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AMNESTY SUPPORTERS PLOT REVENGE AFTER BOEHNER SAYS NO TO CONFERENCE (Norquist, Rove...)
Breitbart ^ | 11/29/13 | MATTHEW BOYLE

Posted on 11/29/2013 12:14:23 PM PST by jimbo123

-snip-

Ball quotes two different pro-amnesty activists as part of the plan pushing for revenge: Frank Sharry of America’s Voice and Joshua Culling of Americans for Tax Reform (ATR), Grover Norquist’s outfit.

-snip-

Ball described Culling as a “conservative,” even though it was just discovered the outfit he works for, ATR, is funded largely by Karl Rove’s Crossroads GPS. According to tax documents released by Crossroads, Rove’s group gave ATR $26 million in 2012.

Rove is actively working against conservatives nationwide in an effort to stop the Tea Party movement. His funding of Norquist’s organization--which has supported amnesty and publicly used progressive media in its efforts against Sens. Ted Cruz (R-TX) and Mike Lee (R-UT) during their attempt to defund Obamacare--seems to be part of that war against conservatives.

Culling claims the GOP, by not rushing to grant amnesty to illegal aliens, has lost an opportunity to save itself.

(Excerpt) Read more at breitbart.com ...


TOPICS: News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: aliens; amnesty; atr; boehner; grovernorquist; karlrove; lameduckamnesty2014; norquist; rove

1 posted on 11/29/2013 12:14:23 PM PST by jimbo123
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To: jimbo123

Bonehead is going to feel pretty lonely. But I suspect this was a move to garner sympathy for the amnesty side.


2 posted on 11/29/2013 12:15:12 PM PST by GeronL (Extra Large Cheesy Over-Stuffed Hobbit)
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To: All

Report: Karl Rove has been funding Grover Norquist

Students of the GOP establishment take note: new documents revealed by ProPublica, the George Soros-funded “investigative journalism” outfit that supplies free content to media outlets, reveal that Rove’s fundraising behemoth Crossroads GPS supplied $26.4 million of the approximately $31 million Norquist’s outfit, Americans for Tax Reform, spent in 2012. That’s about 85%.

In the corporate world, if one company owns 85% of another, that company is properly called a subsidiary.

http://freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/3095608/posts


3 posted on 11/29/2013 12:15:59 PM PST by jimbo123
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To: All

ATR’s Tax Forms Raise Questions About Use of Crossroads Grant, “Social Welfare” Purpose

Americans for Tax Reform, the politically active nonprofit headed by longtime antitax activitst Grover Norquist, raised and spent nearly $31 million in 2012, according to its tax filing for the year — a new record for the group.

-snip-

In addition, the vast majority of ATR’s funds — $26.4 million, or 85 percent — came from Crossroads GPS, the 800-pound-gorilla among conservative dark money nonprofits that are highly politically active and don’t disclose their donors. That means that ATR used at least a sizable portion of the Crossroads grant to fund its political ads, even given the fact that it is difficult to trace how any single donated dollar is spent.

http://freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/3095692/posts


4 posted on 11/29/2013 12:16:35 PM PST by jimbo123
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To: jimbo123

Don’t worry, Boehner will come around. He’s the most accomplished rollover artist since Webb Hubbell..


5 posted on 11/29/2013 12:16:55 PM PST by DJ Frisat ((optional, printed after my name on post))
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To: jimbo123

I am starting to build a strong dislike for Karl Rove.

He is staring to look like he gets pleasure from being a King maker, the power behind the throne so to speak, and I am not fond of his King picks.

I am starting to believe his picks depend on who he can corrupt the easiest.


6 posted on 11/29/2013 12:28:05 PM PST by Venturer (Keep Obama and you aint seen nothing yet.)
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To: jimbo123

Well if we the 5% are not a big deal when it comes to losing our health care that we privately carried then why should we give a hoot about an even lesser percentage when it comes to immigration...the left can not play it both ways or at least they should be called on it when they try!


7 posted on 11/29/2013 12:31:49 PM PST by blueyon (The U. S. Constitution - read it and weep)
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To: jimbo123

The tea party members and those that consider themselves to be among them in spirit aren’t going to go anywhere no matter what Rove does because these are all grass roots people just acting out their common sense and ethics in politics and trying to make a change in government.

