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Fox News host Sean Hannity tried unsuccessfully on Thursday to get presumptive Republican presidential nominee Mitt Romney to weigh in on claims that President Barack Obama tried dog meat and other local foods while living in Indonesia as a young boy in the late 60's and early 70's.

Earlier this week, conservative website The Daily Caller dug up a quote from Obama's 1995 book "Dreams of My Father: A Story of Race and Inheritance" to push back against criticism of Mitt and Ann Romney for forcing their dog Seamus to ride on top of the family's station wagon.

"I learned how to eat small green chill peppers raw with dinner (plenty of rice), and, away from the dinner table, I was introduced to dog meat (tough), snake meat (tougher), and roasted grasshopper (crunchy)," Obama wrote.

"Tell us about your dog and what did you think of the revelation -- it went viral today -- in the president's book, he admitted eating dog when he was growing up in Indonesia and grasshoppers," Hannity asked Romney. "And I didn't make that up."

"I -- Sean, I'm going to talk about jobs and the economy and getting America working again," Romney replied. "I'm going to talk about the debt. I'm going to talk about the measures people care about."

"All of these extraneous stories and attacks... nah," he added.

But other members of Romney's team weren't so shy when it came to attacking Obama for something he did before the age of 10.

"In hindsight, a chilling photo," Romney strategist Eric Fehrstrom tweeted along with a photo of Obama and his current dog, Bo.

The Christian Science Monitor noted that while dog meat is considered taboo in the U.S., it is "common in China, Hong Kong, South Korea, Vietnam, and even Switzerland."

On Tuesday, Romney had told ABC News that he wouldn't force his dog to ride on the roof again "with the attention it’s received."

According to a 2007 Boston Globe profile of the Massachusetts Republican, Romney’s oldest son, Tagg, yelled, “Gross!” as he noticed a brown liquid flowing down the back window from the Irish Setter Seamus, who had been riding on the roof of the family’s station wagon for hours during a family trip in 1983.

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Steve Doocy and his cohorts at Fox & Friends make Ed Schultz's Psycho Talk segment for this -- Doocy: ‘Makes sense’ to give people same care as dogs:

Fox & Friends on Friday may have finally offered up the alternative to "ObamaCare" that Republicans and other health reform opponents haven't stepped up with.

The solution? Treat patients as if they were pets.

To be fair, it wasn't the Fox show hosts' idea. It came from a Newsweek article by veterinary oncologist Karen Oberthaler, who offers an idea for reducing health care costs. She says modeling treatment for humans after veterinary clinics could reduce the use of wasteful and often unnecessary tests.

"A very brilliant veterinary oncologist has a suggestion. She says we should treat people like they treat their dogs," guest host Dari Alexander said.

"Which makes a lot of sense," host Steve Doocy responded, to a few guffaws from his co-hosts.

Read on...

And as Ed noted, they moved on to death panels from there. Heaven forbid anyone on Fox would ever pass up another opportunity to scare the hell out of their viewers.



McCain: Obama has failed bipartisanship test

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Sen. John McCain told CNN's John King that he's not in favor of a public health insurance option because he believes it would lead to a government takeover of health care. "[Public option proposals] remind us all of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. So I've not seen a public option that meets the test of what would not eventually lead to a government takeover," said McCain.

McCain believes that President Obama has failed the test of bipartisanship and the "Blue Dogs" will eventually "roll over a play dead" on their opposition to health care reform.

Update. Transcript below the fold.

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