Pink Equals Green

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Over at Politico, Jonathan Martin has a blog up about another Obama radical. This time, it’s big time campaign bundler and Code Pink co-Founder Jodie Evans.

Evans is a notorious figure, notorious most recently for an inflammatory interview where she suggested that Osama bin Laden was basically being a reasonable chap defending his home:

Jodie Evans:… “We were attacked because we were in Saudi Arabia, that was the message of Osama, was that because we had our bases in the Middle East, he attacked the United States.”

Paul A. Ibbetson: “Do you think that’s a valid argument?”

Evans: “Sure. Why do we have bases in the Middle East? We totally violated the rights of that country. Why do we get to have bases in the Middle East?”

You can catch the audio here.

Code Pink is, of course, famous for their disruption of Congressional hearings, and for casting spells against Marine Recruiting Stations. Yes, that’s right, spells.

There’s more, read on …

Jodie Evans, though, is more than simply yet another radical leftist traitor hopping on the Obama bandwagon. Bundling wasn’t really enough for her.

Code Pink and Evans in particular have been using their typical tactics in support of Senator Obama throughout his campaign. They have repeatedly disrupted Hillary events over the last year and a half, and even created an anti-Hillary website.

According to Variety magazine, (via Melanie Morgan), Evans was exerting heavy pressure in getting hoity-toity celebs to come to Obama over Clinton. The list of exploits goes on and on.

It seems there is another list that goes on and on. The list of radicals, extremists, and left-wing wackos out there working to get Obama elected. As Erick has so well illuminated, Obama is of them, he is from them. He’s their guy, and their success.

For my part, I think a useful test of any idea is this: What Jodie Evans is for, default common sense position is to be against. Especially for you Democrats. Fail to be watchful, and pink will be the new blue … if it isn’t already.

Over at Politico, Jonathan Martin has a blog up about another Obama radical. This time, it's big time campaign bundler and Code Pink co-Founder Jodie Evans. Evans is a notorious figure, notorious most recently for an inflammatory interview where she suggested that Osama bin Laden was basically being a reasonable chap defending his home: Jodie Evans:… "We were attacked because we were in Saudi Arabia, that was the message ... Read More

Washington Times’ Tony Blankley: Obama might be a ‘dictator.’

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In the Washington Times today, former Newt Gingrich aide Tony Blankley tries to cast Sen. Barack Obama (D-IL) as a potential “dictator” in waiting. Claiming that Obama made a “shockingly dictatorial assertion” last month when he said Americans can’t expect to be considered world leaders while still driving SUVs and eating “as much as we […]

In the Washington Times today, former Newt Gingrich aide Tony Blankley tries to cast Sen. Barack Obama (D-IL) as a potential “dictator” in waiting. Claiming that Obama made a “shockingly dictatorial assertion” last month when he said Americans can’t expect to be considered world leaders while still driving SUVs and eating “as much as we want,” Blankley asks if he is a “dictator or democrat?“: Dictator or democrat? Radical or liberal? Who in the world is this man? Where in the world is ... Read More

Obama’s *snicker* ‘War Room’

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Poor, poor Barack. So many vicious rumors to discuss, so few teleprompters available to tell him what to say about them. Why is the internet so unfair?

Well he’s mad, and he’s not gonna take it anymore. Steve Foley at the Minority Report blog reports that Barack Obama is launching an internet “War Room” to fight back. According to the Times Online, a “crack team of cybernauts will form a rapid response internet ‘war room’ to track and respond aggressively to online rumours that Barack Obama is unpatriotic and a Muslim.”

Just read this totally objective excerpt:

As he gears up for his general election fight against John McCain, Mr Obama and his chief advisers are aware of the danger of such rumours, amid polling data showing that a significant number of Americans believe he is a Muslim or are suspicious about his background. Such doubts were a factor in his poor showing with white, blue-collar voters during his primary battle with Hillary Clinton.

In recent days Mr Obama has — unprompted — brought up the subject of the chain e-mails and blog sites making the false claims. Some state that he is a radical Muslim who was sworn in as a US senator on the Koran; others that he sympathises with Palestinian radicals. Many focus on his middle name of Hussein, which was taken from his Kenyan father.

