So your plan is . . . ?
It seems to be to vote for . . . who, exactly?
What chance does that person have of winning? Make your case, please, and I will be on board.
Will we have a chance to do anything at all in 2016 if Obama wins again in November?
Please, do not confuse the GOP with conservatism. It is not the same. The Tea Party came about to fight the GOP elite as much as it did to fight the Dems. What Romney does or does not do will have nothing to do with conservatism. The conservative movement will not die because of him. If anything, it will be reenergized as a new separate party from the GOP.
The only genuine conservative I am aware of that will appear on our ballot in Wisconsin at this time is
Virgil Goode (click). I've reviewed his positions
on the issues (click) as well as his
voting record (click) and find him a welcome relief from the likes of Obama and Romney. Unless someone more conservative than he appears on the ballot,
I will vote for Virgil Goode proudly. Like John Fremont, he may not win. I do not require a "sure thing" to do the "right thing". I can't make a case that will convince you one way or the other. You are faced with an "R" candidate and a "D" candidate that are both advocates for bailouts, gun grabbing, abortion, amnesty, healthcare rationing, homosexualization, and big government. You may choose to support one or the other, or you may choose to risk it all and pick what's behind door number three. I'm picking the third door. Such action sparked the birth of a new nation and the birth of the Republican party, why not a resurgence of conservative values? It is a safer bet than trying to hold a liberal's feet to a conservative fire.