This is BY FAR the best account I've seen from anyone detailing the
atrocious liberal media bias in the 2008 presidential election.

The part detailing the VP debate is excellent and contains many
criticisms I'd NEVER read about Biden's performance that night...

Gov. Palin certainly had her sketchy moments that night. On one
occasion, she called her opponent "Senator O'Biden." She referred
twice to the top U.S. military officer in Afghanistan as "General
McClellan." (His name is David McKiernan). She claimed as mayor to
have reduced taxes "every year I was in office," an assertion that is
accurate only if one ignores sales tax increases. Likewise, she
maintained that McCain's $5,000 tax credit for health coverage was
"budget-neutral," which is only possible by repealing the laws of
mathematics. She gave McCain more credit than he was due in blowing
the whistle on Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, while repeating a
misleading claim against Obama used by Hillary Clinton and McCain on
an energy bill. She also exaggerated her own accomplishment regarding
a $40 billion proposed pipeline in Alaska.

Sen. Biden, however, was in a place by himself when it came to bogus
claims, absurd contentions, and flights of rhetorical fancy. He threw
out several assertions that were so preposterous that – had Palin made
them – they would have prompted immediate calls for McCain to dump her
from the ticket.
The good senator from Delaware warmed up slowly, erroneously claiming
that McCain voted with Obama on a budget resolution, and asserting
wrongly that Obama wanted to return to the Reagan-era marginal income
tax rates. He also embarked on an appallingly wrongheaded monologue
about the constitutional history of the vice presidency. But when the
talk turned to national security, presumably Biden's purported area of
expertise, he went completely off the grid.

• "John McCain voted against a Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty that
every Republican has supported," Biden stated. (Actually, in a 1999
vote in Congress, McCain sided with 50 other Republicans to kill the
treaty. Only four joined the Democrats.) • "Pakistan already has
deployed nuclear weapons," Biden said. "Pakistan's weapons can already
hit Israel and the Mediterranean." (Pakistan has no known
intercontinental missiles. The range of its weapons is thought to be
1,000 miles – halfway to Israel.)

• "When we kicked--along with France--we kicked Hezbollah out of
Lebanon, I said and Barack said, 'Move NATO forces in there. Fill the
vacuum, because if you don't...Hezbollah will control it.'" Biden
recalled. "Now what's happened? Hezbollah is a legitimate part of the
government in the country immediately to the north of Israel." (Except
that the U.S. never kicked Hezbollah out of Lebanon or anywhere else.
They've been entrenched in Lebanon since 1982. Actually, Hezbollah,
insofar as it was responsible for the 1983 suicide bombing at the
Marine barracks that killed 241 U.S. servicemen, kicked America out of
Lebanon, not the other way around.)

• "The president...insisted on elections on the West Bank, when I
said, and others said, and Barack Obama said, 'Big mistake. Hamas will
win. You'll legitimize them.' What happened? Hamas won," Biden said.
(Only the last two words of Biden's strange soliloquy are true. The
rest are false. For one thing, Fatah controls the West Bank. Biden was
thinking of Gaza. Secondly, neither Biden nor Obama predicted the 2006
victory for Hamas in Gaza's legislative elections. Third, McCain and
Obama – but not Biden -- signed a letter urging the president to
pressure Palestinians to require that candidates adhere to democratic
principles before being allowed to run for office. Fourth, Biden
served as an election observer and later wrote an article expressing
high praise for Bush's actions. To sum up: One factual error and three
fibs in only 31 words. Pretty impressive, in its way.)

• "With Afghanistan, facts matter...we spend more money in three weeks
on combat in Iraq than we spend on the entirety of the last seven
years that we have been in Afghanistan. Let me say that again..." (He
did say it again, but that didn't make it true. It's wildly and
weirdly off the mark. Yes, facts matter. The facts here were that at
the time Biden was speaking, the U.S. had spent $172 billion in
Afghanistan. The Iraq War consumes between $7 billion and $8 billion
every three weeks. Biden's math was off by 2,000 percent.)

• "Can I clarify this? This is simply not true about Barack Obama. He
did not say (he'd) sit down with Ahmadinejad." (He most certainly did.
And among those who criticized him at the time for it was Joe Biden,
who told Byron York of National Review that the idea of a president
meeting with the likes of the Iranian president or Hugo Chavez was
"naïve.")

Those were alarming mistakes. To me Biden's most discordant claims
concerned his Animal House-like history lecture about the office of
the vice president. It came while Biden was dressing down Dick Cheney,
who was not present, for supposedly being unfamiliar with the
Constitution. "The idea (that) he doesn't realize that Article I of
the Constitution defines the role of the vice president of the United
States – that's the executive branch – he works in the executive
branch," Biden said. "He should understand that. Everyone should
understand that. And the primary role of the vice president of the
United States is to support the president of the United States of
America, give that president his or her best judgment when sought,
and, as vice president, to preside over the Senate, only in a time
when in fact there's a tie vote. The Constitution is explicit....He
has no authority relative to the Congress. The idea he's part of the
legislative branch is a bizarre notion invented by Cheney to
aggrandize the power of a unitary executive, and look where it has
gotten us."

Lord, would Tina Fey have had fun with this jumble of misinformation –
if only Palin had said it! Article I defines the legislative, not
executive, branch. The vice president is, indeed, mentioned there.
What Biden finds "explicit," hasn't been so to previous vice
presidents or to most constitutional scholars. Prior to the 20th
century, vice presidents didn't even have offices at the White House
compound – they were housed in the Capitol. The notion that a veep's
constitutional authority is to provide advice to a president springs
from Biden's brow; it certainly isn't mentioned, or even contemplated,
in the Constitution, which doesn't even say whether the vice president
should receive a salary.
Should Joe Biden have known this stuff? Since he chaired the Senate
Judiciary Committee, you'd hope so. But even if he didn't, you'd think
it would be news when he unleashed a veritable fount of misinformation
to impugn Palin's knowledge of the federal system while attacking a
sitting vice president. It barely rated a mention in the collective
mainstream media.

http://www.politicsdaily.com/2009/07/08/sarah-barracuda-palin-and-the-piranhas-of-the-press/
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