Read on …

What caused his poor showing with white, blue-collar voters versus Hillary? Misplaced Islamaphobia! Also note how they equate “he sympathises with Palestinian radicals” with his being sworn in on the Koran. No need to look at his many radical associates! That’s just a bunch of rumor mongering! We have a war room!!

“The ‘war room’ comes as the Obama campaign prepares a series of biographical speeches, television advertisements and campaign appearances to tell his life story, an attempt to make voters more familiar with him. Despite his long nomination fight against Mrs Clinton, his campaign aides concede that millions of Americans still feel that they do not really know him.”

To know, know, know him, is to love, love, love him. Why should Barack be overly concerned with people not knowing him? He seems perfectly comfortable with the fact that no one he knows is the person he knew.

Leaving aside the hilarious image produced by trying to imagine a bunch of Obama bloggers as crack cybernauts (boy are there some jokes in that), the idea isn’t a total loss. The left is notoriously successful at conjuring fact from rumor through the magic of repetition. So I’m thinking, “why, I’m a crack cybernaut! Why can’t I do the same thing?”

There are a lot of nasty rumors and memes that pass around the internet. Sometimes these things make it into the real world. They spread, they grow, and they become KnownFacts™. One of the supreme deficiencies with the Bush administration was their unwillingness or inability to combat such things. So I suggest we do so here at RedState. The blogs have shown the ability to fight it. The left pushed as hard as ever on the “100 Years of War” flap, but blogs and YouTube pushed right back. The video is the proof, but without people pushing back it would be ‘common knowledge’ at this point that John McCain had advocated 100 years of war.

So, when you see one of these nasty rumors about John McCain or any Republican, you can email me the link (use my RS contact form). If you blog about them, send me a link. I will either post immediately or save them up for a weekly wrapup. We can be our own crack team.

I don’t think I’ll call it a War Room though, too hilarious. Maybe … The Rumor Kill?

Poor, poor Barack. So many vicious rumors to discuss, so few teleprompters available to tell him what to say about them. Why is the internet so unfair? Well he's mad, and he's not gonna take it anymore. Steve Foley at the Minority Report blog reports that Barack Obama is launching an internet "War Room" to fight back. According to the Times Online, a "crack team of cybernauts will form ... Read More

Convince Me

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I had some fun yesterday, kicking over the anthill that is the Obama cult, and my, how the little critters are still furious about it. This is one reason I can’t be a Democrat; the people in that party appear for the most part to be driven only by emotion. Sure, it makes sense to care about the issues and your candidate of choice, but there really should be rational, logical reasons for your positions. And frankly, the Left seems to hate the very idea of defending its positions with logic and evidence. Take Global Warming, for instance. I agree that we humans must be responsible for the materials we use, and to be accountable for the effect our actions have on other people and living things. But accepting radical demands simply because they are couched in the ‘we can’t wait to prove our case’ arguments of Global Warming advocates is not rational, especially when there is reason to suspect hidden agenda and ulterior motives. Global Warming is an unproven theory, to say nothing of the claims that man’s actions cause it or can stop it. The Kyoto Treaty stands out as a particularly deceitful and hypocritical example of the thinking, punishing the US while excusing, even rewarding third-world nations and places like China, whose actions are - using the logic of the Left - far more contributory to pollution and Global Warming. A reasonable person could well wonder why we should even be concerned with Carbon Dioxide, known to be beneficial to most plants and inert to humans except in levels on concentration impossible to find in Nature, especially when we could and to my mind should focus on real pollution from particulates and known carcinogens. And that is merely one of the more obvious examples.

Economics is another arena where Leftist demands run into brick walls of Reality. Take the recent hike in the minimum wage, an artificial creation of Congress which does nothing to increase the economy’s effectiveness, but is merely another mechanism for wealth redistribution. The money to pay for the increased minimum comes from the businesses which pay employees, businesses which for the most part are sole proprietorships or small partnerships, that is businesses already running on tight margins which cannot afford to have their expenses increased simply because Congress wanted to do so. So they did what they had to do, they cut positions to make ends meet and this raised the unemployment rate. This is the same logic that adding a half-dollar tax on your gas would be a good idea, but if you look on the side of the pump the next time you fill up, you will see that the government thought that was a great idea, as well. The Left does not understand Economics, and certainly never considers the law of unintended consequences.

