Reid seeks GOP human shields for Dems’ economic stimulus boondoggle


Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid advertised Sunday for GOP senators to act as human shields for a trillion dollar ripoff, errr, economic stimulus package Democrats want to shove  down the throats of American taxpayers.

Reid assured Meet The Press host David Gregory that the Senate and House Republican leadership had asked to be “part” of the trillion dollar belated Christmas present for president-elect Barack Obama.

“This is something–as I’ve indicated earlier, David, Boehner and McConnell are saying, ‘Let us be involved.’ I’m not going to here dictate what’s going to happen,” Reid told Gregory.

Translation: this legislation sucks, the Repubicans don’t like it, the American taxpayers won’t like it, and Reid wants to make it appear “bipartisan.” Of course, Boehner and McConnell simply want to protect the Treasury.

Reid babbled further about how this trainwreck-in-waiting will have Republican fingerprints all over it.

“To do what is right for this country is going to take us working together, Democrats and Republicans, because, because the problem…the problems out there aren’t Democratic problems or Republican problems, they’re American problems.  We have to address them,” Reid explained.  What he didn’t explain was how many, if any, Republicans would sign on to what likely will be failed legislation that will further bankrupt the country. But Reid wants the country to know this absolutely will not be a Democratic bill. After all, even Reid faces re-election in 2010.

Apparerently the usual suspects won’t act as human shields on this one. Or they are preoccupied.

“John McCain–a day or two after the election, I called John. We’ve served–we came to Washington together in 1982.  We’ve been together in the House and we came to the Senate together.  And we talked about the campaign.  We had both said things about each other that probably we shouldn’t have, but we did.  He’s my friend.  He said, ‘Harry, I, I want to come back to the Senate.  We want to do some good things.  I want to work with you…

“We need comprehensive immigration reform.’ That was a conversation I had with John McCain.  Yes, we need comprehensive immigration reform,” Reid reported.

Nothing like good ol’ fashioned bipartisanship, even if mostly illusory, on legislation the voters hate and the country doesn’t need.

 

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2008, The Year That Was


Once again we approach the end of another year and once again taking a look back at the year has become the writing rage. Whether it is in entertainment, celebrity deaths, politics, you name it and someone is writing about 2008, the year that was. I even found one article written by one of the Gorwellion disciples that looked back on Global Warming , (sorry PC says Climate Change now), in 2008. Of course it followed the usual line of destruction despite evidence to the contrary.

Although the title of this post is, “2008, The Year That Was,” this is not going to be an actual review of what all of us have already experienced but a look at the stories which brought surprise in the context of the whole year as opposed to headlines of the moment. 2008 did bring surprises that almost no one predicted.

The largest of these has to be the Presidential election. At the beginning of 2008 there were two candidates who led in the polls and had the prediction of nearly all analysts of easy wins both in the Republican and Democrat Primary races. What is most surprising is that both of the first of the year leaders failed to make it to the General Election in November with one actually dropping out very early.

As 2008 was ushered in Republicans found Rudi Giuliani in the lead and Democrats had Hillary. Both were considered the favorites by wide margins and looked to easily win the nomination of their respective parties. Then came the actual Primaries and the failure of Giuliani to campaign. As the early part of the year progressed the candidate whose nomination it was to lose did just that. Giuliani rolled over and basically quit campaigning.

He stopped making public appearances, he pulled out of several of the early States. In fact by the South Carolina Primary in early February the presumptive nominee had lost his lead and his following and began to drift into obscurity as the GOP began looking elsewhere for a candidate. Hillary on the other hand was all but running away with the nomination for the Democrats.

Then an unexpected endorsement began a series of endorsements and the Democrats turned their sights from Hillary the ,”destined,” nominee to Barack Obama the unknown candidate. Caroline Kennedy Schlossberg announced her endorsement of Obama in January. This did not have an immediate effect on the nomination but her placing the Kennedy name behind Obama and soon after followed by her Uncle Ted, started a series of high profile endorsements of Obama that caused the party to turn away from Hillary.

This combined with a general Clinton fatigue with Democrats pushed Obama to the front and after a considerable amount of party infighting the Summer brought Obama the nomination. On the GOP side of the coin with Rudi out of the picture a horse race began between McCain, Romney and Huckabee. Then surprisingly the candidate whose White House run was struggling to the point that he had to take a commercial airline flight to the New Hampshire Primary began pulling ahead and John McCain eventually came out on top.

