the Obama campaign was actually winning votes. To the extent that anything in a campaign is real, it doesn’t get any more real than actual votes.

And, no, he wasn’t winning them just because of his “words.” He backed up his words with action: old-fashioned grassroots organizing. For instance, as was widely noted in the blogosphere, the Clinton campaign apparently found out only in February that the March 4th primary/caucus in Texas was sort of complicated:

“Supporters of Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton are worried that convoluted delegate rules in Texas could water down the impact of strong support for her among Hispanic voters there, creating a new obstacle for her in the must-win presidential primary contest.”

As publius at Obsidian Wings says:

“While they were busy ‘discovering’ the rules, however, the Obama campaign had people on the ground in Texas explaining the system, organizing precincts, and making PowerPoints. I know because I went to one of these meetings a week ago. I should have invited mark Penn I suppose.”

Repeat that kind of organizing throughout 23 “insignificant” states, and it turns out you get a pretty healthy delegate lead.

So let’s look at how Obama uses words. Contrary to Clinton’s charges, Obama never claims his words will somehow magically create change. instead, he uses his words to ask the American people to demand change. Very little change for the better happens in Washington unless it is demanded by the people. It’s instructive that, back in New Hampshire, Clinton discounted the work Martin Luther King did in creating the political atmosphere that allowed LBJ to push though the Civil Rights Act and the Voting Rights Act.

Which is why Obama’s constant invocation is “Yes we can” — not “Yes I can.” Obama uses words to persuade, to mobilize and to get people to imagine that reality can be changed. and based on how his campaign has been run, on the ground, in state after state, it’s clear that he knows changing reality is not done through magic — it’s done through hard work.

It is Clinton who uses words to deny reality, and expects them to magically change it. Haven’t we had enough of that over the last seven years?

Update: Dana Milbank offers up yet another example of reality denial — and the belief that saying something is so will make it so — on the part of the Clinton campaign. This one comes courtesy of Clinton advisor Harold Ickes who yesterday told a gathering of high-powered Washington journalists: “We’re on our way to locking this nomination down.” no word on whether the journalists — including David Broder and Maureen Dowd — responded with a collective spit take.

Clinton, Obama and the Belief In the Magic Power of Words