I think they are going to grow, and grow until there are far more in politics like them than not, including in the Democrat party as well. All politics.

What is so wrong and radical about “make a bill, pay a bill”, or “the government should answer to the people, not the other way around by growing government”

Nope, no one will be going away except for Rove IMO.


8 posted on 11/29/2013 12:47:29 PM PST by A CA Guy ( God Bless America, God Bless and keep safe our fighting men and women.)
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To: DJ Frisat
Don’t worry, Boehner will come around. He’s the most accomplished rollover artist since Webb Hubbell..

Conservatives are fighting a battle that cannot be won by conventional ways. Yes Boner will roll - will roll to whatever the elites tell him & that is to ruin the country, if it's not already. Illegals will rule by mob. Burkas will flourish in 30yrs. The nation will split into at least 4 regions.

9 posted on 11/29/2013 12:53:37 PM PST by Digger
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To: jimbo123

I wonder where Rove gets his money?


10 posted on 11/29/2013 12:58:03 PM PST by Controlling Legal Authority
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To: jimbo123

The good news here?

Those that Rove has supported, to the tune of $300 million, lose.


11 posted on 11/29/2013 2:14:13 PM PST by oldbill
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To: jimbo123

There are 18 Hispanics who will vote Republican after amnesty.

There are 6,239,422 conservative Republicans who will stay home after the “Republicans” like Boehner, Cantor, Rove, McCain, Graham, McCarthy pass amnesty.


12 posted on 11/29/2013 2:17:27 PM PST by oldbill
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To: blueyon

Excellent comeback.


13 posted on 11/29/2013 2:29:49 PM PST by sheana
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To: jimbo123

This is why Norquist and McCain were so pissed.

King and Gohmert killed this year’s amnesty and dummy McCain could not work out what was going on.

The GOP should have had full attention and months to get a majority of support.

“GOHMERT: I know that is one contention, but if Ted doesn’t suspend the filibuster, we already heard what was coming. As soon as we got beyond this summer we were going to have an amnesty bill come to the floor.”

https://www.numbersusa.com/content/news/october-16-2013/obama-push-amnesty-after-budgetdebt-deal.html

Steve King even said it was 2 more weeks of keeping the Rule of Law on the books.


14 posted on 11/29/2013 5:19:49 PM PST by ObamahatesPACoal
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To: jimbo123; 1_Inch_Group; 2sheep; 2Trievers; 3AngelaD; 3pools; 3rdcanyon; 4Freedom; 4ourprogeny; ...
Ping!

Click the keyword Aliens to see more illegal alien, border security, and other related articles.


15 posted on 11/29/2013 9:43:01 PM PST by HiJinx (Bambi is Safe for Another Year.)
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To: jimbo123
Fifteen years ago GWB was ready to sign the North American Union Treaty, effectively eliminating our borders, language, and culture. I suppose Tokio Rove played a large part in that and was fuming after it ended up going nowhere.

This push for amnesty is only an extension of that. Even a mental midget like rove knows the ‘Hispanic’ votes will not materialize. It's all about the NWO.

16 posted on 11/29/2013 10:05:20 PM PST by Paulie
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To: Venturer
I am starting to build a strong dislike for Karl Rove.

With all due respect: Where have you been for the last eight years? Rove has been pushing the Bush one world agenda since he got little George the presidency.

Just think of Rove as the Valerie Jarret of the GOPe.

17 posted on 11/30/2013 3:16:47 AM PST by raybbr (I weep over my sons' future in this Godforsaken country.)
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To: raybbr
Just think of Rove as the Valerie Jarret of the GOPe

Pretty much sums it up.

