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Ann Coulter: The problem with Rick Santorum
The St. Augustine Record ^ | March 5, 2012 | Ann Coulter

Posted on 03/10/2012 12:04:55 PM PST by 2ndDivisionVet

Even when I agree with Rick Santorum, listening to him argue the point almost makes me change my mind.

I also wonder why he’s running for president, rather than governor, when the issues closest to his heart are family- oriented matters about which the federal government can, and should, do very little.

It’s strange that Santorum doesn’t seem to understand the crucial state-federal divide bequeathed to us by the framers of our Constitution, inasmuch as it is precisely that difference that underlies his own point that states could ban contraception.

Of course they can. States could outlaw purple hats or Gummi bears under our Constitution!

State constitutions, laws, judicial rulings or the people themselves, voting democratically, tend to prevent such silly state bans from arising. But the Constitution written by James Madison, et al, does not prevent a state’s elected representatives from enacting them.

The Constitution mostly places limits on what the federal government can do. Only in a few instances does it restrict what states can do.

A state cannot, for example, infringe on the people’s right to bear arms or to engage in the free exercise of religion. A state can’t send a senator to the U.S. Congress if he is under 30 years old. But with rare exceptions, the Constitution leaves states free to govern themselves as they see fit.

In New York City, they can have live sex clubs and abortion on demand, but no salt or smoking sections. In Tennessee, they can ban abortion, but have salt, creches and 80 mph highways. At least that’s how it’s supposed to work.

And yet when Santorum tried to explain why states could ban contraception to Bill O’Reilly back in January, not once did he use the words “Constitution,” “constitutionally,” “federalism,” their synonyms or derivatives. Lawyers who are well familiar with the Constitution had no idea what Santorum was talking about.

He genuinely does not seem to understand the Constitution’s federalist framework, except as a brief talking point on the way to saying states can ban contraception. Otherwise, he wouldn’t keep claiming, falsely, that Obamacare is the same as Romneycare.

Rick! We’re conservatives! We believe the states can establish a religion — and the federal government can’t.

If he truly believed in the Constitution, Santorum wouldn’t be promoting big social programs out of the federal government, such as tripling the child tax credit exemption and voting for “No Child Left Behind.”

No federalist can support this man.

Most recently, Santorum assailed Obama for saying everyone should go to college by responding: “What a snob!”

No! No! No!

Santorum’s response merely reinforces the insane liberal worldview that going to college is the preserve of our betters, a hoity-toity proof of social class, a desirable consumer product like a Louis Vuitton bag.

This isn’t the ‘20s, when only the upper classes went to college. These days, every idiot who can scratch an “X” on his checkbook assumes hundreds of thousands of dollars in debt to make himself less employable by taking college courses in — for example — “Lady Gaga and the Sociology of Fame” (University of South Carolina, Columbia), “GaGa for Gaga: Sex, Gender and Identity” (University of Virginia), “Arguing With Judge Judy: Popular ‘Logic’ on TV Judge Shows” (University of California, Berkeley), “The Phallus” (Occidental College), “Zombies” (University of Baltimore), “Comics” (Oregon State University), “Harry Potter: Finding Your Patronus” (Oregon State University), and “Underwater Basket Weaving” (University of California at San Diego).

My fellow Americans, Meghan McCain has a bachelor’s degree.

It’s not snobbery that compels liberals to promote college for all; it’s a scam to manufacture more Democratic voters, much like their immigration policies.

Is a Valley Girl who takes courses in Self-Esteem at Cal State Fresno (an actual course at an actual college) a finer class of person than a skilled plumber with approximately 1,000 times the earning capacity and social worth of the airhead?

No. But she is more likely to vote Democratic.

Encouraging everyone to go to college creates an all-new class of people entirely dependent on the government, which is to say: reliable Democratic voters.

First, the taxpayer subsidizes the wasted human space teaching these moronic courses (at prices far outpacing inflation), and then the taxpayer pays the incomes of the graduates who are resigned to filling ever-growing no-show, self-paced and self-evaluated government jobs.

Who else would employ a graduate with a degree in Women’s Studies, Early Childhood Education, Physical Education , Sociology or Queer Studies but the government?

Santorum can’t be the one arguing for our side.

Even when he’s asked to defend his own blindingly obvious point, Santorum manages to blow it. A few weeks ago, George Snuffalupagus asked Santorum about a perfectly reasonable quote from his book “It Takes a Family,” where he suggested “that a lot of women feel pressure to work outside the home because of radical feminism.”

Santorum disavowed the quote and gallantly blamed it on his wife: “Well, that section of the book was co-written, if you want to be honest about it, by my wife, who is a nurse and a lawyer.”

Mrs. Santorum is neither listed as a co-author nor thanked in the acknowledgments of the book. (Rick should read his book! It’s probably chock full of interesting quotes like that.)

Then, when asked about another criticism of radical feminists from his own book, he said: “I don’t know — that’s a new quote for me.”

My imaginary beagle could have defended Santorum’s book better.