The Conventions then took place and Obama picked a dud in Joe Biden as his running mate but still gained some ground until McCain shocked the world by picking conservative Alaskan Governor Sarah Palin as his running mate which solidified a shaky base and gave McCain a strong lead going into the final weeks of the election. It looked as if nothing could derail McCain in his White House bid until Wall Street stepped in and the mortgage collapse.

At the beginning of 2008 the economy was strong and growing with unemployment still holding at record low levels. Yet underneath there was brewing a cancer in the financial markets that had taken years to build under close Democrat assistance with a little GOP on the side. The sub-prime mortgage market was building a bubble that was bound to burst and it did in mid September taking with it the economy and the candidacy of John McCain.

While the blame for the crisis that ensued stretched back as far as the Carter Presidency and especially with changes made during the later Clinton years, Democrats in Congress who had defended the risky lending practices forced by the Clinton changes to allow those who would not have been eligible to purchase homes to get in WAY over their heads, used the opportunity to blame the Bush administration which in turn bled over to the McCain campaign and assisted greatly in electing Barack Obama as the 44th President.

The crisis also sparked a surprising and ridiculous bailout spasm in Washington that has yet to find an end and is actually looking to expand as the Obama administration prepares to take the reigns and looking for ways to , “spark,” the economy with stimulus that is destined to fail and bailouts that reward failed companies.

Of course the financial crisis was not the only cause that gave Obama the Presidency. McCain ran one of the weakest and poorly run Presidential campaigns in United States history. The one opportunity he had in overcoming the crisis was the popularity and hard hitting conservative style of Sarah Palin, but the campaign chose instead to hold her back and as a result finished second to a nearly flawless campaign run by Obama.

There were many other stories that made headlines in 2008 that are worthy of mentioning. The Hurricanes which destroyed the Texas Coast, Madoff’s 50 billion dollar Ponzi scheme, the tremendous success of the surge in Iraq and the historic agreements to insure a secure and free Iraq. Michael Phelps and eights gold medals, the Balgoyevich scandal, and of course Obama picking Hillary as Secretary of State.

But none of these stories brought the surprise and the impact to 2008 and beyond as the election of the unknown Barack Obama to the Presidency and the financial crisis which spread from Wall Street to the entire world. Both will influence 2009 and future history for years to come which made ,”2008, The Year That Was !”

Ken Taylor   http://theliberalslies.blogspot.com

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The 11th Commandment, Conservatives, and Moderates.


“Thou shalt not speak ill of any fellow Republican.” -President Ronald Reagan. 

President Reagan never spoke poorly about any Republican. He was always loyal to the party, no matter how poorly some of the more liberal Republicans treated President Reagan, he was always civil and even heaped praise on them and their leadership. When President Ford won the Republican nomination in 1976, then Governor Reagan not only supported the President, but he campaigned for him. Reagan knew that this was between Conservatives and Liberals in the GOP was killing the party. President Reagan surrendered 100% loyalty to moderate Republican candidates so that when he was eventually nominated in 1980, he got their enthusiastic support. 

Conservatives are often much more offended when we don’t get our candidate for President, because we’re often the ones much more enthusiastic about the process than moderates. But we have got to support Republican candidates, even if we disagree with them 20 or even 30% of the time, because in the end we live in a two party system and the Republican Party as a brand has to be strong just as much as Conservatism as a brand needs to be strong. 

If Republicans are smart and if we want to survive we will embrace the 11th Commandment, and if Conservatives are smart we will appoint the right candidates (by sending in our money for their campaigns) with the honor, integrity, and credibility to spread our message instead of whining when the GOP puts up a moderate Republican presidential candidate.

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Loyalty


Any limits at all?

I voted for John McCain. I held my nose because Obama was worse. Now the election is over and I would like to ask a question. How much loyalty do Republicans owe John McCain?

Republicans have been more than loyal to him than he has been to us. He fought against the Bush tax cuts. He fought for a very unpopular immigration amnesty bill. He destroyed Republican fund raising with his anti free speech campaign finance reform. He has spent so much time over the past 8 years on television news shows trashing Republicans and reaching out to Democrats that he was considered for Kerry’s VP.

The threat of a primary opponent is all we have to keep any of our own Republican elected officials in line. If it is going to be business as usual and John McCain decides to go back and carry the water for the Democrats, then something should be done.

So, how loyal should we be? Are we obligated to keep EVERY candidate just because they currently occupy a Senate seat and run under the Republican banner? Once elected can they do ANYTHING they want? What is the point of winning an election only to have your candidate surrender to the opposition the minute he gets to Washington?