- continued -

This brings us back to the Left’s poster boy for President; a guy whose experience is so thin that he barely got started in his first year as a Senator before he started running for President. A guy who boasted about his superior judgment, but who has had to admit that he did not really understand the character and nature of some of his closest associates. His mentor, Jeremiah Wright, has been exposed as an America-hating racist, yet Obama called this man his mentor and his closest advisor for years. Obama was a close acquaintance of Billy Ayers, even declared his candidacy from Ayer’s house, but now it turns out that Ayers was not only a member of the infamous ‘Weatherman’ terrorist group in the 1960s, he still holds the same values he did then. We find that Obama made deals with his fund-raiser Antoin Rezko, at least before Mr. Rezko got himself indicted and convicted for fraud and corruption. The list goes on much further, but you get the idea … Obama’s associates were and are as dirty as those we once saw surrounding Richard Nixon. Different party, but the same game.

So, convince me guys. What is the rational argument for electing Obama? What empirical support can you point to, that shows he can do the job and is fit for it?

Is there anything inside that expensive suit but a con man?

I had some fun yesterday, kicking over the anthill that is the Obama cult, and my, how the little critters are still furious about it. This is one reason I can't be a Democrat; the people in that party appear for the most part to be driven only by emotion. Sure, it makes sense to care about the issues and your candidate of choice, but there really should be rational, logical reasons for your positions. And frankly, the Left ... Read More

REDSTATE ROUNDTABLE #12: Is It Time To Bring Back Temperamental Conservatism?

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Dan McLaughlin: One of the criticisms being made against the various permutations of a new GOP agenda being circulated these days is that they are too small-bore, too modest and detail-oriented to compete with the broad “Hope and Change” themes of Barack Obama’s campaign. (See Patrick Ruffini’s critique).

At the same time, there’s a school of thought that says that George W. Bush has run into troubles in his presidency precisely when he was too ambitious, whether in his promotion of democracy in Iraq or his unsuccessful attempts to get Congress and the public behind sweeping reforms of Social Security and immigration policy, macro-initiatives that died a death by a thousand cuts from opponents on all sides. Critics have charged that the GOP under Gingrich and under Bush has abandoned Burkean modesty and incrementalism and bought into the rhetoric of revolution, which it then predictably fails to deliver for many of the same reasons why the Democrats have failed over the years to sell things like radical health care reform and gays in the military.

With Republicans likely to be playing defense on domestic policy over the next few years, I’ve been wondering if maybe it’s time, for tactical reasons, to give more weight to what I think of as temperamental conservatism over ideological conservatism - to argue at every turn for smaller, more modest reforms as opposed to sweeping plans to junk the tax code, abolish Cabinet-level departments, etc. On health care, for example, there remains a lot of public desire for change, but huge apprehension about radical change - and we may well be best situated to oppose a massive plan by Obama if we are offering more modest alternatives.

So, I open the floor: should the GOP agenda seek to reclaim the initiative of broad, bold, visionary, “choice not an echo” change of the Goldwater/Reagan/Gingrich variety? Or should we be positioning our party more as the party of sober adult leadership that knows the limitations of our system?

Thomas Crown: How’d that work out for the Party between 1932 and 1980?

Thomas Crown: Let me add something to that:

Much of the answer to your question depends on your goal and your perception. If your desire is to make a run at winning, and if you believe that there’s a potential majority constituency that will vote for conservative governance, then you play long ball. You risk a blowout in either direction — Goldwater ‘64, Reagan ‘80 — so that you have the chance to govern. If you believe that there’s no potential majority constituency for conservative governance (but you believe there’s a strong minority in favor of it, or at least of its leavening effects), then there is no chance to win unless you change your message to what the majority wants. You’re then either stuck with trying to win for winning’s sake (divorcing the GOP from conservatism), or running to hold a strong minority position, but never having the reins of power.

I’m simplifying interesting things like GOTV, donor response, etc., but I’m doing this during part of my nominal lunch break, so there.

The problem with that second state — you assume that there’s no majority market for conservative governance among real, actual voters who actually vote, and don’t just say they will — is that you’re not really going to win either way. I think the Democrats are full of horse-poo on most issues, but they internalized Goldwater’s dictum pretty well, with an unspoken a priori assumption: [If voters want a Democrat for office and] if you give them a watered-down Republican, they will go with the real Republican every time, because they believe that the Republican is at least being straight with them. Or something. Now, of course, if they want a Republican, you’re only going to beat the Republican if you’re prepared to be the Republican he’s not.

