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Herman Cain: The New Front-Runner
Pajamas Media ^ | October 7, 2011 | Kyle-Anne Shiver

Posted on 10/08/2011 10:18:22 AM PDT by Kaslin

Herman Cain is entering the American consciousness at a time when ordinary people are more afraid of the future than at any juncture within memory. We Americans are searching for someone to fill the leadership vacuum left by an adolescent gadabout president who believes leadership is nothing more than giving speeches, perennial fundraising, politicking, and playing golf every waking moment in between. Except for the brief moments, when Obama’s Astroturf protesters show up “coincidentally” to make his points, the community organizer in chief can’t seem to organize his way out of a wet paper bag.

Yes, America is leaderless. And Americans know it.

Morgan Freeman seems to think it’s all a movie and his president thinks it’s a game. “I’ve got game,” Barack Obama told Democrats a couple of years ago, but “game” doesn’t fill the real shoes of the real presidency. And when there’s no real grown-up president there, things tend to go down the chute in a great big hurry. That would happen whether the president off playing games was black, white, or purple. It’s just a fact of life. Americans know this and are not the least bit fooled with all the race-baiting hustlers on the airwaves.

This country elected an eternal adolescent in a man’s body. Where’s the president? Oh, he’s off playing on the Vineyard. Where’s the president? Oh, it’s cold in D.C., so he must be off sunning in Hawaii. Where’s the president? It’s Sunday, so he must be playing golf. Where’s the president? It’s a boring weeknight, so he must be having a soiree with movie stars and musicians. I heard it was Paul McCartney, or is it Stevie Wonder this week? Where’s the president? Oh, he’s on The View, or is it the late night show? Honestly, I cannot keep track of this man-child’s social schedule.

Play. Play. Play. While the nation suffers.

Enter Herman Cain, the Republican backbencher who is setting the nominating race on its ear, confounding the oddsmakers of all stripes, and winning voters over one hard-fought day at a time.

Mr. Cain is having an extraordinary effect on all those who see him speak. Pollsters have been quite astonished with Mr. Cain’s effect on people, noting time after time Cain’s ability to win voter confidence in the span of a single debate, especially when he is not even given much opportunity to talk.

Herman Cain’s fatherly presence is so powerful that it literally sucks all the air out of the room in which he stands. Cain emanates fatherly wisdom.

One simply cannot deny Cain’s archetypal appeal as the good, wise, strong, loving-but-firm father.

And it’s down-to-the-marrow genuine. Cain is not putting on airs or going around talking down to voters like he is the one who thinks of himself as a national father figure come on the scene to take charge. It’s the people he encounters who have this sense about him. The man inspires confidence just by walking in a room. Really, is it now any wonder how Cain motivated his employees and turned failing businesses into sterling successes?

Cain demonstrates in his every utterance a deep-down respect for this country and its citizens. For the recent tenth anniversary of the 9/11 attacks, Herman Cain didn’t try to politicize the moment or grab an ounce of attention for himself. Instead, he put country over his candidacy and made the most heart-rending video I’ve ever seen, while singing “America the Beautiful” in the background. I’m not ashamed to admit I cried.YouTube Preview Image

Cain’s respect for America, which he emits like a potent aura everywhere he goes, comes back to him ten-fold from the people. It’s as though he had sowed it as a fertile seed in his listeners’ hearts and stands humbly ready to receive the harvest and plow it right back into America’s soil. When one listens to Herman Cain, one has the sense that things actually might have a chance of turning around if we all work hard enough and steady enough and stop playing our childish political games.

Whatever Herman Cain has got, it is something big. Zogby just released its latest polling showing Herman Cain in a surge worthy of shock-value:

In news sure to inject shock and awe into the Republican political primary season, a Zogby poll released Thursday showed Herman Cain leading the Republican field, topping former front-runner Mitt Romney by an astonishing 20 points. Cain would also narrowly edge out Obama in a general election, the poll found, by a 46-44 margin.