18 posted on 11/30/2013 4:18:08 AM PST by TADSLOS (The Event Horizon has come and gone. Buckle up and hang on.)
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To: HiJinx

Grover Norquist’s Strange Alliance With Radical Islam
The New Republic ^ | November 11, 2001 | Franklin Foer
http://www.thenewrepublic.com/111201/foer111201.html

GROVER NORQUIST’S STRANGE ALLIANCE WITH RADICAL ISLAM.
Fevered Pitch
by Franklin Foer

Post date 11.01.01 | Issue date 11.12.01

On the afternoon of September 26, George W. Bush gathered 15 prominent Muslim- and Arab-Americans at the White House. With cameras rolling, the president proclaimed that “the teachings of Islam are teachings of peace and good.” It was a critically important moment, a statement to the world that America’s Muslim leaders unambiguously reject the terror committed in Islam’s name.

Unfortunately, many of the leaders present hadn’t unambiguously rejected it. To the president’s left sat Dr. Yahya Basha, president of the American Muslim Council, an organization whose leaders have repeatedly called Hamas “freedom fighters.” Also in attendance was Salam Al-Marayati, executive director of the Muslim Public Affairs Council, who on the afternoon of September 11 told a Los Angeles public radio audience that “we should put the State of Israel on the suspect list.” And sitting right next to President Bush was Muzammil Siddiqi, president of the Islamic Society of North America, who last fall told a Washington crowd chanting pro-Hezbollah slogans, “America has to learn if you remain on the side of injustice, the wrath of God will come.” Days later, after a conservative activist confronted Karl Rove with dossiers about some of Bush’s new friends, Rove replied, according to the activist, “I wish I had known before the event took place.”

If the administration was caught unaware, it may be because they placed their trust in one of the right’s most influential activists: Grover Norquist. As president of Americans for Tax Reform, Norquist is best known for his tireless crusades against big government. But one of Norquist’s lesser-known projects over the last few years has been bringing American Muslims into the Republican Party. And, as he usually does, Norquist has succeeded. According to several sources, Norquist helped orchestrate various post-September 11 events that brought together Muslim leaders and administration officials. “He worked with Muslim leaders to engineer [Bush]’s prominent visit to the Mosque,” says the Arab-American pollster John Zogby, referring to the president’s September 17 trip to the Islamic Center of Washington. Says Zogby, who counts Norquist among his clients, “Absolutely, he’s central to the White House outreach.” Indeed, when Jewish activists and terrorism experts complained about the Muslim invitees to Adam Goldman, who works in the White House public liaison’s office, Goldman replied that Norquist had vouched for them. (Goldman denies this, but two separate sources say they heard him say it.) “Just like [administration officials] ask my advice on inviting religious figures to the White House,” says Paul Weyrich, another top conservative activist, “they rely on Grover’s help [with Muslims].”

Norquist denies being involved in “micromanaging the specifics” of White House meetings, but admits “I have been a long time advocate of outreach to the Muslim community.” In fact, the record suggests that he has spent quite a lot of time promoting people openly sympathetic to Islamist terrorists. And it’s starting to cause him problems. Weyrich, echoing other movement conservatives, says he is “not pleased” with Norquist’s activity. According to one intelligence official who recently left the government, a number of counterterrorism agents at the FBI and CIA are “pissed as hell about the situation [in the White House] and pissed as hell about Grover.” They should be. While nobody suggests that Norquist himself is soft on terrorism, his lobbying has helped provide radical Islamic groups—and their causes—a degree of legitimacy and access they assuredly do not deserve.

Norquist is one of the undisputed masters of Republican coalition building. And so it is no surprise that he has turned his attention to America’s fast-growing Muslim population, which by some accounts now stands at seven million strong. (Although two other recent reports suggest it is less than three million.) “He’s worked with [Rabbi Daniel] Lapin to bring Jews into the fold,” says one Norquist associate. “That was an uphill effort. So he figured that he could turn Muslims into the obvious counterweight to the relationship between the Jews and Dems.” In the last few years, Norquist has pursued a Republican-Muslim alliance with a two-track approach. With conservatives, he has emphasized that Muslims are a good demographic fit for the GOP: well-off and socially conservative. “American Muslims look like members of the Christian Coalition,” he wrote in The American Spectator this summer. To Muslims, he has promised a sympathetic hearing for their causes. He has pushed Republican leaders to support a prohibition on the government’s use of “secret evidence” in the deportation of suspected terrorists—an issue that jibes with Norquist’s own anti-government agenda. And he has intimated that Muslim support for Republicans could change U.S. policy toward the Middle East. Appearing on a panel at a 1999 meeting of the American Muslim Alliance, alongside activists who complained about the “Zionist lobby” and Jewish “monopolizing” of Jerusalem, Norquist announced that “[t]oo many American politicians have been able to take their shots at Muslims and at Muslims countries.”