I would posit that this is why the GOP got its rear end handed to it in 2006: It’s not about stem cells (an issue that divided the caucus) or spending (something the Democrats do much of, too) or Iraq, or immigration, or any particular issue: It’s because the Democrats went into Republican-leaning districts and found Democrats who sounded, and presumably would act, like Republicans, while Republicans were perceived as not acting like Republicans. But that was a win at the margins. They haven’t won by being lefties across the board, they’ve won by supplementing lefties with a lot of nominal righties. There’s a reason why Kitten is running as a transcendant figure, rather than the anodyne liberal he is: Nationally, the majority market for liberalism still isn’t there. Which in turn means that, for all of the tearful navel-gazing in which the Right has been involved these last two years, the Democrats haven’t won and indeed probably won’t, at least in the only national referendum we have.

And if they don’t win that, as they well realize, they don’t win. We don’t either, but unless they can get past a veto, they’re stuck.

By contrast, the alternative outcome is the Republican situation from 1932 to 1980. Two, count them, two Congresses. Sixteen years of Republican governance at the Presidential level, eight of which were marred by one of the most bizarre, and damaging constitutional events in our history. A casual presumption that the Democrats were the ruling party. The ingrained belief that government was there to solve problems at every level. The New Deal. The Great Society. Irreparable damage to the Federal system, and a judiciary it took two and a half decades to (mostly) clean up. And Republicans ran as mild Democrats to get there. I’m not remotely clear that the loyal opposition either opposed anything, or even slowed anything down.

If the GOP exists merely to advance the GOP, regardless of ideology, the best tack to take is to find what the Democrats are selling, and sell it better. If it exists for some other reason, we do it no service by being Democrats-lite.

Ben Domenech: I think it depends greatly on the definition. If “temperamental conservatism” means Gov. Jindal, then I think it absolutely has a future. But Jindal still packaged his adult leadership, responsible reform message in a way that reached across typical political lines without sacrificing its true conservatism. As the NYTimes points out, this is a reformer who has gone from ethics and governmental reform to anti-stem cell research, pro-voucher, pro-tax cut policies - while hardly a group of issues that avoid headlines, this isn’t revolutionary new ground for conservatism.

The packaging and the product has to correspond, and it has to have an appeal that is far beyond Washington’s normal detail-focus. I think that the long lists of policy proposals designed to satisfy every interest group always lose to a form of political leadership that is simple, appealing, easy to understand, and has a message that cuts across lines of race and class. It comes down to: here are a few ideas. Here is why they will work, and why our opponents’ ideas will not. I tend to think it’s not the necessary “boldness” of these ideas that matter, as much as finding the ones that cut across the widest range of the population. Which is why I laugh a little bit, despite Ruffini’s cogent analysis, that the first issue on his list is earmark reform. Ah, yes, that’s what’s holding us back.

I think the answer to your question may be as simple as this: these days, it’s bold to be an adult.

Thomas Crown: I don’t think we’re disagreeing; perhaps I misunderstood Dan’s question (and if so, I apologize). I understood the question to be whether we should continue, however presented, with swinging for the fences, or whether, to botch the metaphor beyond all reason, we should try to hold the Democrats to a base at a time.

Dan McLaughlin: What I am not suggesting we consider is let’s-propose-a-small-new-entitlement-instead-of-a-big-one thinking. That way definitely leads to Bob Michelsville. What I am suggesting is more in the nature of choosing increments of progress rather than constantly going for the moon… let’s take some examples.

HEALTH CARE: Big proposals: Health savings accounts for all. Eliminate preferential tax treatment for employer-provided care. Radical overhaul of Medicare.

Small proposals: allow insurance to be purchased across state lines.

TAXES: Scrap the tax code, kill the IRS. Abolish corporate taxes.

Small proposals: Create an alternative optional simplified tax system.

Down the line, there are more modest ways to get a foothold for conservative ideas. They may be the way to go right now.

Pejman Yousefzadeh: Part of what makes it difficult to answer this question is the fact that a return to moderate, temperate conservatism of the Burkean variety does indeed involve bold and radical change.