(The only worse quote in the campaign so far was from Newt Gingrich explaining why he denounced the Paul Ryan plan on Social Security as “right-wing social engineering.” Newt went on Fox News and said: “Let me say, on the record: Any ad which quotes what I said on Sunday is a falsehood.”)

It was the same thing with Santorum on gays serving openly in the military. Again, Santorum is right — but he still manages to lose the argument.

Back in October, when Chris Wallace was interviewing Santorum on “Fox News Sunday,” he fell into a trap a 14-year- old high-school debater wouldn’t have walked into, by agreeing with a quote — without knowing who said it.

Wallace asked Santorum if he agreed with the following quote: “The Army is not a sociological laboratory. Experimenting with Army policy, especially in time of war, would pose a danger to efficiency, discipline and morale and would result in ultimate defeat.”

To no avail, I screamed at the TV: “NO! DON’T AGREE! IT’S PROBABLY A HITLER QUOTE! SAY YOU’LL USE YOUR OWN WORDS!”

Santorum agreed with the blind quote only to be informed that it was a quote from someone arguing in 1941 against blacks in the military. (I didn’t catch the segregationist’s full name ... Franklin Delano something.)

He still could have recovered by demanding to know if Wallace was suggesting, therefore, that the Army IS a sociological laboratory and a splendid place for social experimentation in time of war, but Santorum just shrugged sheepishly and mumbled something about how that was different.

The problem is not Santorum’s conservative positions, it’s that he can’t defend them.


TOPICS: Campaign News; Issues; Parties; State and Local
KEYWORDS: ann4romney; anncoulter; coulter4romney; faghag; faghagann; kenyanbornmuzzie; mittromney; newtgingrich; obamacare; ricksantorum; romney; romneycare; santorum; statesrights
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To: bopdowah
GO NEWT
41 posted on 03/10/2012 12:58:47 PM PST by onyx (SUPPORT FREE REPUBLIC, DONATE MONTHLY. If you want on Sarah Palin's Ping List, let me know.)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

Coulter, you have become a pathetic Christie, ...errr... Romney shill. Bob


42 posted on 03/10/2012 1:01:01 PM PST by alstewartfan ( 27 of 36 Romney judicial appointments were DEMOCRATS!!!!!)
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To: circlecity
All the more reason to support Newt. He may never overcome the "unlikeability" factor, but he clearly would make the best President at this point in time.

I agree! But since life is like high school and the vast hordes in the middle of the intelligence curve determine the outcomes, don't get your hopes up.

43 posted on 03/10/2012 1:01:16 PM PST by Albion Wilde ("The facts of life are Tory." -- Margaret Thatcher)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet
The more I like Santorum...

Oooops.

44 posted on 03/10/2012 1:01:29 PM PST by EGPWS (Trust in God, question everyone else)
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To: onyx

Get a picture with him tomorrow!


45 posted on 03/10/2012 1:01:47 PM PST by trappedincanuckistan (livefreeordietryin)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet
Would like to hear Ann's defense of Romney's description of the President as just a "nice guy" who "doesn't understand." Romney is either uninformed or deliberately misrepresenting the opponent he would face in November, as was cited in the following FR post on 1/15/12:

"Who in his/her right mind doubts the President's commitment to accelerate the agenda to which he has devoted the past several years of his life?

"Does anyone believe that he came to such a commitment just before, or during, the 2008 campaign?

"The American people need to hear from an informed Republican candidate about the real nature of the battle of ideas in which citizens must be engaged, and the design and serious intent of the November 2012 opponents.

"Long ago, a Freeper posted the Agenda of a 2002 meeting of so-called "intellectuals" in Chicago.

"Note the participants in that conference are the major "players" in the headlines emanating from White House policy makers in 2012, including the now-President.

"Romney's cavalier description of the President as "a nice guy" who "just doesn't understand" how the "private sector works" is either shallow and uninformed, misleading, or something else. The "battle of ideas" for the future direction of the Republic is too important to be engaged in on such a level.

"American voters, like the citizens of 1776 and 1787 can understand and connect dots--if they are adequately articulated to them now, allowing them time to think about it.

"Picture this: a group of people who describe themselves as being "intellectuals," declaring of the conference: "It will be both a celebration of ideas and a rigorous examination of the roles and responsibilities that intellectuals play in society."

"Nothing is so pitiful and shameful that, in a country whose document of liberty was authored by a true intellectual, and was said by him to be a mere representation of "the American mind" of 1776--in such a country, in 2002, after over 200 years of basking in the "light of liberty" first shed by that document--we now have a group of people sitting around in Chicago and plotting how their so-called "intellectual" efforts will play a role "in society." Consequences of their "role" are being played out now in the "society."

"As Weaver said, "Ideas have consequences."

"The ideas of 1776 resulted in more liberty and prosperity for more people over a longer period of time than ever had been experienced in the history of civilization!

