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Welcome faithful, lurkers, sllort, and of course all you Big Hitters.
1 posted on 01/17/2008 8:45:25 AM PST by Chuck54
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To: Chuck54

ibpt?


2 posted on 01/17/2008 8:46:31 AM PST by NeoCaveman (It's a Texas Hold Em Primary and Fred is "All In" in South Carolina)
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To: Chuck54

IB4P?


3 posted on 01/17/2008 8:46:34 AM PST by rightinthemiddle (Guess what? I'm voting for the Conservative. Fred Thompson.)
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To: Chuck54

Good morning/afternoon and megadittos PING to you Chuck54. :) =^..^=


4 posted on 01/17/2008 8:46:40 AM PST by Biggirl (A biggirl with a big heart for God's animal creation, with 4 cats in my life as proof. =^..^=)
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To: NonValueAdded; LibertyisSpecial; HOYA97; ICFN(ICan'tFixNothing); StoneWall Brigade; ...

Should be another good one.

It’s been a wild ride this week.

Welcome, all you IB4TP’s.

:o)


5 posted on 01/17/2008 8:46:59 AM PST by Chuck54 (Huck keeps finishing 3rd in these primaries. Is The Huckster our Breck Girl? Southbound!)
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To: Chuck54

Okay, we want something this time for being early, Chuck...we want you to guarantee a Fred Thompson win in South Carolina.

RUSH: Be true to your conservative ideals. Remind your listeners in South Carolina who the real conservative is in this race.

Shock the (liberal) world!


9 posted on 01/17/2008 8:48:44 AM PST by rightinthemiddle (Guess what? I'm voting for the Conservative. Fred Thompson.)
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To: Chuck54

10 posted on 01/17/2008 8:48:52 AM PST by TornadoAlley3 ( UNITED BY OUR CORE BELIEFS Fred08)
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To: Chuck54

The guy who makes or breaks GOP canidates. :)


13 posted on 01/17/2008 8:49:23 AM PST by Biggirl (A biggirl with a big heart for God's animal creation, with 4 cats in my life as proof. =^..^=)
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To: Chuck54

hey chuck :-)


17 posted on 01/17/2008 8:51:04 AM PST by Fox_Mulder77
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To: Chuck54
This is a Big Hitter.
19 posted on 01/17/2008 8:51:35 AM PST by rightinthemiddle (Guess what? I'm voting for the Conservative. Fred Thompson.)
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To: Chuck54

got up late.......was writing all night.......

hurry up COFFEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE


22 posted on 01/17/2008 8:51:59 AM PST by advertising guy (If computer skills named us, I'd be back-space delete.)
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To: Chuck54
Hi, Chuck; thanks again for the ping.

If anyone needs a video break, here is some (clean) cubicle humor:

http://www.truveo.com/Bad-Day-at-the-office-HILARIOUS/id/36896522
29 posted on 01/17/2008 8:54:10 AM PST by rightwingintelligentsia (CNN: Full of plants from the DNC Plantation.)
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To: Chuck54

A little show prep for El Rushbo and the other guardians of the Reagan Temple.

The Use and Abuse of Reagan
By Victor Davis Hanson
Thursday, January 17, 2008

Ronald Reagan’s presidency was a great success. He rebuilt a chaotic U.S. military and helped end the Cold War. Reagan’s radical tax cuts in 1981 spurred economic growth and redefined the relationship between U.S. citizens and their government. And he appointed conservative federal judges and bureaucrats who tried to roll back the half-century trend of expanded governmental control over our lives.

Reagan’s nice-guy charm made it difficult for even his critics to stay angry with him for long. But he was no mere smiling dunce, as liberal intellectuals used to snicker. His private papers and diaries instead reveal that he was widely informed, read voraciously, drew on a powerful intellect and was an effective writer.

It is no wonder that conservative leaders — especially the current crop of Republican presidential hopefuls — now constantly evoke Ronald Reagan’s successful presidency. In contrast, they rarely hearken back to the uprightness of the one-term Gerald Ford, or praise the foreign-policy accomplishments of the two Bush Republican presidencies.

Instead, the candidates try to “out-Reagan” each other by claiming they alone are the true Reaganites while their rivals in the primaries are too liberal, flip-floppers or without consistent conservative principles.

In short, Ronald Reagan has been beatified into some sort of saint, as if he were above the petty lapses and contradictions of today’s candidates. The result is that conservatives are losing sight of Reagan the man while placing unrealistic requirements of perfection on his would-be successors.

They have forgotten that Reagan — facing spiraling deficits, sinking poll ratings and a hostile Congress — reluctantly signed legislation raising payroll, income and gasoline taxes, some of them among the largest in our history. He promised to limit government and eliminate the Departments of Education and Energy. Instead, when faced with congressional and popular opposition, he relented and even grew government by adding a secretary of veteran affairs to the Cabinet.