It is difficult–if not impossible–to overstate the effect of the advent of the welfare state and the New Deal coalition. Not only did it bring about a massive increase in the size and scope of government, but it also created expectations for a continued increase in government. I have said it before and will say it again: Much of the appeal of Big Government is the fact that a call for governmental “solutions” constitute a Pavlovian response to a whole host of public policy problems. Is crime rampant? Take guns off the streets! Is there a health care crisis? Make the government give us health care! Is there an education crisis? Spend more money! You actually have to think to get to the small-government/free market solution to these problems but you can just press a button and emit a big government answer with no cogitation whatsoever. The appeal of that is enormous.

The same thing, by the way, applies when it comes to originalist jurisprudence and fights against judicial activism. Originalists denounce judicial activism but are themselves called activists for their desire to see a whole host of “living Constitution” decisions reversed. The originalist response gets lost in the noise; if you are going to return the country to a state where originalism is respected, you are going to have to reverse some decisions. Scalia, of course, tries to avoid this fight–though he gets dragged into it–by leaving a lot of precedent alone. But Thomas gets slammed for his willingness to hold nothing sacred.

Bear in mind as well that the politics of “doing something” go over a lot better with the public than the politics of being the next Calvin Coolidge. That, plus the need to take some actual action to return the country to a Burkean state means that in order to be a Burkean, one must be broad, bold and visionary.

Dan McLaughlin: That last sentence, Pejman, has been at the core of conservative disappointment for the last 27 years. I’m not saying we should surrender the idea of dismantling a lot of the Big Government machinery root and branch, but it is extremely hard work politically and ends up leading us into a lot of losing battles.

The Social Security fight continues to weigh heavily on my mind. I still think it was the right thing to do, and was just abysmally mishandled by the White House in general and the communications shop in particular. But I also recognize that a lot of the electorate just wasn’t prepared for anything that sounded like radical change to Social Security - and if we want real change, we need to be moving in a long series of increments that will build the functional constituency for each successive step.

Pejman Yousefzadeh: Interestingly enough, I think that a lot of the agenda that you laid out in your previous e-mail coincides very nicely with my belief that in order to be a Burkean and to return the country to a Burkean state, one must be broad, bold and visionary. So I think we agree more than we disagree.

As for the Social Security fight, that should not have been undertaken without a crack at tax reform coming first. That would have been an easier–or at least, more electorally appealing–fight and it would have had more of a chance of building up the appearance of greater political capital at the end of it.

Kevin Holtsberry: I fervently believe that a philosophical commitment to small government is a minority position in this country. Conservatives succeed when they convince voters that Big Government hurts them through higher taxes, wasted money, corruption, substandard service, less choice, etc. It is about effectiveness not ideology. Liberal Democrats have succeeded in convincing far too many Americans that they can get government to solve huge problems while Republicans have raised significant doubts about whether they can be trusted in the areas of competence and integrity.

I think one effective way to stop or slow some of these grandiose liberal plans is to remind people just how incompetent government can be. We need to keep pointing out that these programs always cost more, do less, and have nasty unintended consequences. This makes us the party of realism and of prudence. Universal health care may be well intentioned but it is the height of naivete to believe we can simply mandate it without serious problems.

In this vein, it is easy to imagine smaller proposals as a part of this recognition of the limits of government.

Thomas Crown: We have to convince people that incrementalism works, first. I’m not remotely convinced they know it or believe it. You can blame the social conservatives for a lot, but a lack of voter education is not one of them. By contrast, small government and fiscal conservatives have simply presumed, despite all evidence to the contrary, that everyone basically agrees with them, and that there’s no need to teach.

What that leaves us is a polity that believes in big, robust solutions to problems of any kind, and that if we effect a half-measure today, we’ll just have to go all the way later, so why not just speed things up? The enormous, disproportionate cost of these huge responses, and the human misery and cost that we have to endure before, during, and after we fix them, is lost on most. Hence the demand for universal health care (”But it’ll be different from Canada and Britain!”)

The massive, soul-deadening effects of the welfare State, for example, were largely not seen as connected to welfare except at a gut level that most folks won’t voice for fear of being called racist; and any attempt to solve the former by fixing the latter ran into enormous opposition that took thirty years, millions of lives, and God alone knows how much money to overcome. And that’s about the only successful education effort on government largesse I can think of, made possible in large part by middle class reactions to inner city crime, some (good) stinginess, and decades of work by the conservative movement. The lessons from that have not precisely made it into the population at large.