"So-called "intellectuals" who occupy positions of excessive coercive power in Washington today may, if unstopped, precipitate another age of darkness in the world, where the ideas of liberty have been censored, and "other ideas" from other sources have been exalted.

"Dr. Russell Kirk years ago warned of what T. S. Eliot had labeled a "new provincialism--the provinciality of time, imprisoning people in their own little present moments." Picture the participants of that Chicago conference, and we have a visual of Kirk's words.

"The enduring and essential ideas of Creator-endowed individual liberty must be defended against the "redistributionist" ideas which have led to tyranny in every society where they have been implemented.

Where is the Jeffersonian intellect of 2012 who is up to the task? Whose study of the founding ideas can equip him to help American youth and other voters discover and preserve the ideas of liberty for their posterity?"

46 posted on 03/10/2012 1:02:16 PM PST by loveliberty2
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To: 2ndDivisionVet
It’s strange that Santorum doesn’t seem to understand the crucial state-federal divide bequeathed to us by the framers of our Constitution

It's strange that Coulter has endorsed the architect of communist health care, with its unconstitutional mandate that forces American citizens to overpay for their insurance policies so society's bums, deadbeats, and parasites can have their health care for "free'.

47 posted on 03/10/2012 1:03:02 PM PST by Lancey Howard
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To: Captain Peter Blood

Who in their right mind listens to this woman anymore? She’s proven himself to be a card carrying member of the communist party, with all the crap she’s been saying lately.


48 posted on 03/10/2012 1:03:10 PM PST by Kratos
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To: 2ndDivisionVet; Ann Coulter

Santo is running and Willard too to KEEP Newt out of the Presidency..

It pure and quite simple.. Willard and Santo have no plans to eviscerate the federal givernment.. Newt does.. Willard and Santo are Union stooges.. ringers.. you know fakes.. phonies.. shills..

You too Ann are a useful tool.. being played like a rented donkey..
Maybe even a Rhino in an Elephant costume.. but then the bright side is you can no longer “play me”..

You are not dumb so what your doing must be ON PURPOSE..
That of course, makes you, a malefactor.. I’ve got my EYE on you..


49 posted on 03/10/2012 1:04:53 PM PST by hosepipe (This propaganda has been edited to include some fully orbed hyperbole...)
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To: TennesseeProfessor
We have a big government social conservative, a big government economic conservative, a big government liberal — and one remaining candidate who...is unwilling to lift a finger to prevent Iran from getting/using nuclear weapons.

I think that's the way it was planned:
The big government pol with the most money wins by default.

And, it doesn't hurt that he has been "next in line" for four years.

50 posted on 03/10/2012 1:04:57 PM PST by norton
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To: trappedincanuckistan

I shall try!


51 posted on 03/10/2012 1:06:27 PM PST by onyx (SUPPORT FREE REPUBLIC, DONATE MONTHLY. If you want on Sarah Palin's Ping List, let me know.)
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To: jonrick46

The slang term “baggage” has virtually always been used to refer to negative (or negatively perceived) past behaviors or issues, NOT to weight.


52 posted on 03/10/2012 1:07:01 PM PST by Albion Wilde ("The facts of life are Tory." -- Margaret Thatcher)
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To: bopdowah
You hit the nail right on the head. Our only hope is Newt! Neither Romney or Santorum could raise a slight sweat on King Obama’s head in a debate. King Obama would look like a whipped puppy and would craw in a hole after Newt handled him his head.
53 posted on 03/10/2012 1:08:00 PM PST by Logical me
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Comment #54 Removed by Moderator

To: Cyber Liberty

55 posted on 03/10/2012 1:10:55 PM PST by 2ndDivisionVet (Ich habe keinen Konig aber Gott)
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To: cripplecreek

There is no doubt that Washington DC is a collosus of bureaucrats and government. It is like putting someone in charge of a jumbo jet. You wouldn’t want someone piloting a jumbo jet when all they know how to fly is a Cessna. Newt has his jumbo jet pilot’s license.

Go Newt!


56 posted on 03/10/2012 1:15:14 PM PST by jonrick46 (Countdown to 11-06-2012)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

It speaks for itself. Thanks....


57 posted on 03/10/2012 1:16:04 PM PST by Cyber Liberty ("If the past sits in judgment on the present, the future will be lost." --Winston Churchill)
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To: Albion Wilde

When used in the sense of hindrance, baggage can be seen as drag weight or overload. The use of the word “baggage” has that subliminal message.


58 posted on 03/10/2012 1:26:50 PM PST by jonrick46 (Countdown to 11-06-2012)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

For a 65-year-old guy, that's an awfully good jawline -- better than his wife's. Wonder who does his "work"? Can I get a Medicare jowl tuck under Romalangobamacare?

59 posted on 03/10/2012 1:28:49 PM PST by Albion Wilde ("The facts of life are Tory." -- Margaret Thatcher)
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To: Longbow1969

You are right — I should have phrased it as “dangerously naiive foreign policy”


60 posted on 03/10/2012 1:35:31 PM PST by TennesseeProfessor
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