Romney, the former Massachusetts governor, would lose by a point to the president, 40 percent to 41 percent. Texas governor Rick Perry, who has slipped in the polls of late, would lose to the president 45 percent to 40 percent.

The poll found that 38 percent of Republican primary voters said they would vote for Cain if the primary were held today. Eighteen percent said they would throw their support to Romney, while 12 percent each said they would vote for Perry and Texas congressman Ron Paul. No other candidate attracted double-digit support.

Writing as a Georgian and a former civil rights fighter, it’s hard for me to remain purely objective when it comes to Herman Cain’s candidacy. My heart swells every time I hear him speak. There are days when I practically get weak-kneed just imagining a debate between him and Barack Obama. I’ve got a deep-down feeling that Obama would leave that debate stage feeling as though he had just had a very painful woodshed experience with a mature father wielding a rhetorical paddle.

That’s just me, of course. But from the looks of the way this is going, a whole lot of American voters are sensing the same thing – or something very close to it.


TOPICS: Politics
KEYWORDS: cain; hermancain
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To: fireman15
You have made a bunch of posts critical of us; why don't you come to an event and see if we are really as dumb as you think we are.

I loved the Tea Party concept back when Santelli made his famous rant. I remember watching it that morning. And I attended the tea party rally that it spawned, on tax day, whatever year that was (09?).

But since then, the Tea Party has morphed into just the usual nonsense. And when you have the Tea Party coalescing around a guy who WANTS TO TAX TEA, you know it's gone completely off the rails.

81 posted on 10/08/2011 4:25:24 PM PDT by Huck (NO FEDERAL SALES TAX -- UNDER ANY CIRCUMSTANCES)
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To: william clark

Your entire post was nonsense, and this one is evasion.


82 posted on 10/08/2011 4:29:20 PM PDT by Huck (NO FEDERAL SALES TAX -- UNDER ANY CIRCUMSTANCES)
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To: fireman15
The Limbaugh/Hannity remark was rhetorical in nature and meant to make a point. As with the successful businessman, Ross Perot, neither Limbaugh or Hannity could win the gop nomination. The point being. Get elected to a lower position like House, Senate or Governor before you set your sight on the ultimate prize. The Founders did promote citizen legislators and not lifetime politicians. In the last 235 years, things have changed quite a bit. If Jefferson was to reappear today, I'm confident he would find political reevaluation priority #1.

No reason to get so touchy. I didn't set myself up as the arbiter of who is electable or who isn't. That is not the primary function of political debate. Just because someone gets themselves on TV doesn't mean they know WTF they're talking about.

Btw, if you're going to quote someone, properly delineate from your verbiages so as not to confuse with editorializing.

83 posted on 10/08/2011 4:34:10 PM PDT by Reagan Man ("In this present crisis, government is not the solution to our problem; government is the problem.")
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To: Politicalmom

Oh, no problem. Look at it this way....the payroll tax every single worker in US pays id based on your GROSS paycheck. You pay 7.5% and the employer pays 7.5%.

Then from your gross pay you have to pay the income tax withholding, state tax if any, city tax if any, property tax, mortgage payment, car payment, and if you are lucky you put away some of your money in savings or a tax deferred retirement plan such as 401-K or 403-B. What is left after all those expenses is what you have left to actually spend. You may call it your discretionary spending money. It is obviously lot smaller than your gross paycheck because of all those fixed expenses. But the good news is you will not be paying any federal sales tax on all those items because none of that is purchase of a NEW item.

So, the 9% sales tax will apply only to that discretionary money you might spend buying stuff. And you pay that federal sales tax only if you buy new items. A used car purchase or a buying a used house has no sales tax because it was already paid by the original buyer.

Then you add the tax savings on dividends and capital gains, and death tax on any large inheritance. So my guess is the federal sales tax will be lot lower for most people than the sum of all your other tax savings.

Best of all it will make it easier for people to get richer since income tax will be a flat 9% no matter how much money one makes.


84 posted on 10/08/2011 4:41:25 PM PDT by federal__reserve (November 2012 will decide whether we fall into an abyss or walk up the shiny city on the hill.)
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To: Huck

You argue on the level of a second grader. Ignoring rational arguments that come your way and throwing a tantrum at anyone who dares challenge you.