Robert A. Hahn: We can implement a small-government agenda and appeal to the “expectations for government solutions” segment at the same time. We do it by stealing an idea from Bill Clinton, and taking advantage of the fact that the “problems” people want solutions for are always changing.

Bill Clinton had a new government program every week. But they were nits. He’d learned his lesson about big, sweeping reforms with GaysInTheMilitary and LetMyWifeReformHealthCare. He replaced those with symbolism over substance. “Put 100,000 cops on the street.” Sounds good, costs little. And it expired in two years, leaving the cities with the problem of keeping the salaries funded after that. Clinton had lots of programs that were funded to the tune of five or ten million over ten years. “Clinton to spend $10 million on smiles for children.” “Clinton to spend $5 million on happiness for the handicapped.” It was a headline-a-day, on the cheap.

We could do that, while quietly making other things go away. Our problem has been a one-way “cut government” approach. We want to kill Barney and Big Bird. We never have a $5-million-over-5-years program to talk about at the same time. This allows the media to crucify us as a bunch of Meanies. Instead we could be buying 100,000 ballpoint pens for The Chill’run.

Dan McLaughlin: One of the criticisms being made against the various permutations of a new GOP agenda being circulated these days is that they are too small-bore, too modest and detail-oriented to compete with the broad "Hope and Change" themes of Barack Obama's campaign. (See Patrick Ruffini's critique). At the same time, there's a school of thought that says that George W. Bush has run ... Read More

The Resurrection of Austan Goolsbee

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Back from the abyss to become the third in what appears to be a long line of questionable Obama appointees is one Austan Goolsbee. That’s right — the same Austan Goolsbee from Canada/NAFTA-gate, as TPM’s Greg Sargent pointed out in a piece penned yesterday entitled “Austan Goolsbee Lives!

<img src=”http://img300.imageshack.us/img300/7779/obamaaustanql3.jpg” width=”500″ height=”300″

Austan resurfaced in a confenece call yesterday as Obama’s chief surrogate on economics. As Greg Sargent put it:

And so, today on a conference call today with reporters, Goolsbee was front and center as a chief surrogate for Obama, who’s battling it out with John McCain today over their competing economic plans.

Read on…

This move has prompted a lot of us on the right to wonder aloud what Karl at Protein Wisdom asked Yesterday:

I wonder who else Obama has disappeared only temporarily…

I wonder who indeed… Karl went on to say:

Ironically, Austan is back just in time to be asked about his spirited defense of the subprime lending practices that Obama has been railing against out on the campaign trail. The media will ask him about it, won’t they?

This is a disturbing trend coming from the Obama camp and Obama himself… not only are his past relationships enough to give one pause, do to so many of them being radicals who are clearly anti-American, but currently his inability to recognize his appointees for the baggage they carry shows a complete lack of good judgment, experience, and a political naivety unfit to hold the highest office ion the land.

Cross posted from The Minority Report

Back from the abyss to become the third in what appears to be a long line of questionable Obama appointees is one Austan Goolsbee. That's right -- the same Austan Goolsbee from Canada/NAFTA-gate, as TPM’s Greg Sargent pointed out in a piece penned yesterday entitled "Austan Goolsbee Lives!" <img src="http://img300.imageshack.us/img300/7779/obamaaustanql3.jpg" width="500" height="300" Austan resurfaced in a confenece call yesterday as Obama's chief surrogate on economics. As Greg Sargent put it: And so, today on a conference call today with reporters, Goolsbee was front and ... Read More

Tim Mahoney (D-FL) Tacitly Admits He’s A Chicken

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Tim Mahoney (D-FL) is running scared.

With Tom Rooney and two other Republicans gunning for him this year, Mahoney has officially declared himself too chicken to compete.

Barack Obama has effectively clinched the Democratic presidential nomination, but freshman U.S. Rep. Tim Mahoney, D-Palm Beach Gardens, isn’t hopping on the bandwagon. Mahoney says he’ll remain an uncommitted superdelegate through the party convention this summer. And Mahoney plans to keep a low profile in the presidential race this fall as he seeks reelection to one of the nation’s most competitive congressional seats.

“I wasn’t elected to be a role model as to how people should vote,” Mahoney says of the presidential race. “People in my district are smart enough to decide.”

Mahoney says it is not about self preservation, but we all know otherwise. Mahoney does not want to be seen as aligned with someone as radical as Barack Obama.