I am curious to know what the limits, if any, are of loyalty to McCain or anyone else in the Republican party.

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Conservative call to action


Get off your butt and find a candidate

Before John McCain picked Sarah Palin as his vice presidential running mate I didn’t know her. Even after we still only know what the MSM and the McCain handlers allowed us to see and hear. I think one of the flaws in McCain’s campaign was they didn’t allow Sarah to be herself. Part of that too was having to support the McCain platform and not contradict the presidential candidate on the ticket.

Now, she’s been introduced to the nation and the base. She fired up huge numbers of people to come out who, arguably, would have otherwise remained at home. I was one of these.

Read More →

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How Sedition and Corruption Elected a Coup


As evidenced by a new documentary, the press kept knowledge of anything negative about Obama and the Democrats completely quiet. The average voter had no clue about Bill Ayers, Tony Resko, George Soros, how the Democrats set up the housing crash, how the Democrats set up the Wall Street fiasco, the pending redistribution of wealth, that socialism is a cancer or the coming destruction of the domestic coal industry. No matter how important those stories were to the election, none of them were big enough to force the media to cover them. There was no scandal. No ‘October Surprise’. But there could have been. And there should have been.

What was the fired attorney’s ’scandal’ all about? What role did Alberto Gonzales play in national security? Why were so many people fired or transferred from Executive branch agencies? Why were lawyers replaced with ‘good Americans’?Why were leaks the common way the New York Times compromised national security? Why did the American People not know?

Finally, the entire corruption case is on line. It has been a secret until now. With the election over and the power changing only in title, read how sedition and public corruption resulted in a coup, through democratic elections. Search over 2,300 related news articles and documents. View the entire case docket history and evidence submissions.

http://www.rollovermartin.com

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McCain Running For Re-Election in 2010


US Senate

John McCain is running for re-election to US Senate in 2010 and has already formed an exploratory committee to start raising funds.

So what you will at least this takes on headache off Republicans in 2 years. I doubt any strong Dem will challenge him.

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Conservatives, it’s our turn


Moderates had their shot

Americans, why did McCain/Palin loose this election? A lack of conservative principals showcased from the beginning. The Republican leadership allowed a moderate (McCain) to be selected as our candidate. McCain ran a weak campaign only selecting Palin in the end to energize the conservative base, and she did.

I submit if someone with more ‘fire in the belly’ for conservative principals like Sarah Palin had been chosen in the beginning we wouldn’t be lamenting the direction we all fear our country will take after January 20, 2009. If you are not happy with the direction the Republican party is currently taking then I suggest we all get off our collective backsides and get involved.

I don’t mean send in cash and feel as if you’ve ‘done your part’. No. I mean select some local candidates at the state or local level and volunteer. Choose someone in from the house at the federal level and volunteer. Do it now to get your feet wet and ready before the election cycle begins. I’m currently looking at several of my Georgia political figures, such as Tom Price and Chip Rogers and I encourage others to do the same.

Conservatism has not been defeated, nor is it in decline. Moderates lost this election. Now we need to take charge and help get this party energized and moving again in a more fiscally and socially conservative direction rather than ‘reaching across the isle’.

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McCain - “I Can’t Wait to Introduce Her to Washington!” - Maybe He Will


If the cards fall into place and she accepts a Senate position.

John McCain would still get the opportunity to introduce her to Washington, and therefore, the two of them would still get a chance to “clean up Washington and put Government back on the side of the People”.

Very interesting possibility.

Just picture McCain introducing her: “Ladies and Gentlemen, I introduce you to your worst nightmare … Sarah Baracuda”.

Imagine the camera crews following her around like no other Senator.

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These are not the campaign aides I knew


McCain defends Palin... sort of

Sen. John McCain appeared on Jay Leno’s show last night. When the topic of discussion turned to Sarah Palin and the smears directed at her from within his campaign, he didn’t “name names” or have even one harsh word of criticism for any member of his campaign organization. Here’s a video of the segment:

Well, that certainly was devoid of passion, not to mention conviction. Rather than call out the culprits and put an end to it all, McCain took the easy route. He simply dismissed such talk by saying that anyone can call themselves top advisors. The former presidential candidate may as well have offered up an Obamunism: “These are not the campaign aides I knew.”

Gov. Palin deserved better from McCain. She didn’t get it. This is not the man of honor many of those who supported him thought they knew.

  • JP

Cross-posted at Gov. Sarah Palin for President

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