orquist has not undertaken this crusade alone. In the mid-1990s, he enlisted a partner, Khaled Saffuri, then working as a lobbyist and deputy director for the American Muslim Council (AMC). After receiving a master’s in management science, Saffuri came to Washington in 1987 and worked his way up through the city’s Arab-Muslim political apparatus, starting with a stint at the American Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee. In 1998 he left the AMC to help Norquist found the Islamic Institute, an advocacy organization dedicated to promoting a conservative agenda that would appeal to Muslims. Saffuri served as executive director and Norquist as chairman of the board.

The Institute operated out of the headquarters of Americans for Tax Reform, from which it borrowed not just a fax machine and conference room, but an agenda. Soon the Institute was shilling for all of Norquist’s pet issues—a moratorium on Internet taxation, fast-track trade negotiation authority, and personal savings accounts. It even published a paper on the Koran’s compatibility with capitalism. “People should remember that Mohammed and his wife were businessmen,” Norquist notes. With the help of Saffuri, who brought ties to a vast network of activists, the Islamic Institute became a nerve center for Muslim lobbying in Washington. As Norquist puts it, “They gather at the Islamic Institute to plan and debrief, when they have meetings [with administration officials].”

Through the Islamic Institute, Norquist appears to have developed close relationships with a number of Muslim leaders. When I recently spoke to the Muslim Public Affairs Council’s Salam Al-Marayati, the man who fingered Israel as a potential sponsor of the World Trade Center attacks, he recited Norquist’s phone number from memory. When University of South Florida professor Sami Al-Arian e-mailed The Wall Street Journal in response to an op-ed that tied him to Islamic Jihad, he CC’d Norquist. Last year at its annual dinner, the AMC presented Norquist with an award for his service. As John Zogby told me, “[H]e’s played the role of interlocutor. With all respect, many of the leaders are immigrants and don’t have years and years of experience. Grover has filled that void.”

And he has done so to their mutual political benefit. During the 2000 campaign, Norquist urged Karl Rove to focus on the Muslim vote—pointing to, among other things, the thousands of Muslims in the key state of Michigan. By all appearances, the Bush campaign heeded Norquist’s advice. In an admirable departure from the usual Republican script, Bush frequently integrated mosques into his platitudes about churches and synagogues. In the second presidential debate, Bush vowed to repeal the use of secret evidence, just as Norquist had promised. Bush even named Saffuri as the campaign’s National Advisor on Arab and Muslim Affairs.

When Bush won, Norquist credited the Muslim strategy. “Bush’s talk about outreach and inclusion had extraordinary results—the Muslim community went 2-1 for Bill Clinton in 1996 and almost 8-1 for Bush in 2000,” he told The Washington Times. (That statistic is almost certainly untrue, and Bush actually lost Michigan, the state where Muslims are most heavily concentrated.) Or, as Norquist put it in the Spectator, “George W. Bush was elected President of the United States of America because of the Muslim vote.”

Norquist quickly set about turning that supposed electoral influence into legislative influence. One day after Bush’s inauguration, he and Saffuri arranged for Muslim leaders to meet Newt Gingrich and Congressman Tom Davis, head of the National Republican Congressional Committee. Soon Saffuri began regularly appearing at the White House, accompanying imams and heads of Islamic organizations to discuss the faith-based initiative and concerns about law enforcement persecution of Muslims. Suhail Khan, an administration adviser who helps plan Muslim outreach, once served on the Islamic Institute’s board. And at one of his regular Wednesday meetings, according to two witnesses, Norquist announced that he had lobbied to get Khan his White House post. On the afternoon of September 11, a group of Muslim leaders happened to have plans to meet the president in the West Wing to discuss their grievances with racial profiling and secret evidence. When they couldn’t enter the building, along with almost everyone else, they headed a few blocks uptown and reconvened—in the conference room of Norquist’s office.