But he will still vote for Obama, won’t he.

Tim Mahoney (D-FL) is running scared. With Tom Rooney and two other Republicans gunning for him this year, Mahoney has officially declared himself too chicken to compete. Barack Obama has effectively clinched the Democratic presidential nomination, but freshman U.S. Rep. Tim Mahoney, D-Palm Beach Gardens, isn't hopping on the bandwagon. Mahoney says he'll remain an uncommitted superdelegate through the party convention this summer. And Mahoney plans to keep a low ... Read More

The latest evidence that the Democrats want American to come in second place

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Newt Gingrich is pushing his Drill Here. Drill Now. solution as gas prices go up.

It is a great idea. Along those lines, here is some information that really reflects the differences between the Republicans and Democrats in the U.S. House — and why winning back the House is important.

In a breakdown of top energy issues, you’ll find the GOP is in favor of more options for energy than the Democrats.

ANWR Exploration
House Republicans: 91% Supported
House Democrats: 86% Opposed
 
Coal-to-Liquid
House Republicans: 97% Supported
House Democrats: 78% Opposed
 
Oil Shale Exploration
House Republicans: 90% Supported
House Democrats: 86% Opposed
 
Outer Continental Shelf (OCS) Exploration
House Republicans: 81% Supported
House Democrats: 83% Opposed
 
Refinery Increased Capacity
House Republicans: 97% Supported
House Democrats: 96% Opposed
 
 That’s startling information. Look at that again. Put another way, the Republicans are opposed to grinding our economy to a halt due to soaring energy costs and the Democrats are in favor of shutting down our economy and way of life.

Why are the Democrats so in favor of shutting down the American economy? Because they’ve become wedded to an entrenched group of radical environmentalists who see the United States as the greatest threat to the earth.

The Democrats want the United States to fall behind because they see it as the only real way to, as Barack Obama said, let the earth “heal” and “the oceans … recede.” The only way to save the planet is to humble America, apparently.

No wonder so many radicals and terrorists like Obama. The whole party is eaten up with anti-American sentiments.

Newt Gingrich is pushing his Drill Here. Drill Now. solution as gas prices go up. It is a great idea. Along those lines, here is some information that really reflects the differences between the Republicans and Democrats in the U.S. House -- and why winning back the House is important. In a breakdown of top energy issues, you'll find the GOP is in favor of more options for energy ... Read More

Does this make me “abstiniphobic”?

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One of the things I always find humorous about the anti-sex crowd is that they try to frame their regressive worldview as “radical” or “counterculture” — as in, the teevee sez everyone is having sex, and so they’re going totally against the grain by telling you you’re a huge whore if you open your legs. […]

One of the things I always find humorous about the anti-sex crowd is that they try to frame their regressive worldview as “radical” or “counterculture” — as in, the teevee sez everyone is having sex, and so they’re going totally against the grain by telling you you’re a huge whore if you open your legs. The argument that there have always been large groups of anti-sex control freaks telling women what to do with our lady-parts seems to fall on deaf ears. ... Read More

Change That’s More Than Skin Deep

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The more I hear about Barack Obama and his slogan of “Change you can believe in,” the more I realize that it’s being used by the wrong candidate.

John McCain’s most defining feature has to be his “maverick” label. He has a decades-long history of turning away from his party, of reaching across the aisle, of — in general — pissing off the Republican base to achieve his goals and maintain his principles. I happen to think that that is often a mistake, as he picks the damnedest wrong-headed positions to defy his party, but it’s hard to call him a “typical Republican” or “Bush III” or “party hack.”

Barack Obama, though… he really doesn’t bring much “change” to the party.

One of the more disgusting scandals of the Bill Clinton administration (and there were a lot to choose from) was the last-minute pardon of fugitive financier Marc Rich. It was one of the last acts of President Clinton before he left office, and not only did the pardoning process completely bypass the standard processes, but — by an astonishing coincidence — corresponded with Rich’s ex-wife making some very, very hefty donations to Clinton’s presidential library. (It also corresponded with several visits to the White House by the quite attractive — and zaftig — ex-wife in question.)

