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Speak Up! (Now is the time to sort things out.)[Mark Levin]
NRO ^ | January 20, 2008 | Mark R. Levin

Posted on 01/20/2008 10:28:50 AM PST by vietvet67

With all due respect, this is absurd on many levels. If John McCain is nominated and loses, it is because he doesn’t appeal to enough Americans, including the base that he has repeatedly betrayed (as Thomas Sowell puts it) over a long period of time. The suggestion that McCain and McCain alone is capable of fighting this war, given his experience, seems to be the core of the concern. Let me suggest that VDH and others who make this claim are wrong.

McCain never treated Bill Cohen, Clinton’s defense secretary, with the kind of personal animus he showed Donald Rumsfeld. McCain often confuses policy with personality affronts. He was social friends with Cohen so he didn’t admonish him about his hollowing out of the military. His attacks on Rumsfeld started before his disagreement over the surge. Their personalities clashed. And as before, McCain wanted to get even. The fact that he was right on the surge, which has now evolved into mythical proportions with the help of his campaign and supporters, goes high on the credit side of the ledger.

You ask, in essence, that we ignore McCain’s leadership in the amnesty debate and his course reversal of recent months as he seeks votes. What does this tell us about the man? The bill he co-authored with Ted Kennedy (and which was foolishly supported by the current president) would have caused enormous economic and cultural dislocations. (VDH doesn’t need lectures from me on the subject, since he’s written eloquently on it.) As the Heritage Foundation and many others pointed out at the time, the McCain-led effort would have resulted in tens of millions of new illegal aliens coming to the country with the likelihood of eventually receiving citizenship;

(Excerpt) Read more at article.nationalreview.com ...


TOPICS: Editorial; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: aliens; amnesty; donaldrumsfeld; elections; immigration; kennedy; levin; marklevin; mccain; sc2008; tedkennedy; wor
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To: ClearCase_guy

Mccain doesn’t get my vote for anything for any reason. He is so much like hilary that the women will vote for her,as they may as well. I can’t see any difference in the two.


21 posted on 01/20/2008 10:41:43 AM PST by libbylu (Why vote for a democrat with an R next to his name? Proud MITTen.)
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To: GunsareOK
When John McCain climbed into bed with Teddy K. on amnesty for illegal aliens is when I decided not to support him. The very thought of him and Teddy in bed together sent me to therapy.
22 posted on 01/20/2008 10:42:25 AM PST by WesternPacific
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To: TCats

Maybe the state of his health is a reason the msm is pushing him. He is so beatable.


23 posted on 01/20/2008 10:43:39 AM PST by amihow
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To: vietvet67

McCain and Lieberman will make the media happy.


24 posted on 01/20/2008 10:45:23 AM PST by ex-snook ("Above all things, truth beareth away the victory.")
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To: vietvet67

Furthermore, we all have a perfect example of what happens when we nominate and then elect a RHINO like John McCain.

Arnold Schwarzenegger

He has been a total disaster and has ruined the GOP in California for decades.


25 posted on 01/20/2008 10:46:19 AM PST by SoConPubbie
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To: vietvet67

You can always tell when an election is coming up...John McCain starts espousing conservative principles. As soon as the elections are over he will revert to the back room deals with Ted Kennedy and the rest of the rats.


26 posted on 01/20/2008 10:47:59 AM PST by Mogollon
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To: GunsareOK

I’m with you. I’ll write in Fred Thompson and watch the GOP go under. Maybe they’ll come back in 2012 with better candidates, maybe it won’t matter by then. I’m tired of fighting.

After the ordeal in 2000 with Bush and the disappointment that followed on so many levels, especially not being able to keep the lead in the House and Senate, I’m done.


27 posted on 01/20/2008 10:50:27 AM PST by snippy_about_it (I'm a Friend of Fred, FRedneck! Fred08.com)
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To: SoConPubbie
It may be time for conservatives to form a new nation. Sort of. Have conservatives in the liberal north east, California, migrate to red states and make them redder. Change state constitutions, get rid of social bleeding heart programs. Unit with other red states to form a unified guard to prevent the federal government from enforcing its laws. and collecting tax revenues.
28 posted on 01/20/2008 10:53:35 AM PST by mainerforglobalwarming
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To: vietvet67
"He is convinced that man is responsible for global warming, such as it is, and consequently the federal government must act to control man."

That, all by itself, is enough to put him in the "Ain't No Way" category!

He has been in a "monkey-see monkey-do" mode ever since he first went to D.C. Hanging out with Ted Kennedy doesn't help him in my book either.....it was bad enough with "W" chumming up with that bloated liberal.

It always seemed to me that McCain was filling some kind of weird quota for the number of nasty insults and kicks in the teeth to conservatism that he did each month.

* and look out if he lets a month or so slide by without getting high-fives from the liberals, because that means he's working on something like "McCain-Feingold" or amnesty for illegal immigrants trespassers.

29 posted on 01/20/2008 11:01:18 AM PST by capt. norm (Those who think logically provide a nice contrast to the real world.)
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To: GunsareOK

The problem with the GOP is that it no longer is the party of conservatism. Thus, we can no longer expect that a true conservative will have a chance at gatting the national nomination.

That was true in 2000 aqnd 2004, because GWB was not and is not a conservative. It was true in 1996 with Dole. And it will be true in 2008 because the only two conservatives running are Duncan Hunter (who just dropped out) and Fred Thompson, who is floundering, and will not come anywhere close to getting the nomination (the fact he did so poorly in SC, a state he should have carried handily, speaks volumes about the “conservative” nature of the GOP).