ut the events of September 11 have cast some of Norquist’s relationships in a less flattering light. Consider first the history and recent statements of the American Muslim Council, the organization that presented Norquist with an achievement award, and whose officials attend Norquist-arranged meetings with the Republican hierarchy. In the 1990s it co-sponsored two conferences with the United Association for Studies and Research, which, according to The New York Times, a convicted Hamas operative named Mohammed Abdel-Hamid Salah in 1993 called “the political command” of Hamas in the United States. At a Washington rally last year, Abdurahman Alamoudi, Saffuri’s boss at the AMC, declared, “I have been labeled by the media in New York to be a supporter of Hamas. Anybody support Hamas here?...Hear that, Bill Clinton? We are all supporters of Hamas. I wished they added that I am also a supporter of Hezbollah.” In press releases and forums, the AMC has defended the terrorist-harboring Sudanese government against charges that it massively violates human rights and condones slavery. As late as June of this year, the AMC put out a press release entitled “SLAVERY IN SUDAN IS A SHAM..”

The record of the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR)—which, like the AMC, sends members to meetings organized by Norquist and Saffuri—is no more encouraging. When interviewed by Salon’s Jake Tapper on September 26, CAIR Communication Director Ibrahim Hooper refused to condemn Osama bin Laden. CAIR founder Nihad Awad, who appeared with Bush at the Washington Islamic Center, has argued that “[t]here is ample evidence indicating that both the Mossad and the Egyptian Intelligence played a role in the [1993 World Trade Center] explosion.” And Siraj Wahaj, who has served as a CAIR board member, has been described by federal prosecutor Mary Jo White as a possible conspirator in the ‘93 bombing. As Harvard professor of Islamic studies Ali Asani has complained, “There is general concern among Muslim intellectuals about how not only CAIR but some of these other organizations are claiming to speak in the name of the Muslim community, and how they’re coming to be recognized by the government as spokespeople for the Muslim community in the U.S.”

nd Norquist hasn’t only developed close ties to American groups that apologize for terror. He has also flacked for at least one Middle Eastern autocracy: Qatar. Eager to improve relations with the United States, Qatar worked with Norquist and Saffuri to help portray itself as a liberal outpost in the Islamic world. In April, Saffuri sponsored the “First Annual Conference on Free Trade and Democracy” in the Qatari capital of Doha, for which the Islamic Institute received over $150,000 in payments from the Qatar Embassy’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs Account. (Saffuri says these were reimbursements for the travel expenses of congressional delegates.) A lobbyist at Norquist’s firm, Janus-Merritt, has solicited pro-Qatari op-eds from at least one conservative pundit. When the emir of Qatar came to Washington, Saffuri hosted a Capitol Hill luncheon in his honor. And just three weeks after September 11, Norquist wrote an op-ed in The Washington Times in which he claimed that “Qatar has taken great strides to enshrine values of universal suffrage, a free press, and human rights.” He continued, “[S]he really means it on being a reliable ally.”

Qatar may not be Iraq, but Norquist’s arguments are still laughable. Freedom House, which monitors religious liberty, rates Qatar “not free.” Among countries in the Middle East—a region hardly known for its liberalism—Qatar finished in the bottom half of a Heritage Foundation “Index of Economic Freedom.” Two days after Norquist’s op-ed, The Washington Post reported on Qatar’s refusal to support a widening of the war on terrorism to include Islamic Jihad, Hamas, or Hezbollah. And, just two weeks later, the foreign minister of Qatar—our “reliable ally”—announced that “[t]he attacks against Afghanistan are unacceptable and we have condemned them. It is our clear position.”

orquist’s new associations—particularly his links to groups like CAIR and the AMC—have not gone unnoticed in conservative ranks. Paul Weyrich says, “I have on at least one occasion [confronted him] and he assured me that he knew what he was doing and that I shouldn’t have any concerns.” Another conservative says he told Norquist about the two organizations’ statements on terrorism, but it didn’t make an impression. “We can’t knock it off; we want them on our own team,” Norquist replied.