Well, one of the key figures in getting Rich his pardon was Eric Holder, who was the #2 man in the Justice Department under Attorney General Janet Reno. It was Holder who directed that the normal pardon process (including consulting with — or, at least, notifying the officials who were directly involved with the case against the pardon-seeker, or that the subject of the pardon make the request themselves, or that the proposed pardon not mess up any current cases) be bypassed and Rich get his pardon.

Rich, of course, went on to take his second chance to get heavily involved in the United Nations’ “Oil For Food” program for Iraq, which Saddam Hussein used to funnel literally billions of dollars into bribes all around the world to get the sanctions against his regime lifted — a goal that was most likely barely foiled by President Bush’s decision to invade Iraq.

I wonder if Mr. Holder lists his involvement in the Rich affair (pun partly intended) on his resume?

Well, Mr. Holder is now one of the troika that is advising Barack Obama on who should be his vice-presidential candidate. Alongside a fellow named Jim Johnson. Mr. Johnson is a bit more qualified to do this, as he helped pick two other Democratic vice-presidential nominees — Geraldine Ferrraro and John Edwards. Maybe they think the third time is the charm or something.

Several of Obama’s top foreign policy advisors is Zbigniew Brzezinski, who served as National Security Advisor for Jimmy Carter — where he helped shape the foreign policy that we’re still paying the price for, in many ways, today.

Obama is the junior senator from Illinois, and he worked his way up through the Chicago political machine. Now, I won’t say that Chicago’s Democratic apparatus is the most corrupt in the nation (I strongly suspect Louisiana could give them a run for their money), but it’s legendary for its corruption. And Obama was part and parcel of all that.

Obama worked closely with convicted political moneyman and fixer Tony Rezko, but insists he never saw any signs of the man’s corruption.

And the Chicago apparatus has done yeoman’s work in helping Obama. In his first race for the state legislature, an astonishing thing happened: every single one of Obama’s rivals for the Democratic nomination was disqualified after enough of their signatures on petitions discarded until Obama was the only one left.

Later, when Obama was running for the state US Senate nomination, he was running against a guy named Blair Hull. Obama was way behind until his staffers put enough pressure on reporters to dig into Hull’s sealed divorce records. They eventually got them opened and found a never-proven allegation of domestic violence by Hull against his then-wife, and that was it. Hull was history, Obama was the Democrats’ nominee. (corrected — thanks, david)

Then, when he was running for the US Senate, he was running against a Republican named Jack Ryan (no connection to Tom Clancy’s superhero). Ryan was also divorced (from actress Jeri Ryan), and once again the press went digging and unsealed Ryan’s divorce and child-custody records. There was nothing as repulsive as violence, but there were some deliciously lurid allegations of a sexual nature that came to light — and Ryan quit the race, leaving Obama virtually unchallenged in the race.

“The new politics of hope and change?” Sounds pretty damned old-school to me.

Another bit of old-school politics are the radical bomb-throwers of the 60’s. One of the most prominent of those groups were the Weather Underground. Two absolutely unrepentant veterans of that group are Bill Ayers and his wife, Bernardine Dohrn, are among Obama’s staunchest supporters and long-time friends and allies.

Well, that’s the past. What about the future?

Seems to me like most of Obama’s policies are reruns of Carter-era policies — and the most disastrous ones. Make nice with the nutjobs that run Iran. Punish the oil companies to bring down the price of energy, in the lines of the ever-popular “the beatings will continue until morale improves” signs. Tax the rich and deprive them of their incentives to better themselves and add to the growing economy. And all done with an air of idealism that trends towards sanctimoniousness.

I first started becoming politically aware during the Carter administration. I have some pretty vivid memories of that time. And I really, really, really don’t want to go through those again — mainly because now I’m old enough to have to face it directly, and not through the buffers of parents and elementary school.

I find myself wondering how things would be different if Barack Obama was Barry O’Brien, a charming, gifted public speaker (but not off the cuff) who came up through the Chicago political machine and had no real track record. Would Senator O’Brien have been taken seriously as a presidential contender, let alone the nominee?

I dunno. We’ll never know. But I think it’s an interesting question.

The more I hear about Barack Obama and his slogan of "Change you can believe in," the more I realize that it's being used by the wrong candidate. John McCain's most defining feature has to be his "maverick" label. He has a decades-long history of turning away from his party, of reaching across the aisle, of -- in general -- pissing off the Republican base to achieve his goals and maintain his principles. I happen to think that that is often a mistake, ... Read More