85 posted on 10/08/2011 4:52:58 PM PDT by william clark (Ecclesiastes 10:2)
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To: william clark

You didn’t make any rational argument. You made a facile appeal to authority as a means of dodging the issue in question.


86 posted on 10/08/2011 4:54:19 PM PDT by Huck (NO FEDERAL SALES TAX -- UNDER ANY CIRCUMSTANCES)
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To: Huck

I dodged nothing. I’m not the one who summed up Cain’s qualifications and track record of saving failing businesses as “selling bad pizza.”

Why don’t you insult his mother while you’re at it? It would show as much depth of thought as any of your posts.

You want direct. Here’s direct. The man has a degree in mathematics (FYI, that tends to be useful in forming economic plans) and experience managing and saving large business structures. That combined with his socially conservative positions and ability to communicate them to people makes him a good candidate.

Note how I didn’t find it necessary to denigrate any other candidate in making the above statement.


87 posted on 10/08/2011 4:59:48 PM PDT by william clark (Ecclesiastes 10:2)
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To: Danae

‘Let’s beat Obama with a Cain!’


88 posted on 10/08/2011 5:00:03 PM PDT by MHGinTN (Some, believing they can't be deceived, it's nigh impossible to convince them when they're deceived.)
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To: PhilDragoo
Thanks, Phil. Please keep me appraised of developments.

Cheers!

89 posted on 10/08/2011 5:09:11 PM PDT by grey_whiskers (The opinions are solely those of the author and are subject to change without notice.)
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To: federal__reserve

Thank you for the cogent explanationg.

I’ve been for the Fair Tax for years, but I was concerned about a complete switch. I was hoping to see it work in a state or two, before committing the whole country. Cain’s plan really takes care of that concern for me.


90 posted on 10/08/2011 5:51:23 PM PDT by Politicalmom (Amnesty (ie: Perry/Rubio) will be the final death blow to the United States of America.)
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To: Reagan Man
Btw, if you're going to quote someone, properly delineate from your verbiages so as not to confuse with editorializing.

Not trying to be critical in any way. I am confused about what exactly you want. I put Franlin’s words in quotes and blank lines both above and below to separate his words from mine.

91 posted on 10/08/2011 8:20:13 PM PDT by fireman15 (Check your facts before making ignorant statements.)
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To: Reagan Man

Never mind, I got confused about which post you were refering to. Sorry I made a mistake and messed up my html tags after running the spell check.


92 posted on 10/08/2011 8:23:58 PM PDT by fireman15 (Check your facts before making ignorant statements.)
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To: Kaslin

I’ve jumped on the Cain train.

The encouraging thing about this poll is that Romney may have gotten 19%, but the people voting for the other surely don’t have Romney as their second choice. Romney might as well pack it in.

And, BTW, Mormonism is a cult; and it’s not even debatable.


93 posted on 10/08/2011 8:26:53 PM PDT by SeaHawkFan
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To: fireman15
Their vision was for citizen leaders not career politicians.

Their vision was for citizen leaders to live at home and visit Washington; not for them to live in D.C. and visit home.

94 posted on 10/08/2011 8:31:29 PM PDT by lonestar (It takes a village of idiots to elect a village idiot.)
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To: fireman15

Your first sentence in post #79 was from my prior post to you. Those are my words. You didn’t put quotes around them. It can cause confusion. Thought I’d point it out. No biggie.


95 posted on 10/08/2011 8:39:44 PM PDT by Reagan Man ("In this present crisis, government is not the solution to our problem; government is the problem.")
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To: All
FYI.... Romney opposed the two most successful conservative policy efforts of the last 30 years... the Reagan policies of the 1980`s and the Contract With America of the 1990`s.

A Essay on Mitt Romney. Its damning.

96 posted on 10/09/2011 3:41:18 AM PDT by 506Lake (I'll say it again... no more compromise.)
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Comment #97 Removed by Moderator


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