Thus, we are guaranteed a RINO gets the nomination; in which case, the only hope for this country is that enough people show up at the voting booth in November to vote AGAINST the Dim candidate (who will be either a stalinist — Hildabeast; or a marxist — Obambi), and with clothespins on their noses, pull the lever for the RINO.

I do not want a RINO as president, but I would reluctantly accept one if it meant keeping either of the two Dims out of the White House. Because — and let’s be candid about it — if Hildabeast wins the White House, there will be a civil war; if Obambi wins the White House, there will anarchy.


30 posted on 01/20/2008 11:03:18 AM PST by ought-six
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To: GunsareOK

I agree with you 100%. The only “Republican” that scares me more than McPain is Huck.


31 posted on 01/20/2008 11:05:48 AM PST by DFG
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To: vietvet67
The fact that he was right on the surge, which has now evolved into mythical proportions with the help of his campaign and supporters, goes high on the credit side of the ledger.

I'm not so sure this is entirely accurate. As I understand it, McCain's position from the outset was that we needed a significantly greater number of troops than what was ultimately decided on, and as we saw, the number sent won the "war" brilliantly and in record time.

After that, I think there were some things done right and a number of things done wrong. My understanding of McCain's idea was to send back in massive numbers which I think would have "Americanized" the effort completely. I don't think what he was proposing was the brilliant strategy of Gens. Petraeus and Odierno and Fred Kegan, which is the strategy that has worked to tamp down the violence, kill the bad guys and allow Iraqi forces to get up to speed.

It's pure speculation on my part with no background in warfare (although I follwed the events as closely as a civilian could), but I am not sure the John McCain strategy, if I have rightly understood it, would have worked.

I will give McCain this though. He wanted to win, and he was right about the terrible consequences, on many fronts, of losing. But President Bush was aware of that as well. He brought in lots of people and he actually listened to them. His call in the end was the right one. McCain always knows he is right. He would have done it his way, and the rest be damned. That could have been a disaster.

32 posted on 01/20/2008 11:06:59 AM PST by Bahbah
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To: vietvet67

I’ve voted in every Presidential election since ‘72 except one. This may be the second.


33 posted on 01/20/2008 11:11:51 AM PST by SouthTexas
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To: SoConPubbie

“He has been a total disaster and has ruined the GOP in California for decades.”

We had a governor like that in Illinois, and he’s now serving time for corruption. George Ryan single-handedly destroyed the GOP in Illinois. Illinois won’t see another GOP governor or state legislature for decades, if ever.

The difference between the Republicans and the Democrats is that Republicans get rid of their corrupt politicians, whereas Democrats elevate theirs to the secular equivalent of sainthood.


34 posted on 01/20/2008 11:12:07 AM PST by ought-six
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To: SoConPubbie
If goes down to the wire and it's just him vs. Hillary, he's got my vote....but that's the ONLY way it can happen.

Not this life-time Republican.

You're willing to let Hillary walk away with it so you can feel all cool about being a lifetime Republican and do so by abandoning ship when the goin' gets rough? That's a big part of what got us 8 years of Clintons in the first place (and I guess it's human nature not to learn from the past). If that's how it goes down, she is certain to win.

McCain has got to be her favorite Republican....and, by far, the most useful. If you think she wouldn't be any worse than McCain, you have seriously underestimated Hillary and over-estimated McCain.

Only difference between our opinions is that my number one goal is keeping the Clintons out. Too bad it has to be that way, but it is!

I'm pretty sure that Hillary would thank you if she only knew.

35 posted on 01/20/2008 11:13:40 AM PST by capt. norm (Those who think logically provide a nice contrast to the real world.)
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To: TommyDale

McCain does not deserve a single conservative Republican vote.

***

You don’t have to tell that to a true conservative and the closet Democrats could careless!


36 posted on 01/20/2008 11:14:04 AM PST by restornu (Understanding that Grace and Mercy is what one receives after all they can do!)
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To: vbmoneyspender

Absolutely,better Dems gets it and be held for the chaos a liberal will cause. then hopefully get someone good to run and win the GOP nomination in 2012.


37 posted on 01/20/2008 11:17:42 AM PST by mel
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To: holdonnow; AliVeritas; Fudd Fan; MarkLevinFan; STARWISE; rodguy911; tiredoflaundry

TGO ping


38 posted on 01/20/2008 11:18:26 AM PST by SE Mom (Proud mom of an Iraq war combat vet)
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To: TommyDale

“McCain does not deserve a single conservative Republican vote”

I agree, and I don’t believe he got votes from REAL conservatives in South Carolina. He won SC with votes from liberals and independents since they want either McCain or Huckabee to be our nominee. There is no party registration in SC so how does anyone know McCain got so much “conservative” voters? Huckabee either for that matter. I belive Fred got real conservative voters to vote for him. I am standing with Fred!


39 posted on 01/20/2008 11:20:22 AM PST by seekthetruth
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To: SoConPubbie
Don't know, don't care, all I know is that this new brand of Republican that only cares about the WOT and nothing else is worthless and if we listen to them, we are toast as a political party.

IMO, the same holds for the new brand of Republican that only cares if someone is a christian regardless of anything else...all single issue Republicans are an impediment to consolidation.

40 posted on 01/20/2008 11:31:13 AM PST by Ethrane ("semper consolar")
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