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Will FR embrace socialism to make way for Rudy Giuliani as a Republican presidential candidate?
vanity | April 21, 2007 | Jim Robinson

Posted on 04/21/2007 6:42:25 PM PDT by Jim Robinson

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To: Mr Ramsbotham

I assumed so. Rudy supporters have no sense of writing style, sarcasm, or hyperbole.


2,461 posted on 04/22/2007 12:25:25 PM PDT by CharlesWayneCT
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To: Jim Robinson
We got Bush as the nominee in 2000 because he was the "anointed one." He was selected by the PTB (whoever the hell they are) and proclaimed “frontrunner” and de facto nominee by the media and all pundits before anyone else could even get out of the starting gates. He was ramrodded through over the objections from the grassroots. Kind similar to what’s going on now, but it’s even starting earlier.

Exactly. And that makes me think there are too many liberals among the PTB. Way too cozy. IMO, it's the almighty $ (or whatever symbol the globalists will ultimately choose to represent their income from the peons).

2,462 posted on 04/22/2007 12:26:07 PM PDT by arasina (So there.)
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To: Halgr
“I am afraid that someday soon, conservatives will be persecuted just as the Christians will.”

Yes, you are absolutely correct. This is one of the reasons why Rudy appeals to so many Republicans. They think the democrats and MSM will be less harsh on republicans if the party becomes more “moderate”. Not a chance. Too many conservatives are drinking the MSM kool-aid and beginning to believe their lies. If a lie is told often enough people begin to believe it.

Many people aren’t willing to stand up and fight for what they believe in because they don’t want to pay the price (persecution). I often say, “Everyone wants to go to heaven, but no one wants to die”. Well, there is no other way to get there—you gotta die first. If conservative principles are worth having, we better be willing to pay the price. Persecution comes with the territory, and as the saying goes, if you can’t take the heat, get out of the kitchen. Sadly, that’s exactly what many republicans have been doing--because they aren’t willing to pay the price.

2,463 posted on 04/22/2007 12:26:25 PM PDT by dmw (Conservatives do NOT vote for liberals.)
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To: Blackirish
Rudy is discussing using the flat tax as a model to simplify the tax code. That is as anti-socialist as it gets. If you’r going to come to a forum to discuss politics you should get your terminology right. Words have meanings.

The flat tax will retain the oppressive IRS and it's 67,000+ page tax code. If socialist Giuliani was truly for tax reform he would endorse The Fair Tax as it will abolish the socialistic IRS. Try reading the bill. You'll realize the flat tax is nothing like The Fair Tax.
2,464 posted on 04/22/2007 12:27:33 PM PDT by Man50D (Fair Tax , you earn it , you keep it!)
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To: arasina

B U M P


2,465 posted on 04/22/2007 12:27:48 PM PDT by stephenjohnbanker ( Hunter/Thompson/Thompson/Hunter in 08! Or Rudy/Hillary if you want to murder conservatism)
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To: Blackirish
Bring Titans AFC into the discussion you should hear it from him but he has said he and a lot of others he knows won’t pull the lever for Hillary but at the same time would actively campaign against Rudy under minding his candidacy. in my eyes a distinction without a difference.

It's not what I would do. But there is still a distiction. For example there are third party candidates that would benefit from such action.

2,466 posted on 04/22/2007 12:27:51 PM PDT by FreeReign
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Comment #2,467 Removed by Moderator

To: GSlob
One of the big problems with existing within the university system is you begin talking to everyone as if they were all 18 year old freshmen waiting for you to mold their alcohol-soaked minds like pieces of soft clay.

The kids in the classroom may be dazzled by your boundless ego and your ceaseless pretentiousness, but the rest of us already BS'ed our way through your class, got the grade we needed, and moved on to real life.

I don't care about your classroom antidotes, your reading list, your godless enlightenment or your twisted rationalization of the practicalities of barbarism. You're a ghoul. A ghoul with a few degrees and tenure, perhaps. But a ghoul, all the same.

2,468 posted on 04/22/2007 12:29:01 PM PDT by WhistlingPastTheGraveyard (NRA Life Member)
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To: CharlesWayneCT

Yeah, about that...

Sorry to all of the old-timers, but - hey. You snooze, you lose.

Frankly I could not believe it myself. There are (I am sure) other ‘classics’ to be had for the taking.

However, user ID#1, is, has always been, and shall always be, taken.


2,469 posted on 04/22/2007 12:29:05 PM PDT by stuned_beeber (Quit...Give up...Go home...- Vote Democrat!)
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To: mkjessup

ROFL! Good comeback.


2,470 posted on 04/22/2007 12:29:21 PM PDT by arasina (So there.)
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To: NGRY

Welcome to FR.


2,471 posted on 04/22/2007 12:29:38 PM PDT by gpapa
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To: ohioWfan
And it is accurate to state that most conservatives (myself excepted) were bashing Reagan with a vengeance in his second term, just as Reagan Man bashes Bush now.

More revisionist history. Nothing of the kind happened - it was the leftists who became imboldened, and the country club GOP types who never liked RWR in the first place.

It wasn't a conservative who coined 'kinder & gentler America'

2,472 posted on 04/22/2007 12:30:23 PM PDT by skeeter
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To: PSYCHO-FREEP
“Father forgive them, for they know not what they do.”

Are you implying that a Christ-like Peach was crucified?

Good grief.

2,473 posted on 04/22/2007 12:30:47 PM PDT by Petronski (FRED!)
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To: indylindy
You clarified it and we are in agreement. I am sorry if I flamed you.