Two of his Supreme Court appointments, Sandra Day O’Connor and Anthony Kennedy, were far more liberal than George W. Bush’s selections, the diehard constructionists, John Roberts and Samuel Alito.

Reagan’s 1986 comprehensive immigration bill turned out to be the most liberal amnesty for illegal aliens in our nation’s history, and set the stage for the present problem of 12 million aliens here unlawfully.

Republicans forget all this — but so do Democrats, who for their own reasons want to perpetuate an unflattering myth of Ronald Reagan as an extremist right-wing reactionary.

In foreign affairs, Reagan was not always sober and judicious. He shocked Cold Warriors by advocating complete nuclear disarmament at his Reykjavik summit with Michel Gorbachev.

In the middle of Lebanon’s civil war, he first put American troops into a crossfire. Then, when 241 marines were blown up, he withdrew them. That about-face, and the failure to retaliate in serious fashion, helped to embolden Hezbollah’s anti-American terrorism for decades.

The Iran-Contra scandal exploded when a few rogue administration officials sold state-of-the-art missiles under the table to Iran’s terrorist-sponsoring theocracy, and prompted opposition talk of impeachment.

In other words, a great president like Ronald Reagan made mistakes. He sometimes reversed positions, played politics and baffled his conservative base — some of the very charges now leveled against Mike Huckabee, Rudy Giuliani, John McCain, Mitt Romney and Fred Thompson.

When a candidate today says, “Reagan would have done this or that,” he apparently has a poor memory of what Reagan — the often lonely, flesh-and-blood conservative in the 1980s — was forced to do to get elected, govern and be re-elected. While in office, he proved more often the pragmatic leader than the purist knight slaying ideological dragons on the campaign trail.

So what is the real Reagan legacy? It is mostly the Great Communicator’s uncanny ability to distill complex problems, offer a more conservative solution than America was used to or ready for, and then inspire and enact difficult change through a brilliant “Mr. Gorbachev, tear down this wall” turn of phrase.

But 2008 is a different world from a quarter-century ago, when Reagan began his presidency. Amnesiac candidates need to separate the myth of Reagan — the perfect conservative — from the real man when stridently chastising their rivals for their past fudging on taxes, illegal immigration or the size of government.

The current pack of five serious Republican candidates should call on the spirit and principled inspiration of Ronald Reagan for guidance about new problems in the way they evoke Abraham Lincoln or Teddy Roosevelt.

But these candidates only do his memory — and their own careers — a disservice by claiming sainthood for Ronald Reagan, and thereby demanding a standard of immaculate conservative conduct that neither Reagan nor they could ever attain.

Victor Davis Hanson is a classicist and historian at the Hoover Institution, Stanford University, and author, most recently, of “A War Like No Other: How the Athenians and Spartans Fought the Peloponnesian War.”


31 posted on 01/17/2008 8:54:24 AM PST by Agent Smith (“I would remind you that extremism in the defense of liberty is no vice!" AuH2O)
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To: Chuck54

Hi Chuck...Hello all

I’m here early yet 38 posts were already posted.


40 posted on 01/17/2008 8:57:19 AM PST by EagleandLiberty ((No Dems '08!) Thompson '08)
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To: All

Did you hear they found a new spieces of Trees (a palm in Madagascar?


45 posted on 01/17/2008 8:59:21 AM PST by EagleandLiberty ((No Dems '08!) Thompson '08)
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To: Chuck54
We are brudders for evvver, till the end of time.
Singing the song, the music that you love!

50 posted on 01/17/2008 9:00:45 AM PST by Clint N. Suhks (Mike Huckabee is Elmer Gantry©®™)
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To: Chuck54

Rush needs to talk about *uckabee’s push-polling against Fred Thompson in South Carolina, The fact that Fred Thompson comes in 2nd only to McCain on head to head match-up polls against both Hillary and Obama, and he should talk about Huckabee’s Fair Tax monthly rebate check being a massive new entitlement program paid for by taxes which could be manipulated by Democrats to redistribute wealth by making the rebate progressive.


75 posted on 01/17/2008 9:06:43 AM PST by counterpunch (GOP Convention '08 — Go For Brokered!)
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To: Chuck54

“some people just do not know how to smoke”

LOL


79 posted on 01/17/2008 9:07:54 AM PST by svcw (There is no plan B.)
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To: Chuck54

Great video using Rush’s music at http://youtube.com/watch?v=Z-eL-M40rCY


93 posted on 01/17/2008 9:11:26 AM PST by prolifefirst
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To: Chuck54
On McCain-Feingold....

The McCain-Feingold Indian Giving Loophole by Michelle Malkin (April 11, 2001)

104 posted on 01/17/2008 9:14:36 AM PST by mewzilla (In politics the middle way is none at all. John Adams)
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To: Chuck54

I don’t think Rush did any show prep last night. He is going on and on about nothing. McCain ?? He is already in the second segment and he hasn’t even mentioned Hillary.


148 posted on 01/17/2008 9:29:21 AM PST by libh8er
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