Norquist’s relationships have even pitted him against the GOP leadership. After the Republican convention last year, he set up a lunch at the Capitol Hill Club for Republican Party chairman Jim Nicholson to plot strategy with Muslim leaders. But in the week before the event, angry Jewish groups provided the RNC with a set of damning quotes from representatives of CAIR, the AMC, and some of the other invited guests. When I asked Cliff May, who was the Republican National Committee’s communications director at the time, he confirmed the story. “I was approached and apprised of their backgrounds and told the chairman there’s reason to be concerned.” The event took place—Nicholson didn’t feel he could cancel it—but not as originally planned. As one RNC source explains it, Nicholson gave a “generic five-minute talk about lower taxes and less government and said thank you for your support and got the hell out.”

Since September, not surprisingly, conservatives once willing to overlook Norquist’s alliances have more aggressively aired their grievances. Consider William Murray, head of the Religious Freedom Coalition. He had considered Norquist a comrade, but now makes no secret of his displeasure. “Grover has a very liberated view of Islamic nations,” says Murray, somewhat hyperbolically. “So they behead people in the public square. He thinks that’s their business. Hey, it’s no big deal to have people beheaded for religious crimes.” Weyrich, too, has made his unhappiness a matter of public record: “I’m afraid Grover’s woefully naive.” Even Norquist’s weekly confab has become the scene of internecine fighting. At a session earlier this month, Frank Gaffney questioned the presence of terrorist sympathizers at the White House. Norquist exploded, accusing Gaffney of smearing Muslims. Later he choked up as he addressed the meeting and asked Gaffney to stand up and join him in condemning anti-Muslim bigotry. One conservative who witnessed Norquist’s tirade says, “His response is powered in part by a sense that this whole edifice he’s created is in danger of coming unraveled because of [these groups’] stated and abiding positions.”

When I visited Norquist, he was in a similarly embattled frame of mind. He asked me to turn off my tape recorder. Any quote I wanted to use, he told me, would require his approval. There were none of his usual passionate ideological perorations. He just sat in his chair, seething. “There are some people who spit on Muslims and wouldn’t like to see them have any role in American politics,” he told me in a near scream. Grover Norquist’s pursuit of the fabled Republican-Muslim alliance, it seems, will continue for a long time.

FRANKLIN FOER is an associate editor at TNR.

Grover Norquist says ending birthright citizenship equals a tax increase
http://blog.chron.com/txpotomac/2012/03/anti-tax-activist-grover-norquist-says-ending-birthright-citizenship-equals-a-tax-increase/

CPAC’s Grover Norquist Joins Obama Push For Illegal Alien Amnesty
http://www.newsrealblog.com/2010/02/25/cpacs-grover-norquist-joins-obama-push-for-illegal-alien-amnesty/

A Troubling Influence (Grover Norquist’s Islamist Connections
http://archive.frontpagemag.com/readArticle.aspx?ARTID=15084

Grover Norquist’s New Muslim Protégé
http://frontpagemag.com/2011/09/26/grover-norquists-new-muslim-protege/

Frank Gaffney on Grover Norquist and the Muslim Brotherhood
http://www.google.com/url?sa=t&rct=j&q=&esrc=s&source=web&cd=10&ved=0CG4QtwIwCQ&url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.youtube.com%2Fwatch%3Fv%3Dfbyiz97lA78&ei=FrBmT6nsN-Pq0gGxxYy2CA&usg=AFQjCNF-gIk_XD1FHtk36G6So5pO44cXgQ&sig2=uD5sleJkQt6tdeJriqDZHQ

http://www.americanthinker.com/2010/03/grover_norquists_jihad.html

http://frontpagemag.com/2010/02/25/cpac-shills-for-islamic-terrorists/

http://atlasshrugs2000.typepad.com/atlas_shrugs/2010/03/pamela-geller-american-thinker-grover-norquists-jihad.html

http://1389blog.com/category/politics/clinton/

http://atlasshrugs2000.typepad.com/atlas_shrugs/dhimmitude_north_american_style/


19 posted on 11/30/2013 6:23:15 PM PST by RaceBannon (Lk 16:31 And he said unto him If they hear not Moses and the prophets neither will theybe persuaded)
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To: HiJinx

bttt


20 posted on 12/01/2013 7:07:58 PM PST by Dante3
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