Passionate conservative, you know!


No problem. I appreciate your Conservative passion. At least there is two of us!
2,474 posted on 04/22/2007 12:30:50 PM PDT by Man50D (Fair Tax , you earn it , you keep it!)
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To: Melas

> However, I’m going to be perfectly honestly. I’ve grown to hate some of the anti-Rudy crowd so much, because of their own visciousnes.

The rough language on both sides has been pretty heavy.

I think a lot of it has to do with the complete lack of good candidates in the Republican 2008 field, with any traction. I like Hunter but his numbers are abysmal. I like Fred but he hasn’t declared. Rudy and McInsane, the 2 frontrunners, are deeply troubling to me in many ways and I deeply hope neither become the candidate for Prez. I’ve really had to bite my tongue to keep my discussion civil, because I’m so troubled about this upcoming election. Where do we find the man (or woman) who has the stuff to take America into tomorrow, triumph over the liberal decay taking root?


2,475 posted on 04/22/2007 12:31:13 PM PDT by VictoryGal (Never give up, never surrender!)
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To: TommyDale

Then WTH is up their butt? I like flashbunny. What is up the butt? A Rudy probe, maybe?


2,476 posted on 04/22/2007 12:31:27 PM PDT by dforest (Fighting the new liberal Conservatism. The Left foot in the GOP door.)
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To: Blackirish; TitansAFC
he and a lot of others he knows won’t pull the lever for Hillary

Look, it was a simple thing. A freeper says others are so bad they would VOTE for Hillary. The freeper says that to denigrate and attack her fellow freepers. I made a simple request -- show me where they said it. The freeper declined to do so, and nobody has since found one.

You can talk all you want about "distinctions without a difference", but when the topic was "people who said they would vote for Hillary", there is no "distinction" to be differentiated -- don't point to people who said they would NOT vote for Hillary.

Obviously, TitanAFC and others don't think the distinction is without a difference, or they wouldn't go to such lengths to say they would work against Rudy but not vote for Hillary.

2,477 posted on 04/22/2007 12:31:42 PM PDT by CharlesWayneCT
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To: TommyDale; Jim Robinson

Sir, I supported Steve Forbes. Maybe before your time. There was some kind of awful about Keyes but I was always respectful of him. And this forum fought me tooth and nail about my support of Steve Forbes, but they never EVER told me I had to go.


2,478 posted on 04/22/2007 12:31:53 PM PDT by Cincinatus' Wife
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To: jmc813
If you agree with Rudy 75%-80% of the time, you're a liberal zotted troll.

There, all better.

2,479 posted on 04/22/2007 12:32:06 PM PDT by stuned_beeber (Quit...Give up...Go home...- Vote Democrat!)
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To: Kevmo
Thanks! I have more research to do -- I read one reference to NYC synagogue firebombings during Giuliani's tenure, but I haven't had time to follow up on it. The picture that is emerging when Giuliani was confronted with a terrorist attack on NYC is of a mayor who tended to deny a terrorism motive, and prosecuted the attack as a stand-alone crime (rather than what they were: part of an interconnected war the Islamofascists were waging against us). He rejected the idea that these murderous Islamofascists were basically being encouraged and deployed by a larger community of global Islamofascists (some of these communities operated right in NYC), and instead took pains to insist that Islmofascist communities as a whole were in no way responsible for the actions of an individual attacker. This is the action of a crimefighter, not a warfighter.

Even when he later called something terrorism, or broke up a terrorist plot, he didn't connect the dots back to a concerted war against us -- he just kept swatting at flies.

Even your tagline is intriguing... what’s the context of it?

Here's the background -- Giuliani argued in favor of collecting DNA from all newborns. More troubling to me than the issue itself is that the statement shows that this former prosecuter (who should absolutely innately understand how the Constitution works) thinks that the Constitution "gives" us a limited number of rights, that we have no rights beyond that, and everything else is fair game for government intrustion. In fact, as you probably know, the Constitution limits government power, not our freedoms. As Reagan said: "Almost all the world's constitutions are documents in which governments tell the people what their privileges are. Our Constitution is a document in which 'We the people' tell the government what it is allowed to do. 'We the people' are free." Giuliani lacks this most basic understanding.

Here's are the links:

Support for collecting DNA from every newborn --

While not actually proposing it here, he defends the idea (and demonstrates a truly flawed view of how the Constitution works in the process): http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9C0CE5DF103DF934A25751C1A96E958260

Key excerpt: When asked whether all children should have DNA tests at birth, the Mayor said: ''I don't know that that's the proposal, but I would have no problem with that, or fingerprinting all children. We go through a massive effort to try to fingerprint large numbers of children'' now, he said, ''so in case they are lost they can be found again or in case if they are kidnapped they can be found again. There is absolutely no reason why people should be afraid of being identified.''

-snip-

''It's not invasive,'' the Mayor said. ''It doesn't invade any right of privacy. You don't have a right not to be identified. I don't remember a constitutional amendment that gives you the right not to be identified.''

Later, he does propose that the state legislature mandate collection of DNA from all newborns:

http://www.wired.com/politics/law/news/1999/11/32617

Key excerpt: Many experts believe the FBI's database will be expanded in the future. The International Association of Police Chiefs has asked Congress to require DNA samples from anyone arrested, and New York City mayor Rudolph Giuliani has requested that the state legislature require DNA samples from every newborn baby.

2,480 posted on 04/22/2007 12:32:37 PM PDT by ellery (I don't remember a constitutional amendment that gives you the right not to be identified-R.Giuliani)
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